Occurrence record: AK269139

Preserved specimen of Dryopteris Adans. | Buckler Fern recorded on 1966-08-19
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Dataset

Data resource Auckland Museum Botany Collection
Institution code Auckland War Memorial Museum
Supplied institution code "AK"
Collection Auckland War Memorial Museum Herbarium
Supplied collection code "AK"
Catalog number AK269139
Occurrence ID urn:catalog:AK:AK:AK269139
Record type Preserved specimen
Supplied basis "PreservedSpecimen"
Collector B Ollgaard
License CC-BY 4.0 (Int)
Language en
Type PhysicalObject
Presence/Absence PRESENT
Supplied as present

Event

Occurrence date 1966-08-19
Supplied date "19/Aug/1966"
End day of year 231
Date precision DAY
Start day of year 231

Taxonomy

Scientific name Dryopteris
Supplied scientific name "Dryopteris cristata (L.) Gray"
Identified to rank genus
Supplied as "Species"
Common name Buckler Fern
Kingdom Plantae
Phylum Charophyta
Class Equisetopsida
Order Polypodiales
Family Dryopteridaceae
Genus Dryopteris
Species Dryopteris cristata
Name match metric higherMatch
Scientific name authorship Adans.
Name parse type SCIENTIFIC

Geospatial

Country Denmark
Latitude 55.653139
Supplied as: "55.6531388888889"
Longitude 8.166583
Supplied as: "8.16658333333333"
Datum EPSG:4326
Supplied datum: "WGS84"
Verbatim locality "[Denmark, Jutland,] W of Varde, Graerup Langso"
Coordinate precision Unknown
Coordinate uncertainty (in metres) 200.0
Terrestrial true
Biome TERRESTRIAL
Marine false
Country Code DK
Supplied as "DK, The nation of Denmark occupies the Jutland Peninsula, extending northwards from the center of western Europe, and some 400 islands to the east of it. It is bounded by the North Sea to the west, the Baltic Sea to the east, Germany to the south, and the strait between it and Norway and Sweden to the north. It measures some 16,639 square miles in area, not counting the independent territories of the Faeroe Islands and Greenland. The area was a seat of changing cultures in Stone, Bronze and Iron Ages. From the ninth to the eleventh centuries, Danes took part in the Viking raiding, trading, and colonizing expeditions that shaped much of Europe. The kingdom of Denmark ruled much of the Baltic Sea in the 12th and 13th centuries. The boundaries of the kingdom changed often between the 14th and19th centuries, most recently in 1920. The late 19th century saw a time of depression in which Danish farmers established cooperatives and the rural population became highly literature as a result of the establishment of folk high schools. The Danish tradition of social cooperation and humane governmental institutions began around this time. Denmark was occupied militarily by Germany in World War II, but resisted with some success until the local government fell in 1943; organized resistance continued however until freedom in May of 1945. The official language is Danish, a derivative of Old Scandinavian, though English and German are also spoken. Agriculture is an important economic activity, with 60% of the land under intense cultivation, about half of that devoted to grains such as wheat and barley. The raising of sugar beets and of domestic livestock such as dairy cattle, poultry, and swine are also very important. Fishing is done in the North and Baltic Seas as well as in foreign waters far abroad. Mineral exploitation consists largely of the mining of granite, kaolin, and various clays used in the production of building materials. The major manufactures are of electronic equipment, paper, machinery and equipment, processed foods, footwear, clothing, and furniture. The capital city is Copenhagen on the island of Zeeland. The 2004 estimated population was 5,405,600."

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