Occurrence record: CBG 8605570.1
Dataset
Data partner | Australia's Virtual Herbarium |
Data resource | Centre for Australian National Biodiversity Research (CANB) AVH data |
Institution code |
Centre for Australian National Biodiversity Research
Supplied institution code "CANB" |
Collection |
Australian National Herbarium
Supplied collection code "CANB" |
Catalog number | CBG 8605570.1 |
Record type |
Preserved specimen
Supplied basis "PreservedSpecimen" |
Preparations | sheet |
Identified by | Jones, D.L. |
Collector |
Clements, M.A.
Supplied as "Clements, M.A." |
Record number | 4426 |
Associated Occurrence Status | Asserted duplicates |
Associated occurrences |
The occurrence is associated with a representative record.
For more information see Inferred associated occurrence details |
License | CC-BY 4.0 (Int) Supplied as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode |
Language | en |
Type | PhysicalObject |
Presence/Absence | PRESENT Supplied as present |
Associated records | ASSOCIATED |
Disposition | in collection |
Occurrence remarks | Common. Saprophytic herb to 40cm, very brittle; flowers purple to red, spotted. Nature of sample: Leaf. Purpose: DNA analysis. Person: M.A.Clements. Date: 8/7/2019. Inst./Country: CANB. |
Date identified | 2002-10 |
Event
Occurrence date | 1986-12-28 |
Date precision | DAY |
Taxonomy
Scientific name |
Dipodium atropurpureum
Supplied scientific name "Dipodium atropurpureum D.L.Jones" |
Identified to rank | species |
Common name | Purple Hyacinth Orchid |
Kingdom | Plantae |
Phylum | Charophyta |
Class | Equisetopsida |
Order | Asparagales |
Family | Orchidaceae |
Genus | Dipodium |
Species | Dipodium atropurpureum |
Name match metric | exactMatch |
Scientific name authorship | D.L.Jones |
Name parse type | SCIENTIFIC |
Nomenclatural code | ICN |
Geospatial
Country | Australia |
State or Territory | New South Wales |
Locality | c. 10km NE fo Dorrigo road turnoff on New England to Grafton road, top of range. |
Habitat |
Supplied as "Undulating to hilly ground, ridge top, E aspect. Brown clay loam.Tall Eucalyptus forest, stringy bark type, with a burnt grassy understorey. " |
Latitude |
-30.333333 Supplied as: "-30.333333333" |
Longitude |
152.383333 Supplied as: "152.383333333" |
Datum | EPSG:4326 |
Coordinate precision | Unknown |
County | Northern Tablelands |
Terrestrial | true |
Verbatim latitude | 30 20 S |
Biome | TERRESTRIAL |
Marine | false |
Country Code | AU |
Verbatim longitude | 152 23 E |
Referenced in publications
Publication: Curated Plant and Invertebrate Data for Bushfire Modelling
DOI https://doi.org/10.25919/tm4m-5a46
This data asset contains observations of individual plants and animals (“occurrences”) sourced from the Atlas of Living Australia. Data on vascular plants are based on the following paper: Godfree et al. (2021) Implications of the 2019-2020 Megafires for the Biogeography and Conservation of Australian Vegetation. Nature Communications 12: 1023 https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-21266-5 Data on invertebrates are from the following report: Marsh et al. (2021) Threatened species hub report: Assessment of the impacts of the 2019-20 wildfires on southern and eastern Australia on invertebrate species. NESP Threatened Species Recovery Hub Project 8.3.1 Final report, Brisbane. Both studies were performed to understand the impacts of the Australian “Black Summer” (2019-20) fires on the taxonomic group in question. Consequently, this aggregated dataset is designed to support off-the-shelf bushfire impact modelling, and to provide useful context for associated biodiversity conservation work. A total of 896 species of vascular plants and 44,146 invertebrate species. The combined data asset was produced by the Science & Decision Support Team at the Atlas of living Australia (ALA) in collaboration with the authors of the original data sets. This was done as part of an Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC) bushfire data challenges project. The data contained in this deposition has been cleaned by researchers and taxonomists to ensure it is of high quality. Therefore, compared to data returned by the ALA, the unique record ID’s may return a different species or location than is denoted in this data set: these records have potentially been changed by the authors of the data to reflect what they believe is correct.
Version of the data used in the publication
Scientific name | Dipodium atropurpureum |
Decimal latitude | -30.3333 |
Decimal longitude | 152.3833 |
Year | 1986 |
Month | 12 |
Data quality tests
Test name | Result |
Coordinate rounded | Warning |
Coordinate uncertainty meters invalid | Warning |
Geodetic datum assumed WGS84 | Warning |
Show/Hide 93 passed properties | |
Show/Hide 6 missing properties | |
Show/Hide 22 tests that have not been run |
Inferred associated occurrence details
This record is associated with the representative record. This mean another record has been detected to be similar to this record, and that the other record (the representative record) has the most detailed information for the occurrence. More information about the duplication detection methods and terminology in use is available here:
Representative Record | |||
Record UUID | 0903d61f-27b4-4b24-b2af-97aa8744ac32 | ||
Data Resource | Centre for Australian National Biodiversity Research (CANB) AVH data | ||
Raw Scientific Name | Dipodium atropurpureum D.L.Jones | ||
Coordinates | -30.333333,152.383333 | ||
Related records | |||
Record UUID | cac6e9dc-b547-485d-824d-4053528831e6 | ||
Data Resource | Centre for Australian National Biodiversity Research (CANB) AVH data | ||
Raw Scientific Name | Dipodium atropurpureum D.L.Jones | ||
Coordinates | -30.333333,152.383333 |