Benjamin Carter

Studying Climate Change With Plant Diversity DataBenjamin Carter

The Carl W. Sharsmith on-campus herbarium, tucked away in Duncan Hall, is a little known 皇冠体育博彩 treasure that houses preserved plant specimens, along with data including when and where the specimens were collected. Sharing this information across many herbaria is critical to the field, leading to a better understanding of which species are threatened by habitat destruction or climate change. Benjamin Carter and his students are leveraging this unique trove of information by generating a specimen image database that will be folded into the UC Berkeley California Consortium of Herbaria. The resulting compilation of images will be accessible to anyone in the world. Researchers鈥攁nd the broader public鈥攚ill be able to contribute to climate change research by collecting data from these images. Carter鈥檚 interest in plant diversity began during his undergraduate studies at California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo, where he was heavily influenced by his botany professor, David Keil. 鈥淗e has an absolutely encyclopedic understanding of California plants鈥攖heir names, where each one lives, their particular preferences for different kinds of habitats鈥 but he has retained his sense of wonder at discovering new things. He taught me the importance and also the rewards of building a deep personal knowledge of the natural world.鈥 


 

Ilbert Bourang

Ilbert Bourang, 鈥19 Biology (concentration in Systems Physiology) places a plant specimen in a custom-built lightbox that will capture a high resolution image of the specimen for use in climate change research.


Biological Sciences, College of Science 
Sponsor: National Science Foundation 


皇冠体育博彩 Research Foundation 2019 Annual Report