← Back to work
Works cited by this work
42 works
Work: The colonial legacy of herbaria
Plant and fungal collections: Current status, future perspectives
Alan Paton, Alexandre Antonelli, Mark A. Carine +19
Article20204 citationsABIData integration enables global biodiversity synthesis
J. Mason Heberling, Joseph T. Miller, Daniel Noesgaard +2
Article20213 citationsABISampling biases shape our view of the natural world
Alice C. Hughes, Michael C. Orr, Keping Ma +6
Article20213 citationsABILeaf functional response to increasing atmospheric CO<sub>2</sub> concentrations over the last century in two northern Amazonian tree species: a historical <i>δ</i><sup>13</sup>C and <i>δ</i><sup>18</sup>O approach using herbarium samples
Damien Bonal, Stéphane Ponton, Didier Le Thiec +8
Article20112 citationsABINotes on CEPII’s Distances Measures: The GeoDist Database
Thierry Mayer, Soledad Zignago
Article20112 citationsABIscience and colonial expansion: the role of the British Royal Botanic Gardens
Article19792 citationsABIBiodiversity inventory and informatics in Southeast Asia
Campbell O. Webb, J. W. Ferry Slik, Teguh Triono
Article20102 citationsABIOld Plants, New Tricks: Phenological Research Using Herbarium Specimens
Charles G. Willis, Elizabeth R. Ellwood, Richard B. Primack +9
Review article20172 citationsABIWidespread sampling biases in herbaria revealed from large‐scale digitization
Barnabas H. Daru, Daniel Park, Richard B. Primack +8
Article20172 citationsABIUsing herbaria to study global environmental change
Patricia L. M. Lang, Franziska M. Willems, J. F. Scheepens +2
Article20182 citationsABISpatial and topical imbalances in biodiversity research
Laura Tydecks, Jonathan M. Jeschke, Max Wolf +2
Article20182 citationsABIExamining the spectra of herbarium uses and users
Mark A. Carine, Edgley A. César, L. T. Ellis +7
Article20182 citationsABI