Widespread sampling biases in herbaria revealed from large‐scale digitization

Barnabas H. Daru(Harvard University), Charles C. Davis(Harvard University), Tristram G. Seidler(University of Massachusetts Amherst), David S. Barrington(Missouri Botanical Garden), Timothy J. S. Whitfeld(Brown University), Patrick W. Sweeney(American Museum of Natural History), Richard B. Primack(Boston University), Aaron M. Ellison(Harvard University), Charles G. Willis(Harvard University), Daniel Park(Harvard University), David R. Foster(Harvard University)
New Phytologist
October 30, 2017
Cited by 412


Related Papers

Angiosperm phylogeny: 17 genes, 640 taxa
|American Journal of Botany|2011|727
The deepest divergences in land plants inferred from phylogenomic evidence
|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|2006|664
Phylogenetic patterns of species loss in Thoreau's woods are driven by climate change
|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|2008|628
Rosid radiation and the rapid rise of angiosperm-dominated forests
|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|2009|448