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Systematics and Evolution (HA)

Computer identification tool for Australian Pea Flowers

Swainsona galegifolia

THE PEA KEY: An interactive key for Australian Pea-flowered Legumes

The pea-flowered legumes, the Fabaceae (with more than 1500 species) form an important part of the flora of Australia. The family is currently being treated for the Flora of Australia by a number of researchers, postdoctoral fellows and students from around Australia. Capitalising on that collaborative effort, the legume researchers at the Australian National Herbarium and the Centre for Plant Biodiversity Research initiated and have coordinated this project to build an interactive key to all the pea-flowered legumes of Australia - the Pea Key. A character list developed as the result of a workshop held at the Centre in late 1999, was used by the participants to code ~ 500 species.

With support from the Australian Biological Resources Study (ABRS) during 2000-01 a coordinator scored all the remaining taxa. The overall collaborative effort has enabled the coding of c. 1460 taxa of Australian Peas.

The Pea Key, which was originally conceived as a research tool covering the taxa in the tribes Mirbelieae, Bossiaeeae and Brongniartieae, has evolved into a more extended identification tool to all the pea-flowered legumes of Australia. It is now an identification system, developed using Lucid software, for all Australian native (presumed to be present in Australia prior to 1788) and naturalised (introduced species with self-maintaining 'wild' populations) species and sub-specific taxa. Every effort has been made to include the most up-to-date taxonomic information, although the state of knowledge of many legume genera is rather lacking. When many of the active projects of the Australian Pea-flowered Legume Research Group come to fruition, it is anticipated that these results will be incorporated into the Pea Key.

2008 Report

The Pea Key is still in development, but in its final form it will provide an efficient and accessible means to identify all of Australia’s pea-flowered legumes, whether native or naturalised. The final product should be of value to a range of people from professional botanists and resource managers through to students, horticulturalists and interested amateurs and will help to foster an understanding and appreciation of this interesting and important element of Australia’s biological diversity.

We aim to publish on the web by July 2008, with CDs sold on demand. The likely publisher is the Centre for Biological Information Technology (CBIT) part of the University of Queensland.

^ CSIRO Canberra
* Tropical Herbarium, Cairns
# SEWPaC (ANBG)
(PDF) = Postdoctoral Fellowship
(HRF) = Honorary Research Fellows
(PhD) = Graduate Students

Scientific and Technical Staff

PROJECT LEADER

Miller, Joe ^

STAFF, HONORARY ASSOCIATES & STUDENTS

Biffin, Ed (PDF Adelaide Uni)
Cowley, Kirsten ^
Duffy, Siobhan (CSIRO PI Graphic Designer)
Lally, Terena ^
Monro, Anna ^
Pfeil, Bernard ^
West, Judy
#

The Australian Pea-flowered Legume Research Group (from a range of institutions)

Rogier de Kok (Original Coordinator)
Ed Biffin (Coordinator)
Ryonen Butcher
Greg Chandler
Jenny Chappill (dec.)
Ian Cowie


Mike Crisp
Peter Jobson
Terena Lally
Anna Monro
Bernard Pfeil


Jim Ross
Ian Thompson
Judy West
Peter Weston
Peter Wilson

 

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