Looking Back on 130 Years of Fern and Lycophyte Research in Glacier National Park, Montana: A Modern Taxonomic Account

Glacier National Park encompasses over one million acres in the mountains of northwestern Montana, along the United States–Canada border. Our survey of online databases indicates that the earliest extant fern and lycophyte collections from this area were taken by Robert S. Williams in 1892. In the s...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:American Fern Journal
Main Authors: Keegan Heron, Michael D. Windham, Donald R. Farrar, Kathleen M. Pryer
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: The American Fern Society 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1640/0002-8444-111.4.223
id ftbioone:10.1640/0002-8444-111.4.223
record_format openpolar
spelling ftbioone:10.1640/0002-8444-111.4.223 2023-07-30T04:03:40+02:00 Looking Back on 130 Years of Fern and Lycophyte Research in Glacier National Park, Montana: A Modern Taxonomic Account Keegan Heron Michael D. Windham Donald R. Farrar Kathleen M. Pryer Keegan Heron Michael D. Windham Donald R. Farrar Kathleen M. Pryer world 2021-11-05 text/HTML https://doi.org/10.1640/0002-8444-111.4.223 en eng The American Fern Society doi:10.1640/0002-8444-111.4.223 All rights reserved. https://doi.org/10.1640/0002-8444-111.4.223 herbarium online portal databases Paul C. Standley Peter Lesica Text 2021 ftbioone https://doi.org/10.1640/0002-8444-111.4.223 2023-07-09T11:03:06Z Glacier National Park encompasses over one million acres in the mountains of northwestern Montana, along the United States–Canada border. Our survey of online databases indicates that the earliest extant fern and lycophyte collections from this area were taken by Robert S. Williams in 1892. In the summer of 1919, Paul C. Standley, a botanist with the United States National Museum, conducted a survey of the flora of the newly created Park and recorded 39 species of ferns and lycophytes. In 2002, a revised flora for the Park by Peter Lesica increased this number to 61. Here we summarize 130 years of collections-based research on the ferns and lycophytes of Glacier National Park, documenting how our understanding of the flora has changed through time. In the summer of 2019, the lead author conducted a field survey to relocate as many ferns and lycophytes as possible within park boundaries. In parallel, we scoured herbarium online portals and databases for high-resolution digitized specimen images to confirm or refute historical vouchers of ferns and lycophytes collected from the Park. In a few cases, specimen loans were requested from herbaria to confirm our determinations. The results from our combined field and online herbarium studies are presented here. Of the 61 taxa recognized by Lesica in 2002, we were able to confirm all but seven. In sum, we recognize here a total of 71 fern and lycophyte taxa for the Park. Most previously unreported taxa belong to Botrychium, a genus that has seen a flurry of recent taxonomic work by co-author Farrar and collaborators. These new data are presented here together with updated nomenclature and discussion to provide a current taxonomic account of the fourteen fern and lycophyte families known to occur in Glacier National Park. We anticipate this study will provide a useful foundation for further investigations in the Park. Text glacier* BioOne Online Journals Canada American Fern Journal 111 4
institution Open Polar
collection BioOne Online Journals
op_collection_id ftbioone
language English
topic herbarium online portal databases
Paul C. Standley
Peter Lesica
spellingShingle herbarium online portal databases
Paul C. Standley
Peter Lesica
Keegan Heron
Michael D. Windham
Donald R. Farrar
Kathleen M. Pryer
Looking Back on 130 Years of Fern and Lycophyte Research in Glacier National Park, Montana: A Modern Taxonomic Account
topic_facet herbarium online portal databases
Paul C. Standley
Peter Lesica
description Glacier National Park encompasses over one million acres in the mountains of northwestern Montana, along the United States–Canada border. Our survey of online databases indicates that the earliest extant fern and lycophyte collections from this area were taken by Robert S. Williams in 1892. In the summer of 1919, Paul C. Standley, a botanist with the United States National Museum, conducted a survey of the flora of the newly created Park and recorded 39 species of ferns and lycophytes. In 2002, a revised flora for the Park by Peter Lesica increased this number to 61. Here we summarize 130 years of collections-based research on the ferns and lycophytes of Glacier National Park, documenting how our understanding of the flora has changed through time. In the summer of 2019, the lead author conducted a field survey to relocate as many ferns and lycophytes as possible within park boundaries. In parallel, we scoured herbarium online portals and databases for high-resolution digitized specimen images to confirm or refute historical vouchers of ferns and lycophytes collected from the Park. In a few cases, specimen loans were requested from herbaria to confirm our determinations. The results from our combined field and online herbarium studies are presented here. Of the 61 taxa recognized by Lesica in 2002, we were able to confirm all but seven. In sum, we recognize here a total of 71 fern and lycophyte taxa for the Park. Most previously unreported taxa belong to Botrychium, a genus that has seen a flurry of recent taxonomic work by co-author Farrar and collaborators. These new data are presented here together with updated nomenclature and discussion to provide a current taxonomic account of the fourteen fern and lycophyte families known to occur in Glacier National Park. We anticipate this study will provide a useful foundation for further investigations in the Park.
author2 Keegan Heron
Michael D. Windham
Donald R. Farrar
Kathleen M. Pryer
format Text
author Keegan Heron
Michael D. Windham
Donald R. Farrar
Kathleen M. Pryer
author_facet Keegan Heron
Michael D. Windham
Donald R. Farrar
Kathleen M. Pryer
author_sort Keegan Heron
title Looking Back on 130 Years of Fern and Lycophyte Research in Glacier National Park, Montana: A Modern Taxonomic Account
title_short Looking Back on 130 Years of Fern and Lycophyte Research in Glacier National Park, Montana: A Modern Taxonomic Account
title_full Looking Back on 130 Years of Fern and Lycophyte Research in Glacier National Park, Montana: A Modern Taxonomic Account
title_fullStr Looking Back on 130 Years of Fern and Lycophyte Research in Glacier National Park, Montana: A Modern Taxonomic Account
title_full_unstemmed Looking Back on 130 Years of Fern and Lycophyte Research in Glacier National Park, Montana: A Modern Taxonomic Account
title_sort looking back on 130 years of fern and lycophyte research in glacier national park, montana: a modern taxonomic account
publisher The American Fern Society
publishDate 2021
url https://doi.org/10.1640/0002-8444-111.4.223
op_coverage world
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre glacier*
genre_facet glacier*
op_source https://doi.org/10.1640/0002-8444-111.4.223
op_relation doi:10.1640/0002-8444-111.4.223
op_rights All rights reserved.
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1640/0002-8444-111.4.223
container_title American Fern Journal
container_volume 111
container_issue 4
_version_ 1772814708185759744