Login / Signup

Using online databases to produce comprehensive accounts of the vascular plants from the Brazilian protected areas: The Parque Nacional do Itatiaia as a case study.

Marina M MoreiraRafaela Campostrini ForzzaAnderson G Alves-AraújoAndré M A AmorimAlessandro RapiniAndrews V S da SilvaBraz A P CosenzaClaudia R LopesCamila N DelgadoCíntia KameyamaDayvid R CoutoDaniel E F BarbosaDaniele MonteiroDiego R GonzagaEduardo C DalcinElsie F GuimarãesElton John de LírioFernando B MatosFátima R G SalimenaFelipe Alves OliveiraGustavo HeidenJoão Monnerat LannaJosé Fernando BaumgratzJosé F B PastoreJuliana R P M OliveiraLaísa B BarcelosLana S SylvestreLeandro FreitasLeandro Lacerda GiacominLeandro Cardoso PederneirasLeonardo D MeirelesLúcia G LohmannLuciana C PereiraLuís Alexandre Estevão da SilvaLuiz M NetoMarcelo C SouzaMarcelo TrovóMarcos E G SobralMário Luís GarbinMario GomesMarli P MorimMichelle Christine A MotaPaulo H LabiakPedro L VianaPedro Luís R de MoraesRenato GoldenbergRubens Luiz G CoelhoSamyra G FurtadoSebastião José da Silva-NetoThiago B FloresValquíria F DutraVinícius R Bueno
Published in: Biodiversity data journal (2020)
The "Parque Nacional do Itatiaia" houses 13% of the angiosperm and 37% of the fern species known from the Brazilian Atlantic Forest. Amongst these species, 82 have been cited as threatened, following IUCN categories (CR, EN or VU), seven are data deficient (DD) and 15 have been classified as a conservation priority, because they are only known from a single specimen collected before 1969.
Keyphrases
  • big data
  • climate change
  • electronic health record
  • social media
  • health information
  • healthcare
  • machine learning