2012-10-02
GeoSpecies Ontology
Peter J. DeVries
This is an early version of the new ontology. Use it as a vocabulary, since is still under development. The demonstration SPARQL queries will work without the ontology loaded into your triple store.
hasPhotoCollection
hasSpeciesAssociation
hasBBCHabitatPreference
hasBBC_Ecozone
hasBBC_Habitat
hasBio2RDFtaxon
hasBioLibPage
hasBugGuidePage
hasCoL_LSID
Catalog of Life LSID
hasCollector
hasContinent
hasCountry
hasCounty
hasDBpediaResource
hasEOLPage
hasExpectationOf
hasFamilyInfoContributor
FreebaseResource
hasGBIFPage
hasGeoSpeciesConcept
hasGeodeticDatum
hasHumanCollector
hasHumanIdentifier
hasITISPage
hasLocality
hasLocation
hasLowExpectationOf
hasLowUSDA_ExpectationOf
hasNoUSDA_ExpectationOf
hasNomenclaturalCode
hasObservation
hasObservationMethod
hasObservationOf
hasOccurrenceStatus
hasOmernik_3_Ecozone
hasOmernik_4_Ecozone
hasProject
hasSex
hasSpecies
hasStateProv
hasTDWG_Concept
hasTaxonConcept
hasTaxonomicStatus
hasTypeStatus
hasUSDA_ExpectationOf
hasUUID
hasUbio_LSID
uBio NameBankID
hasUnknownExpectationOf
It is unknown if the taxon is expected in feature or not.
hasWI_Herbarium_Habitat
hasWikipediaArticle
hasWikispeciesArticle
hasWisconsinHerbariumHabitatAssociation
hasWisconsinHerbariumHabitatPreference
hasWisconsinHerbariumSpeciesAssociation
has_USDA_Growth_Habit
has_USDA_Native_Status
inClass
inFamily
inKingdom
inOrder
inPhylum
isBugGuidePageOf
isExpectedIn
isNotUSDA_ExpectedIn
isUSDA_ExpectedIn
isUSDA_UnexpectedIn
isUnexpectedIn
isUnknownIn
hasHabitatAssociation
wasObservedIn
homepage
hasBBC_EcozoneName
hasBasionymName
hasBioLib
hasCanonicalName
hasClassName
hasCollectionCode
hasCommonName
hasContinentName
hasCountryCode
hasCountryName
hasCountyName
hasEndDate
hasEndDayOfYear
hasFamilyName
hasGBIF
hasGNI
hasGenusName
hasHumanCollector
hasHumanIdentifierName
hasITIS
hasInfraspecificEpithet
hasKingdomName
hasLocalityName
hasLocalityText
hasLocationName
hasLocationName
hasNCBITaxonID
hasNomenclaturalCodeString
hasOrderName
hasPhylumName
hasScientificName
hasScientificNameAuthorship
hasScientificNameRank
hasSpecificEpithet
hasStartDate
hasStartDayOfYear
hasStateProvName
hasStateProvinceName
hasSubfamilyName
hasSubgenusName
hasTreeBaseID
hasVernacularName
L2
Oc
S
SpeciesIndividual
Txn
Webpage
http://purl.org/ontology/bibo/Website
BBCPage
BBC_Ecozone
From BBC Nature Project: "Ecozones are a method of dividing up the Earth's surface. Each ecozone is a large area that contains a number of habitats, which are linked by the evolutionary history of the animals and plants within them. For instance one ecozone is Australasia, because its marsupials evolved in isolation to mammals in the rest of the world."
http://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/ecozones
BBC_Freshwater_Habitats
BBC_Habitat_Classification
BBC_Marine_Habitats
BBC_Terrestrial_Habitats
BasisOfRecord
Bio2RDFtaxon
BBCPage
BioLibPage
BugGuidePage
ClassConcept
CoL_LSID
Continent
Country
County
DBpediaResource
DarwinPoint
A Darwin Point is an occurrence location that meets the DarwinCore specifications for longitude, latitude, datum, extent, etc as described in "Guide to Best Practices for Georeferencing"
Ecozone
EoLPage
FamilyConcept
FreebaseGUID
GBIFPage
GeoSpeciesPage
GeoSpeciesScheme
GeodeticDatum
Habitat
ITISPage
HabitatIUCN
IndividualOrganism
KingdomConcept
LSID
LifeForm
LifeStage
Locality
Location
A location, would be a subclass of geonames feature, but it will not always have a geonames feature id
Nativeness
Observation
ObservationMethod
OccurrenceStatus
Omernik Ecoregion Classification
Omernik_Level_Three_Classification
The ecoregions shown here have been derived from Omernik (1987) and from refinements of Omernik's framework that have been made for other projects. These ongoing or recently completed projects, conducted in collaboration with the U.S. EPA regional offices, state resource management agencies, and with other federal agencies, involve refining ecoregions, defining subregions, and locating sets of reference sites. Designed to serve as a spatial framework for environmental resource management, ecoregions denote areas within which ecosystems (and the type, quality, and quantity of environmental resources) are generally similar. The most immediate needs are to develop regional biological criteria and water quality standards and to set management goals for nonpoint source pollution.
The approach used to compile this map is based on the premise that ecological regions can be identified through the analysis of the patterns and the composition of biotic and abiotic phenomena that affect or reflect differences in ecosystem quality and integrity (Wiken 1986; Omernik 1987, 1995). These phenomena include geology, physiography, vegetation, climate, soils, land use, wildlife, and hydrology. The relative importance of each characteristic varies from one ecological region to another regardless of the hierarchical level. Because of possible confusion with other meanings of terms for different levels of ecological regions, a Roman numeral classification scheme has been adopted for this effort. Level I is the coarsest level, dividing North America into 15 ecological regions, whereas at Level II the continent is subdivided into 52 classes (CEC 1997). Level III is the hierarchical level shown on this map. For portions of the United States the ecoregions have been further subdivided to Level IV. The applications of the ecoregions are explained in Gallant et al. (1989) and in reports and publications from the state and regional projects.
For additional information, contact James M. Omernik, U.S. EPA National Health and Environmental Effects Laboratory (NHEERL), 200 SW 35th Street, Corvallis, OR 97333 (phone: 541-754-4458 and email: omernik.james@epa.gov).
Omernik_Level_Four_Classification
Ecoregions denote areas of general similarity in ecosystems and in the type, quality, and quantity of environmental resources. The level IV state projects depict revisions and subdivisions of ecoregions, that were compiled at a relatively small scale (Omernik 1987). Compilation of the level IV maps, performed at the larger 1:250,000 scale, has been a part of collaborative projects between United States Environmental Protection Agency, National Health and Environmental Effects Laboratory (NHEERL)--Corvallis, OR, the U.S. Forest Service, Natural Resources Conservation Service, and a variety of other state and federal resource agencies. The ecoregions and subregions are designed to serve as a spatial framework for environmental resource management. The most immediate needs by the states are for developing regional biological criteria and water resource standards, and for setting management goals for nonpoint-source pollution. Explanation of the methods used to delineate the ecoregions are given in Omernik (1995), Griffith et al. (1994), and Gallant et al. (1989). This series of maps has been produced as part of a regional interagency collaborative project aimed at obtaining consensus between the EPA, the NRCS, and the USFS regarding alignments of ecological regions.
OpenCycConcept
A OpenCyc resource
OrderConcept
PhotoCollection
PhylumConcept
Project
Sex
SpeciesConcept
State
State or Province
TaxonConcept
TaxonRank
taxonomicStatus
ThreatStatusIUCN
TypeStatus
USDA_Growth_Habit
Native Jurisdiction Code
USDA_Native_Status
USDA_Plants_Characteristics
From USDA Plants Project: "We have Characteristics for about 2000 conservation plant species and 500 additional cultivars. (A cultivar is a variety, strain, or race that has originated and persisted under cultivation or was specifically developed for cultivation; cultivar is the cultivated plant equivalent of botanical variety.) Mostly we have species (not cultivar) data since conservation plants are primarily native plants without named cultivars. We also have this species data for most of the plants that have cultivar data, and the data ranges for a species generally encompass the ranges for its cultivar(s). In a few cases we have cultivar data only.
These data have been gathered from the scientific literature, gray literature, agency documents, and the knowledge of plant specialists. Characteristics data values are best viewed as approximations since they are primarily based on field observations and estimates from the literature, not precise measurements or experiments. Characteristics for the many conservation plant species native to the U.S. were typically provided by experts familiar with the species in its natural setting. Most values given apply to plants nationwide. Many values are relative to other species since absolute figures are not available"
UUID
Ubio_LSID
UniprotTaxon
WikipediaArticle
WikispeciesArticle
Wisconsin Herbarium Habitat Classification
C.E. Umbanhowar, Jr.'s revised "Vegetation of Wisconsin Habitats" as originally defined by J.T. Curtis (Wisconsin Plant Ecology Laboratory Data (PEL))
The descriptions under each major habitat type were written by Eric J. Epstein, Emmet J. Judziewicz, and Elizabeth Spencer of the Natural Heritage Inventory (NHI), Bureau of Endangered Resources, Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources for the forthcoming Habitat Database of Endangered, Theatened, and Special Concern Vascular Plants, and must be considered tentative. They were condensed and summarized for the Curtis-Umbanhowar classification by Judziewicz. Not all NHI type as currently recognized are included in the preliminary classification below.
Wisconsin_Natural_Heritage_Inventory Habitat_Classification
Feature
An entity that has a geonames feature id
Project2
http://lod.geospecies.org/
Afrotropics
Antarctica
Australasia
Indo-Malay
Nearctic
Neotropical
Oceania
Palaearctic
Brackish water
Lakes and ponds
Marsh
Rivers and streams
Swamp
Temporary pools
Wetlands
Deep ocean
Estuaries
Hydrothermal vents
Open ocean
Reefs
Sea bed
Shallow seas
Broadleaf forest
Coastal
Coniferous forest
Desert
Flooded grassland
Mangroves
Mediterranean forest
Mountain grassland
Polar
Rainforest
Taiga
Temperate grassland
Tropical coniferous forest
Tropical dry forest
Tropical grassland
BasisOfRecord_FossilSpecimen
BasisOfRecord_HumanObservation
BasisOfRecord_LivingSpecimen
BasisOfRecord_MachineObservation
BasisOfRecord_MovingImage
BasisOfRecord_NomenclaturalChecklist
basisOfRecord_PreservedSpecimen
BasisOfRecord_Sound
BasisOfRecord_StillImage
GeoSpecies_Knowledge_Base_Project
http://people.geospecies.org/projects/GeoSpecies_Knowledge_Base/index.rdf
GeodeticDatum_NAD27
GeodeticDatum_NAD83
GeodeticDatum_WGS84
The Geodetic Datum WGS84
Method_Above_Ground_Sticky_Trap
Method_Aerial_Collection_Net
Method_Barrier_Trap
Method_Berlese_Sample
Method_CO2_Suction_Trap
Method_Cantharidin_Baited_Jar_Trap
Method_Chicken_Mash_Baited_Trap
Method_Flight_Intercept_Trap
Method_Ground_Based_Sticky_Trap
Method_Hand_Collected
Method_Hand_Collected_and_Released
Method_Human_Bite_Collection
Method_Human_Observation
Method_Light_and_CO2_Suction_Trap
Method_Malaise_Trap
Method_Photographed
Method_Pitfall_Trap
Method_Sweep_Net
Method_UV_Light_Trap
Method_Vacuum_Collector
Method_Visible_Light_Trap
BioCode
International Code of Botanical Nomenclature
NomenclaturalCode_ICBN
International Code of Nomenclature of Bacteria
International Code of Cultivated Plants
NomenclaturalCode_ICNCP
International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses
NomenclaturalCode_ICVCN
International Code of Zoological Nomenclature
NomenclaturalCode_ICZN
OccurrenceStatus_absent
OccurrenceStatus_common
OccurrenceStatus_doubtful
OccurrenceStatus_irregular
OccurrenceStatus_present
OccurrenceStatus_rare
Omernik_3_Western Corn Belt Plains
Omernik_4_Northern Lakes and Forests
50
The Northern Lakes and Forests (50) is an ecoregion of relatively nutrient poor glacial soils, coniferous and northern hardwoods forests, undulating till plains, morainal hills, broad lacustrine basins, and areas of extensive sandy outwash plains. Soils are formed primarily from sandy and loamy glacial drift material and generally lack the arability of those in adjacent ecoregions to the south. Ecoregion 50 also has lower annual temperatures and a frost-free period that is
considerably shorter than other ecoregions in Wisconsin. These conditions generally hinder agriculture; therefore, woodland and forest are the predominant land use/land cover. The numerous lakes that dot the landscape are clearer, at a lower trophic state (mostly oligotrophic to mesotrophic with few eutrophic lakes), and less productive than those in ecoregions to the south. Streams of ecoregion 50 are mostly perennial, originating in lakes and wetlands; however, stream density is relatively low compared to ecoregions to the south. The Northern Lakes and Forests region is the only ecoregion in Wisconsin where acid sensitive lakes are found. Portions of the southern boundary of ecoregion 50 roughly correspond to the southernmost extent of lakes with alkalinity values less than 400 meq/l (Omernik and Griffith 1986).
Omernik_3_North_Central_Hardwood_Forests
51
The North Central Hardwoods Forests (51) ecoregion is transitional between the predominantly forested Northern Lakes and Forests (50) and the agricultural ecoregions to the south. Nearly level to rolling till plains, lacustrine basins, outwash plains, and rolling to hilly moraines comprise the physiography of this region. The land use/land cover in this ecoregion consists of a mosaic of forests, wetlands and lakes, cropland agriculture, pasture, and dairy operations. The growing season is generally longer and warmer than that of ecoregion 50 to the north, and the soils are more arable and fertile, contributing to the greater agricultural component of the land use. Lake densities are generally lower here than in the Northern Lakes and Forests, and lake trophic states tend to be higher, with higher percentages in eutrophic and hypereutrophic classes. Stream density is highly variable, with some areas having virtually no streams--in wetland and kettle terrain--to others with high densities of perennial streams.
Omernik_3_Driftless_Area
53
The hilly uplands of the Driftless Area (52) ecoregion easily distinguish it from surrounding ecoregions. Much of the area consists of a deeply dissected loess-capped plateau. Also called the Paleozoic Plateau because there is evidence of glacial drift in this region, the glacial deposits have done little to affect the landscape compared to the subduing influences in adjacent ecoregions. Livestock and dairy farming are major land uses and have had a major impact on stream quality. In contrast to the adjacent glaciated ecoregions, the Driftless Area has few lakes, most of which are reservoirs with generally high trophic states, and a stream density and flow that is generally greater than regions to the east.
Omernik_3_Southeastern_Wisconsin_Till_Plains
53
The Southeastern Wisconsin Till Plains (53) ecoregion supports a mosaic of vegetation types and represents a transition between the hardwood forests and oak savannas of the ecoregions to the west and the tall-grass prairies of the Central Corn Belt Plains (54) to the south. Similar to the Corn Belt Plains (54) ecoregion, land use in the Southeastern Wisconsin Till Plains (53) is mostly cropland, but the crops historically have been largely forage and feed grains to support dairy operations, rather than corn and soybeans for cash crops. The ecoregion has a higher plant hardiness value than ecoregions to the north and west, a different mosaic of soils than western ecoregions, and flatter topography. There are fewer lakes here than in ecoregions to the north, but considerably more than in the western Driftless Area (52) and the southern Central Corn Belt Plains (47). The region also has a relatively high diversity of aquatic species.
Omernik_3_Central Corn Belt Plains
54
Prairie communities were native to the glaciated Central Corn Belt Plains, and they were a stark contrast to the hardwood forests that grew on the drift plains of ecoregions to the east. Beginning in the nineteenth century, the natural vegetation was gradually replaced by agriculture. Farms are now extensive on the dark, fertile soils of the Central Corn Belt Plains 54, producing corn and soybeans, cattle, sheep, poultry, and especially hogs. However, livestock operations are not as dominant as in the drier Western Corn Belt Plains to the west. Agriculture has affected stream chemistry, turbidity, and habitat. The extent of the Central Corn Belt Plains (54) ecoregion in Wisconsin is contained in a small area in the southeastern portion of the state. Land use of the ecoregion continues to change, from exclusively agriculture to a pattern with an increasing amount of urban and industrial land.
Omernik_4_Prairie Pothole Region
47g
The Prairie Pothole Region (47g) is characterized by smooth to undulating topography, productive prairie soils, and loess- and till-capped dolomite bedrock. The potential natural vegetation (PNV) is predominantly tall grass prairie with a gradual transition eastward to more mixed hardwoods, distinguishing 47g from the greater concentration of mixed hardwoods of both 51a to the north and 51b to the east, and the mixed prairie and oak savanna of 52b to the south.
Omernik_4_Lake Superior Clay Plain
50a
The Lake Superior Clay Plain (50a) is a flat to undulating lake plain and outwash lowland. The soils of 50a are generally calcareous red clays with organic deposits in swampy areas. A dearth of lakes, along with a somewhat milder climate and longer growing season due to the climate amelioration by Lake Superior, differentiates 50a from surrounding ecoregions. Land use in 50a is predominantly woodland with some limited agriculture of hay, small grains, and apples on Bayfield Peninsula, distinguishing 50a from most other level IV ecoregions in Northern Lakes and Forests (50) where the land use/land cover is predominantly forest and woodland. Ecoregion 50a has a PNV of boreal forest (although somewhat different than boreal forests to the north), unlike the pine barrens and pine forests of 50c, the mosaic of pine and birch in 50b, and the northern mesic forest of 50e.
Omernik_4_51a_St. Croix Pitted Stagnation Moraines
51a
The St. Croix Pitted Stagnation Moraines (51a) is a region of ground and stagnation moraines with broad irregular areas of hummocky topography. Soils are silty and loamy, with sandy loamy till commonly underlain by a substratum of acid sand and gravel glacial outwash. There are more lakes in 51a than in ecoregions to the east and south, and lake trophic states, although generally higher than in the region to the north, are lower than in the bordering ecoregion to the southeast. Land use in this region is a mix of agriculture and woodland, in contrast to the mostly woodland and forest land cover of ecoregions to the north and the greater amounts of agriculture in ecoregions to the southeast. The PNV of 51a includes aspen/birch/pine forests, oak-maple forests, and sugar-maple/birch/pine forests, representing a transition from the pines of 50b to the tall grass prairie and oak forests of 47g.
Omernik_4_Central_Wisconsin_Undulating_Till_Plain
51b
The Central Wisconsin Undulating Till Plain (51b) ecoregion has a greater percentage of agricultural land use than adjacent ecoregion 51a. The land cover mosaic of woodland and agriculture includes large areas of cropland that produce silage corn, oats, barley, and some apples. Ecoregion 51b has fewer lakes, with higher trophic states, than adjacent level IV ecoregions in ecoregion 51. The undulating to rolling irregular plains of sandy loam till and outwash sands also distinguish this ecoregion from the stagnation moraines of ecoregion 51a to the west and the lacustrine sand plains of ecoregion 51c to the south. This ecoregion has areas in the far east that are underlain with igneous metamorphic rock outcrops, and areas in the west and southwest that are underlain by sandstone and shale. Outcrops of sandstone comprise roughly 70% of the total area of the ecoregion. The region supports a transitional PNV mosaic of oak, hemlock/sugar maple/yellow birch, and white pine/red pine forests in the north, and more sugar maple/basswood/ oak forests to the south.
Omernik_4_Glacial_Lake_Wisconsin_Sand_Plain
51c
Compared to adjacent ecoregions, the Glacial Lake Wisconsin Sand Plain (51c) is an area of low relief. The droughty outwash, lacustrine and slope wash sands, sand buttes, and stream bottom and wetland soils support a PNV of jack pine/scrub-oak forests and barrens, along with sedge meadows and conifer swamps, which characterize this flat sandy lake plain. This PNV is in contrast to the predominantly white and black oak vegetation of ecoregion 51d. The region is also distinguished by its more extensive wetlands and a lack of natural lakes. Most of the existing lakes have been constructed for use in cranberry production. Land use in this region consists of woodland and agriculture, with crops including cranberries, strawberries, and potatoes.
Omernik_4_Central_Sand_Ridges
51d
The Central Sand Ridges (51d) ecoregion has the highest density of lakes with the lowest trophic states of all level IV ecoregions in the North Central Hardwood Forests (51). Pitted glacial outwash with extensive eskers and drumlins, ice contact deposits, rolling ground moraines, and steep end moraines distinguish this region from the flat lake plain of adjacent ecoregion 51c. The dry, sandy, and loamy till soils of the region support a PNV of oak savanna (white oak, black oak, and bur oak) with areas of sedge meadows, unlike the wetland vegetation and pine or oak barrens of ecoregion 51c and the mosaic of hemlock/beech/maple forests and mixed conifers of ecoregion 51e to the north.
Omernik_4_51e_Upper Wolf River Stagnation Moraine
51e
The Upper Wolf River Stagnation Moraine (51e) ecoregion is characterized by the hummocky ground and end moraines and pitted outwash, in contrast to the level till plains of ecoregion 51f to the east and the irregular till plain of ecoregion 51b to the west. This region supports a PNV mosaic of hemlock/beech/sugar-maple, wetland vegetation, and mixed conifers, as compared to the predominantly oak forests of 51d to the south. Land use in 51e is mixed agriculture/woodland with a larger area of extensive forest than adjacent level IV ecoregions in the North Central Hardwoods Forests (51). This is due to land use practices within the Menominee Indian Reservation; more forest cover is still intact, and agricultural practices are less significant. The lake trophic state in 51e is generally higher than in 51d to the south.
Omernik_4_51f_Green Bay Till and Lacustrine Plain
51f
Green Bay Till and Lacustrine Plain (51f) is a transitional ecoregion characterized by wetlands, a mix of outwash and loamy recessional moraines, with many areas of outwash plains in the northwest, lake plains and ground moraines in the south, and ground moraines throughout the rest of the region. The PNV of the region represents a shift from the predominantly northern hardwoods and conifer swamps along the lake shore to the maple/basswood/oak forests and oak savanna to the south. The red sandy, loamy soils of this ecoregion are similar to some southern areas in the northern Wisconsin/Michigan Pine Barrens (50k); however, due to the generally milder climate (because of proximity to Lake Michigan), the growing season is more favorable and much of the area has been cleared of natural vegetation and replaced by agriculture.
Omernik_4_Door_Peninsula
51g
The Door Peninsula (51g) ecoregion is a lakeshore region with ground moraines. The longer growing season and shallow, fertile, calcareous loamy till soils of this ecoregion support a mixed woodland/agriculture land use. Orchard and fruit crops, such as apples and cherries, are common. The bedrock geology of 51g is shallower than other ecoregions in 51 and consists primarily of Silurian dolomite bedrock. In recent years, this region has become popular for tourism.
Omernik_4_Savanna Section
52a
Topography in the Savanna Section (52a) of the Driftless Area is different than the rest of the level III ecoregion because of its characteristic broad, relatively level ridge tops and narrow steep sided valley bottoms. Elsewhere in the dissected Driftless Area, the landform mosaic comprises relatively broad, flat valley bottoms with steep sharper crested ridges or a pattern of nearly equal amounts of flatter areas in the valley bottoms and interfluves. The soils are well drained silty loess over residuum, dolostone, limestone, or sandstone. Land use patterns in the Driftless Area also follow spatial differences in slope; hence, 52a is predominantly agriculture on the uplands and some mixed woodland/agriculture in lowland areas. The PNV of the region is a mosaic of oak forests and savannas, large prairie grassland areas, and some sugar maple/basswood/oak forests. The region is also known for past lead and zinc mining.
Omernik_4_Paleozoic_Plateau_Coulee_Section
52b
Dissected slopes and open hills with most of the gentle slope on the lowland characterize the Coulee Section (52b) ecoregion. Soils are well drained silty loess over residuum, limestone, sandstone or shale, with soils over quartzite in the Baraboo Hills area. Land use in the region is predominantly mixed agriculture/woodland, with most of the griculture occurring on the lowlands and more level hilltops. The PNV of ecoregion 52b is a mosaic of oak forests and prairie, with larger areas of sugar maple/basswood/oak forests than in 52a.
Omernik_4_53a_Rock River Drift Plain
53a
The Rock River Drift Plain (53a) ecoregion has a greater stream density and fewer lakes than in ecoregions to the north and east. Glaciation of this region is older, late Pliocene-early Pleistocene, than in surrounding ecoregions. The drift mantle is thin and deeply weathered, with leached soils developed from a silt-loam cap of loess over glacial drift. Steeper topography and broad outwash plains with loamy and sandy soils also characterize this region.
Omernik_4_Kettle_Moraines
53b
The Kettle Moraines (53b) ecoregion contains a higher concentration of lakes with lower trophic states than in the rest of the Southeastern Wisconsin Till Plains (53). The soils are clayey to the east, especially along the Lake Michigan shore, and more sandy to the west, but generally less clayey than the soils in ecoregion 53d to the north. The region also contains extensive ground and end moraines and pitted outwash with belts of hilly moraines. It generally has greater relief than ecoregion 53d to the northeast.
Omernik_4_Southeastern_Wisconsin_Savannah_and_Till_Plain
53c
The till plains of the Southeastern Wisconsin Savanna and Till Plain (53c) ecoregion support a mix of agriculture (cropland and dairy operations) and woodland. Crops include forage crops to support the dairy operations and a wide range of truck and specialty crops. Most of the original vegetation has been cleared, with forested areas remaining only on steeper end moraines and poorly drained depressions. Irregular till plains, end moraines, kettles, and drumlins are common, and wetlands are found throughout the region, especially along end morainal ridges. PNV of this region is transitional with a mosaic of sugar maple, basswood, oak to the east, and an increasing amount of white, black, and bur oak, oak savanna, prairie, and sedge meadows toward the west.
Omernik_4_53d_Lake Michigan Lacustrine Clay Plain
53d
The Lake Michigan Lacustrine Clay Plain (53d) ecoregion is characterized by red calcareous clay soil, lacustrine and till deposits, and a flat plain. The topography is flatter than ecoregions to the south, and there are fewer lakes, but the lakes have generally higher trophic states than in adjacent level IV ecoregions in 50 and 51. Soils are generally silty and loamy over calcareous loamy till, with muck and loamy lacustrine soils in low-lying areas. Ecoregion 53d has prime farmland with a longer growing season and more fertile soils than surrounding ecoregions. Agriculture has a different mix of crops, with more fruits and vegetables, than that of ecoregion 53c. The PNV of this region is beech/sugar maple/basswood/red and white oak forests with a greater concentration of beech than other ecoregions in 53.
Omernik_4_Chiwaukee Prairie Region
54e
The Chiwaukee Prairie Region (54e) is characterized by intensive agriculture, prairie soils, loess capped loamy till, and lacustrine deposits. The soils of ecoregion 54e are fertile and generally more productive than those of ecoregion 53 to the north and west. The PNV of the Chiwaukee Prairie Region is predominantly tall-grass prairie, in contrast to the southern mesic forest and oak savanna of the adjacent region to the north and west. Most of the natural prairie vegetation of ecoregion 54e has been replaced with cropland or urban and industrial land cover.
female
Female (♀) is the sex of an organism, or a part of an organism, which produces mobile ova (egg cells).
hermaphrodite
one organism having both male and female sexual characteristics and organs; at birth an unambiguous assignment of male or female cannot be made
male
Male (♂) refers to the sex of an organism, or part of an organism, which produces small mobile gametes, called spermatozoa.
Sex Undetermined
Sex Unknowable
class
TaxonRank_cultivar
TaxonRank_cultivarGroup
domain
TaxonRank_family
TaxonRank_form
TaxonRank_genus
TaxonRank_infraorder
kingdom
TaxonRank_order
phylum
TaxonRank_section
TaxonRank_species
TaxonRank_speciesAggregate
subclass
TaxonRank_subfamily
TaxonRank_subform
TaxonRank_subgenus
subkingdom
TaxonRank_suborder
subphylum
TaxonRank_subsection
TaxonRank_subspecies
TaxonRank_subspecificAggregate
TaxonRank_subtribe
TaxonRank_subvariety
superclass
TaxonRank_superfamily
TaxonRank_superorder
TaxonRank_tribe
TaxonRank_variety
Accepted
The status of a taxon according to the taxonomic judgement of a cited authority
taxonomicStatus_valid
Heterotypic Synonym
Subjective synonym based on different type(s)
taxonomicStatus_heterotypic_synonym
Homotypic Synonym
Objective synonym based on the same type(s)
taxonomicStatus_homotypic_synonym
taxonomicStatus_invalid
Misapplied
misapplied name
taxonomicStatus_misapplied_name
Proparte Synonym
Some specimens of the original type series have been assigned to a new type
Synonym
if unclear whether hetero- or homotypic. May be qualified by the nomenclatural status of the name
taxonomicStatus_synonym
Unaccepted
unaccepted name, invalid, invalid name
taxonomicStatus_unverified
TypeStatus_hapantotype
TypeStatus_holotype
TypeStatus_lectotype
TypeStatus_neotype
TypeStatus_paralectotype
TypeStatus_paratype
TypeStatus_syntype
TypeStatus_varitype
USDA_Growth_Habit_Forb_Herb
Applies to vascular plants only. Federal Geographic Data Committee (FGDC) definition includes graminoids, forbs, and ferns.
FB
Vascular plant without significant woody tissue above or at the ground. Forbs and herbs may be annual, biennial, or perennial but always lack significant thickening by secondary woody growth and have perennating buds borne at or below the ground surface. In PLANTS, graminoids are excluded but ferns, horsetails, lycopods, and whisk-ferns are included.
http://plants.usda.gov/growth_habits_def.html
USDA_Growth_Habit_Graminoid
Applies to vascular plants only. An herb in the FGDC classification.
GR
Grass or grass-like plant, including grasses (Poaceae), sedges (Cyperaceae), rushes (Juncaceae), arrow-grasses (Juncaginaceae), and quillworts (Isoetes).
USDA_Growth_Habit_Liana
Applies to vascular plants only. In PLANTS, mutually exclusive with VI (Vine). A shrub in the FGDC classification.
Climbing plant found in tropical forests with long, woody rope-like stems of anomalous anatomical structure.
LI
USDA_Growth_Habit_Lichenous
Applies to lichens only, which are not true plants.
LC
Organism generally recognized as a single "plant" that consists of a fungus and an alga or cyanobacterium living in symbiotic association. Often attached to solid objects such as rocks or living or dead wood rather than soil.
USDA_Growth_Habit_Nonvascular
Applies to non-vascular plants only; in PLANTS system this is groups HN (Hornworts), LV (Liverworts), and MS (Mosses).
NP
Nonvascular, terrestrial green plant, including mosses, hornworts, and liverworts. Always herbaceous, often attached to solid objects such as rocks or living or dead wood rather than soil.
USDA_Growth_Habit_Shrub
Applies to vascular plants only.
Perennial, multi-stemmed woody plant that is usually less than 4 to 5 meters (13 to 16 feet) in height. Shrubs typically have several stems arising from or near the ground, but may be taller than 5 meters or single-stemmed under certain environmental conditions.
SH
USDA_Growth_Habit_Subshrub
Applies to vascular plants only. A dwarf-shrub in the FGDC classification.
Low-growing shrub usually under 0.5 m (1.5 feet) tall, never exceeding 1 meter (3 feet) tall at maturity.
SS
USDA_Growth_Habit_Tree
Applies to vascular plants only.
Perennial, woody plant with a single stem (trunk), normally greater than 4 to 5 meters (13 to 16 feet) in height; under certain environmental conditions, some tree species may develop a multi-stemmed or short growth form (less than 4 meters or 13 feet in height).
TR
USDA_Growth_Habit_Unknown
Growth form is unknown.
UN
USDA_Growth_Habit_Vine
Applies to vascular plants only. In PLANTS, mutually exclusive with LI (Liana). FGDC classification considers woody vines to be shrubs and herbaceous vines to be herbs.
Twining/climbing plant with relatively long stems, can be woody or herbaceous
VI
USDA_Native_Status_Introduced_Garden_persistent
Garden persistent - persists around gardens and old habitations, not naturalized
USDA_Native_Status_Introduced_Introduced
ntroduced
USDA_Native_Status_Introduced_Probably_Garden_persistent
Probably Garden persistent - persists around gardens and old habitations, not naturalized
USDA_Native_Status_Introduced_Probably_Introduced
Probably Introduced
USDA_Native_Status_Introduced_Probably_Native_and_Introduced
Probably Native and Introduced - some infra-taxa are probably native and others are introduced
USDA_Native_Status_Introduced_Probably_a_Waif
Probably a Waif - an ephemeral introduction, not persistently naturalized
USDA_Native_Status_Introduced_Waif
Waif - an ephemeral introduction, not persistently naturalized
USDA_Native_Status_Native_Native
Native
USDA_Native_Status_Native_Native_and_Introduced
Native and Introduced - some infra-taxa are native and others are introduced
USDA_Native_Status_Native_Native_and_Probably_Introduced
Native and Probably Introduced - some infra-taxa are native and others are probably introduced
USDA_Native_Status_Native_Probably_Native
Probably Native
Wisconsin_Herbarium_Beech_Forest
Wisconsin_Herbarium_Bog
Wisconsin_Herbarium_Boreal_Forest
Wisconsin_Herbarium_Bracken_Grassland
Wisconsin_Herbarium_Cliff
Wisconsin_Herbarium_Emergent_Aquatic
Wisconsin_Herbarium_Northern_Lowland_Forest
Wisconsin_Herbarium_Northern_Upland_Forest
Wisconsin_Herbarium_Pine_Barrens
Wisconsin_Herbarium_Prairie
Wisconsin_Herbarium_Sand_Barrens
Wisconsin_Herbarium_Sand_Dunes
Wisconsin_Herbarium_Savanna
Wisconsin_Herbarium_Sedge_Meadow
Wisconsin_Herbarium_Shrub_Carr
Wisconsin_Herbarium_Southern_Lowland_Forest
Wisconsin_Herbarium_Southern_Upland_Forest
World Pyrochroidae Database
Introduced
The organism arrived in the region via an anthropogenic mechanism or mechanisms
Invasive
The organism is having a deleterious impact on another organism, multiple organisms or the ecosystem as a whole
Managed
The organism maintains its presence through intentional cultivation or husbandry
Native
The organism either evolved in this region or arrived by non-anthropogenic means
Naturalised
The organism reproduces naturally and forms part of the local ecology