Fungal literature records database of the Northern West Siberia (Russia)
Citation
Filippova N, Arefyev S, Bulyonkova T, Zvyagina E, Kapitonov V, Makarova T, Mukhin V, Stavishenko I, Tavshanzhi E, Shiryaev A, Tolpysheva T, Sedelnikova N, Ryabitseva N, Paukov A, Zhurbenko M (2024). Fungal literature records database of the Northern West Siberia (Russia). Version 1.20. Yugra State University Biological Collection (YSU BC). Occurrence dataset https://doi.org/10.15468/hfje3l accessed via GBIF.org on 2024-11-03.Description
The mycological research in the Northern part of West Siberia stems from isolated studies in the beginning of the 20th century, but regular and systematic research dates back to the 1970-80s. Over the following decades several dozens of researches have worked in the area and more than four hundred scientific works have been published. FUngal Records Database of Northern West Siberia (FuNWS) was developed to accumulate the results of previous studies of species distributions. The FuNWS database includes 28 fields describing species name, publication source, herbarium number, date of sampling, locality information, vegetation, substrate, and others. The occurrences in the database were extracted from previously published works, no herbarium collections or other unpublished records were included in the database. Presently, the dataset includes about 22000 of fungal occurrences recorded in the region, reported from about 130 scientific publications. According to the database summary report, there are about 3358 species identified within the region up-to-date. The richest studied classes are Agaricomycetes (60%) and Lecanoromycetes (30%) with totally 25 classes represented.Purpose
The dataset accumulates fungal records of fungi and myxomycetes made in the Northern West Siberia and published in scientific literature from the beginning of mycological research in the region up to date. It was intended to summarize the results of inventory of fungi in the region.
Sampling Description
Study Extent
The digitisation was aimed at summarizing the species occurrences of fungi and fungi-related organisms accumulated in the course of previous mycological studies and published in peer-reviewed scientific literature. The geography extended the Northern part of West Siberia, in the administrative borders of two regions (Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug and Khanty-Masi Autonomous Okrug-Yugra). Over 460 publications were reviewed and the species occurrence records were extracted from about 140 selected works. About 80% of species occurrences accumulated in the database were relatively recent, i.e. published in the literature since the beginning of 21th century.Sampling
Methods of sampling vary in different reviewed publications, but generally follow the protocols of Mueller et al. (2004) for different taxonomical and ecological groups. The majority of the records were made using direct observation of fruiting structures. The exception are a few studies of micromycetes and yeasts where cultivation techniques were applied. No molecular (environmental sampling) methods were used until present to reveal molecular diversity of fungi in the region. Plot-based monitoring of terrestrial and lignicolous macrofungi was organized by some researchers, providing estimates of quantitative parameters and temporal dynamics of fungal communities. The majority of fungal occurrence records were accompanied by accessioning of specimens in fungaria, the specimen numbers are rarely reported in publications, however. The specimens are stored in different collections within and outside the region where the researchers working (mentioning the main collections of LE - the Komarov Botanical Institute, Saint-Petersburg; SVER - Institute of Ecology of Animals and Plants, Ekaterinburg; NSK - Central Siberian Botanical Garden, Novosibirsk, and others).Quality Control
The original species identifications from the published works were recorded in the database, no attempt was made for the revision of the species identification accuracy. A single author revised the species list and corrected wrong original identifications: the corrected names were added in identificationRemarks field, totally 15 records in the database. The incorrect spelling of taxa was verified using GBIF Species Matching tool at the later stage of the database compilation. Possible georeference errors at the scale of the region were corrected using QGIS software (https://qgis.org/en/site) by eliminating the outliers. Depending on the quality of georeference provided in publications, the uncertainty was estimated as follows: 1) the coordinate of a fruiting structure or a plot provided in the publication gave the uncertainty about 3-10 meters; 2) the coordinate of the field work locality provided in publication gave the uncertainty about 500 m – 5 km; 3) the report of the species presence in the district or the region gave the central coordinate of the area with the uncertainty radius to include its borders. The occurrences with large uncertainties weren’t eliminated, as they can still be important in global context.Method steps
- The bibliography of related publications was compiled using Zotero bibliographic manager (https://www.zotero.org). Only published works (peer-reviewed papers, conference proceedings, PhD theses, monographs or book chapters) were selected.
- The layout of the FuNWS database was made using Google Sheets software. Such database could be filled simultaneously by several specialists, and a common data format will be provided (Filippova and Bolshakov 2017).
- The Darwin Core standard was applied to the database structure to accomodate the relevant information extracted from the publications.
- From the available bibliography of publications related to the region, only works with species occurrences were selected for the databasing purpose. We decided to include all different sorts of occurrence records, from a mere mention of the species within the administrative region, to the annotated species lists with exact locations of the records.
- All occurrence records were georeferenced, either from the coordinates provided in the paper, or from the verbal description of the field work locality. The georeferencing of the verbal descriptions was made using Yandex (https://yandex.ru/maps) or Google (https://maps.google.ru/maps) maps services.
- The coordinate uncertainty was estimated according to the algorithm described above (see Quality control paragraph).
- The locality names reported in Russian were translated in English and written in the «locality» field. Russian descriptions were reserved in the field «verbatimLocality» for accuracy.
- When possible, the «eventDate» was extracted from the species records annotation data. Whenever this information was absent, the date of the publication was used instead.
- The ecological features, habitat and substrates preferences were written in the «habitat» and reserved in Russian.
- The original scientific names reported in publications were filled in the «originalNameUsage». Correction of the spelling errors was made using the GBIF Species Matching tool.
- The GBIF Species matching tool was used to create the additional fields of taxonomic hierarchy from species to kingdom, to fill in the «taxonRank» field and to make synonymization according to the GBIF backbone.
- The taxonomic and spatial analyses of the final database were made using Microsoft Excel, QGIS and R software (https://www.r-project.org).
- To track the digitization process, a working database was created. Each bibliographic record has a series of fields to describe the digitization process and its results: the total number of extracted occurrence records, general description of the occurrence quality, presence of observation date, presence of specimen number, and details of georeferencing.
Taxonomic Coverages
According to the database summary report, there are about 3358 species revealed in Northern West Siberia up-to-date, representing 1020 genera, 293 families, 94 orders, 25 classes, 6 phyla and 2 kingdoms (Fungi, Protozoa). The richest studied classes by number of occurrences are Agaricomycetes (60%) and Lecanoromycetes (30%). The richest ten families by number of species are Parmeliaceae (144 species), Russulaceae (111), Physciaceae (99), Cortinariaceae (96), Tricholomataceae (93), Polyporaceae (84), Lecanoraceae (83), Cladoniaceae (81), Hymenogastraceae (79), Ramalinaceae (67 species).
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Fungirank: kingdom
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Protozoarank: kingdom
Geographic Coverages
The dataset is limited by the administrative borders of two regions (Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug, Khanty-Masi Autonomous Okrug-Yugra). However, in cases when the digitized work contained records from other regions, they were also entered into the database (there are about 1300 such records in total). The region occupies the central to northern part of the West Siberian Plain. The area extends for about 1.5 thousand km from the West to the East from Eastern slopes of the Ural mountains to Yenisey river and from North to South – about 1.5 thousand km. The total area equals about 1.3 mln km2.
The relief of the region is mainly a plain, but western part of the area is occupied by the Ural mountains with the highest points reaching up to 2000 m. The three vegetation zones (taiga, forest-thundra and thundra) and well developed peatland cover represent the plain, while the mountain vegetation of the Urals changes from taiga to alpine zones.
In the southern half of the area (Yugra region), most administrative divisions were studied for fungi, but the intensity of the research varies. 80% of all records in the database have been made at three districts (Khanty-Mansiyskiy, Surgutskiy, Berezovskiy, Sovetskiy). Totally about 13 thousand records or 60% coming presently from Yugra region.
The northern part of the region presented by less number of records in the database (about 6 thousand, or 27%). The research is mainly concentrated in two districts (Priuralskiy - 66% of records and Yamalskiy - 22%).
Generally, localities of the studies are situated randomly, no attempts of regular studies using grid pattern have been done before. The areas under different kinds of nature protection are better studied compared to others: about half of all records in the database coming from 13 protected areas.
Bibliographic Citations
Contacts
Nina Filippovaoriginator
position: researcher
Yugra State University
Khanty-Mansiysk
RU
Stanislav Arefyev
originator
position: researcher
Institute of problems of Northern development
Tyumen
RU
Tatiana Bulyonkova
originator
position: researcher
A.P. Ershov Institute of Informatics Systems Russian Academy of Sciences
Novosibirsk
RU
Elena Zvyagina
originator
position: researcher
Yugansky Nature Reserve
Ugut village, Surgutskiy rayon
RU
Vladimir Kapitonov
originator
position: researcher
Tobolsk Complex Scientific Station of the UrB RAS
Tobolsk
RU
Tatiana Makarova
originator
position: researcher
Surgut state university
Surgut
RU
Victor Mukhin
originator
position: researcher
Ural federal university
Ekaterinburg
RU
Iraida Stavishenko
originator
Institute of Plant and Animal Ecology
Ekaterinburg
RU
Elena Tavshanzhi
originator
Museum of Nature and Man
Khanty-Mansiysk
RU
Anton Shiryaev
originator
Institute of Plant and Animal Ecology
Ekaterinburg
RU
Tatiana Tolpysheva
originator
position: reseacher
Moscow State University
Moscow
RU
email: tolpysheva@mail.ru
homepage: https://elibrary.ru/author_profile.asp?id=80942
Nellya Sedelnikova
originator
position: researcher
Central Siberian Botanical Garden
Zolotodolinskaya, 101
Novosibirsk
630090
Novosibirskaya oblast
RU
email: sedelnikova-csbg@mail.ru
homepage: https://elibrary.ru/author_profile.asp?id=79737
Nataria Ryabitseva
originator
position: senior researcher
Institute of Plant and Animal Ecology of Ural branch of RAS
Ekaterinburg
RU
Alexander Paukov
originator
Institute of Plant and Animal Ecology of Ural branch of RAS
Ekaterinburg
RU
Mikhail Zhurbenko
originator
position: senior researcher
Komarov Botanical Institute of RAS
Saint-Ptetrsburg
RU
email: zhurb58@gmail.com
Nina Filippova
metadata author
position: researcher
Yugra State University
Chekhova street, 16, Khanty-Mansiysk
Khanty-Mansiysk
628012
Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug-Yugra
RU
email: filippova.courlee.nina@gmail.com
userId: http://orcid.org/0000-0002-9506-0991
Nina Filippova
administrative point of contact
position: researcher
Yugra State University
Chekhova street, 16
Khanty-Mansiysk
628012
Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug-Yugra
Telephone: +7 9527057846
email: filippova.courlee.nina@gmail.com
homepage: https://fungariumysu.org
userId: http://orcid.org/0000-0002-9506-0991