Monday, January 20, 2020

Pointillist Portrait of Canada”


Misty Niskonlith Morning  by Peter Stuhlmann, 23 September 2016, 35.5 x 28 cm, acrylic
 Pointillism is a technique of painting in which small, distinct dots of color are applied in patterns to form an image. This technique relies on the ability of the eye and mind of the viewer to blend the colour spots into a fuller range of tones. Some maps of the ranges of species have areas of tone, but those that have a dot for each location where the species has been found are more useful. Imagine a huge map of Canada, with a coloured dot where we’ve collected, noted, photographed, or painted something. This, as an ongoing project, is a pointillist portrait of Canada, containing a depth of information that when analyzed, or when the dots are connected, makes possible an understanding of not just individual species, but ecological communities, in both history and real time. 

In our youth, Fred began keeping field notes as a teenager – alas for the loss of the Red Book of West Haven! - and learned the Grinnell system of field notes as an undergraduate, while Aleta was taught prose-&-sketching natural history journaling by Frank Ross. As biological illustrator and Research Associate, we spent several years at the National Museum of Canada/National Museum of Natural Sciences with Francis Cook and Don McAllister, focused on collecting, keeping records and doing paintings of what was found and seen across Canada, to be studied for an understanding of current conditions and for comparison with what would happen in the future.
 
What we've already done includes:
  • Book text and illustrations for Canadian Nature Notebook, Wild Seasons Daybook, A Place to Walk, Fragile Inheritance, Art & Science in the South Nation Watershed, Island of Biodiversity, and Landscape: Progress towards a philosophy of sustainable occupancy.
     
  • Student apprentices/interns on many projects

  • focusing on observations & specimens that can be used to document ecological change.
  • laying down series of specimens & observations until support is garnered for the time required for writing up or testing our hypotheses

  • keeping data in lieu of specimens (as the museum stopped accepting collections in the early 1990s)

  • keeping mostly shell & herbarium specimens that don't require much curation 
     
  • the Canadian Library of Drifted Material as a physical record of what has been washed up on particular shores at particular times 
     
  • individually exportable data records as the dots in a pointillist portrait, to be used by those interested in a taxon or subject, even without support to compile the whole portrait.
We’ve long been concerned about the loss of naturalists’ field notes (Anonymous [F.W. Schueler]. 1993. Historic Records on archival paper. Ontario Herpetofaunal Summary Newsletter, April 1993:4). This concern has been increased by the modern fragmentation of more complete records into public databases that focus only on particular taxa or species or communities at risk. Now that we’re elders ourselves, we’re very concerned to get all the material we’ve gathered (through our freedom from institutional constraints) into a coherent body of work, available for use by others.

 
A map of our 141.852 databbase records in which red=herps (Amphibians & ‘reptiles’), orange=Molluscs, yellow=Crayfish, blue=birds, green=plants, purple=fish or Mammal, white=event or inorganic. The map is mostly red because they are layered in the above order, see Table 1 for relative numbers of different kinds of records. Thanks to Dave Seburn for making the map.

 The framework of this portrait (and the project that consumes Fred’s time and documents all our other work) is the biographical table of the Foxpro database – as described at - http://fragileinheritance.org/projects/database/database.htm - now (13 Jan 2020) 141,852 records, and summarized in Table 1. 

As far as we know, no-one else maintains a database that is, in the tradition of Grinellian field notes, structured to export individual records of species and events, as well as being readable as a prose narrative of travels, landscapes, and events (poems are in individual records).

One major goal is to get specimens into museums. This will flesh out the portrait with accurate identifications of the species we have encountered. Another goal is to update the format of the database so the portrait can include Aleta’s images. The older images remain unphotographed (though we now have a scanner that can do this at high precision). Generous thousands of records remain to be entered from previous years’ notes and from the waypoints of the 2014 & 2015 trips across Canada. Loose leaf field note pages from 2002-2018 also require binding.

This is more than we can handle ourselves, so we need institutional commitments to the Portrait, or substantial financial backing which will enable the project to become an institution.

Possible Projects:
  • find direct institutional acknowledgement and support for the Portrait as a whole

  • reach volunteers/interns/assistants who would be interested in helping with aspects of the Portrait, while understanding the whole.
  • get http://pinicola.ca back on line and arrange http://fragileinheritance.org so it can be modified.
  • get specimens into museums to be identified – sorting, curation, checking, databasing: mostly plants, Molluscs, and vertebrates for skeletons
  • get specimen records back from all museums that hold our specimens
  • update the format of the database and translate input & output programmes to 1) include images, 2) match iNaturalist’s format, and 3) match the Darwin Core format.
  • Photograph/scan older images and illustrated journal pages
  • input and georeference the generous thousands of records from the hand-written notes of the 1970s & early 1980s, non-specimen records in the text files from the 1980s, local herp records which will be valuable for analysis of population trends, but which weren’t digitized for the Ontario Herpetofaunal Summary atlas in the mid-1990s. unentered notes from subsequent years, and expansion of unprocessed waypoints into proper records. 
     
  • update the names of species which have changed with recent DNA-based taxonomic revisions and correct the co-ordinates of some frequently visited sites where the present co-ords are based on topo maps rather than GPS or online maps.

  • inventory, scan, & bind field note pages from 2002-2019 and pre-1990 years
  • find students to continue and analyse data from our long-term monitoring projects
  • put out collections of writing & illustrations on particular subjects as books: Poetry, Chorus Frogs, Ecological monitoring; How to paint fish en plein air; Carbon sequestration, etc.

    Possible methods:
    • publicity locally and nationally
    • book launch events
    • public “find out” trips to solve natural history problems – either by us or by parties working with us

    • repeated applications for funding from foundations
    • cleaning up the premises to look respectable
    • online sales that produce net income
    • escalate the ‘weekly’ newsletters into a quarterly magazine of progress on and accounts & images from the Portrait as a perk for crowd-funding contributions or subscriptions.
    • Fragile Inheritance as a membership organization publishes the magazine and works on other art, science, and loving-the-land projects.

    • adequately publicized, unrushed transCanada painting-a-day trips, revisiting places we’ve studied in the past.

    So this is what we see as the rest of our 'careers:' making what we've done publicly accessible by getting records, text, & images into a modern database, getting specimens into museums,  retrieving records of already identified specimens from museums, and publishing summaries & analysis of the material, while engaging students & volunteers in the experience of understanding deglaciated north America, its flora & fauna, and how it has changed & may change in the future. If you'd like to help or collabborate in any way, or if there's a class of our data that you think you might be able to use, don't hesitate to let us know.

Frederick W. Schueler <bckcdb@istar.ca> & Aleta Karstad <karstad@pinicola.ca> - Fragile Inheritance Natural History - 4 & 6 St-Lawrence Street Bishops Mills, RR#2 Oxford Station, Ontario K0G 1T0 - on the Smiths Falls Limestone Plain 44.87156° N 75.70095° W (613) 299-3107


Table 1: Classes of records in the biographical table of the database

Overall
Database evaluation of records from all years on 2020Jan13/1459:33: 141,852 FWSOBS records, including 1822 unprocessed waypoint records, 870 records needing more editing, and 33,269 records from Bishops Mills, 10,149 departure records, and 54,613 observational (not departure) records from the North Grenville area.

These include 44,492 herpetological records, 14,260 auditory monitoring records, 13,076 malacological records, 2473 Unionid records flipped for DFO, 1151 Unionid records not flipped for DFO, 510 NO:Unionidae records, 1510 other invertebrate records, 2684 piscine records, 11,617 avian records, 7015 mammal records, 24,868 botanical records, 16,120 on-road creature records, 17,048 other driveby records, and 7075 'doing the streets' records from Bishops Mills.

Newfoundland records: 149, Nova Scotia records: 692, New Brunswick records: 4246, Quebec records: 4850, Ontario records: 115,588, Manitoba records: 1258, Saskatchewan records: 944, Alberta records: 149, British Columbia records: 5169, records from the territories: 149 -- 4543 records from the USA, 12 from Mexico.

Top fifteen names: departure (10,149), Pseudacris crucifer (Spring Peeper, 8015), visit (7961), Rana pipiens (Leopard Frog, 6327), Phragmites australis (Reed, 5285), Bufo americanus (American Toad, 4423), Rana clamitans (Green Frog, 4135), no observation (3918), Rana sylvatica (Wood Frog, 3423), Hyla versicolor (Tetraploid Gray Treefrog, 3199), reference (cartigraphic reference, 2620), Rana catesbeiana (Bull Frog, 2203), Thamnophis sirtalis (Common Garter Snake, 1802), Cepaea nemoralis (‘Grove Snail,’ 1570), arrival (1518).

2019
Database evaluation of records from 2019 on 2020Jan13/1453:46: 5461 FWSOBS records, including 0 unprocessed waypoint records, 17 records needing more editing, and 2160 records from Bishops Mills, 435 departure records, and 3475 observational (not departure) records from the North Grenville area.

These include 999 herpetological records, 555 auditory monitoring records, 317 malacological records, 41 Unionid records not flipped for DFO, 19 NO:Unionidae records, 88 other invertebrate records, 30 piscine records, 504 avian records, 391 mammal records, 1111 botanical records, 884 on-road creature records, 859 other driveby records, and 646 'doing the streets' records.

New Brunswick records: 266, Quebec records: 114, Ontario records: 5068.

Top fifteen names: departure (435), visit (426), no observation (350), Pseudacris crucifer (Spring Peeper, 220), Bufo americanus (American Toad, 173), Cepaea nemoralis (‘Grove Snail,’ 117), Hyla versicolor (Tetraploid Gray Treefrog, 109), Hemerocallis fulva (Orange Daylily, 98), Rana pipiens (Leopard Frog, 97), Sciurus carolinensis (Grey Squirrel, 96), Branta canadensis (Canada Goose, 81), Rana sylvatica (Wood Frog, 77), weather (climate observation, 65), Rana clamitans (Green Frog, 64), Pseudacris 'brown-maculata' (Great Lakes-St Lawrence Chorus Frog, 52).

1 comment:

  1. A most ambitious agenda, Fred, and at your age! (which is also mine).

    Reading it, with not a single indication of what the record actually contains (apart from a name and coordinates; Table 1 was in part unreadable, by the way: cut off on the right hand side), what strikes me is how it can be compared to records of mine, consisting of pieces of paper with words on them.

    As we plan to move from this house into an apartment, I have to deal with the overflow of boxes and materials on shelves accumulated over the past 25 years of community involvement (my local CA, the FCA and, for 90%, the Greenspace Alliance).

    City Archives took much of the official stuff (government documents) and a good number of reports. I now have listed content of 21 boxes of files, documenting the exploits I have been involved in. There'll be five more boxes with files related to meetings. Plus all the CA stuff, and a trail of OMB Official Plan appeal material. I've got two more months to put the rest in order. Oh, I also have five boxes of newspaper clippings, spanning 1995-2019, ordered by year.

    If Archives doesn't take it, what then? No way I will let this become recycle material. There are real stories there, of real people, wins and losses. Along with the GA web site's Archive, Minutes and Annual Reports sections, this is the raw material for stories that someone at some point will want to write up.

    Local history is, to me, as important as knowing the natural world.

    What do you think?

    ReplyDelete