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Rare plant occurrences geodatabase for the northern Channel Islands

Published by U.S. Geological Survey | Department of the Interior | Metadata Last Checked: August 25, 2025 | Last Modified: 20250624
The Rare Plant Occurrences geodatabase is an element occurrence data system with about 10,000 records of rare plant observations on the 6 northernmost California Channel Islands. It is an historic database created with the purpose of bringing together in one space discoverable information on the localities of about 180 rare and sensitive plants of the northern Channel Islands, California ranging range from the late 1880s to 2025. The list of taxa was developed from agency and non-governmental databases, supplemented with a 1-day workshop with area botanists in 1993; the list has been updated as new information emerges. Data records include information from herbarium labels, published and unpublished literature, agency files, botanist field notes, incidental observations and results of targeted surveys for individual taxa. The data come from authoritative sources, but the records are of varying quality, related to the nature of the original observation. Consequently, each record contains metadata about the data source and accuracy, as well as the observation itself. The database was initiated in 1994, by Kathryn McEachern, U. S. Geological Survey (USGS) Research Ecologist, and collaborators at Channel Islands National Park and the Santa Barbara Botanic Garden. It is maintained at the co-located offices of the USGS-Western Ecological Research Center-Channel Islands Field Station and Channel Islands National Park in Ventura, California.

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