Browsing by people, organizations and landmarks: decade:
Quercus brandegeei. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016 (3.102485)
Date: 2016Creator: Denvir, Audrey, Westwood, Murphy
Type: Article
Three Rarest Trees in The Morton Arboretum's Living Collections (3.31607)
Date: 2015Creator: The Morton Arboretum
Type: Video
Nicole Cavender and Murphy Westwood presenting a photograph to colleagues at the Chenshan Shanghai Botanical Garden in China (3.36294)
Date: March 6 2014Creator: The Morton Arboretum
Type: Photographic image
Description:Nicole Cavender, vice president of science and conservation at The Morton Arboretum, and Murphy Westwood, tree conservation specialist at The Morton Arboretum, presenting a photograph to colleagues at the Chenshan Shanghai Botanical Garden in China
Nicole Cavender and Murphy Westwood meeting with colleagues from the Beijing Botanical Garden in China (3.36301)
Date: March 17 2014Creator: The Morton Arboretum
Type: Photographic image
Description:Nicole Cavender, vice president of science and conservation at The Morton Arboretum, and Murphy Westwood, tree conservation specialist at The Morton Arboretum, meeting with colleagues from the Beijing Botanical Garden in China
Nicole Cavender and Murphy Westwood at the Pingwu Wanglang Nature Reserve in China (3.36304)
Date: March 19 2014Creator: The Morton Arboretum
Type: Photographic image
Description:Nicole Cavender, vice president of science and conservation at The Morton Arboretum, and Murphy Westwood, tree conservation specialist at The Morton Arboretum, meeting with researchers from Peking University to see newly established forest research plots at the Pingwu Wanglang Nature Reserve in China
Nicole Cavender and Murphy Westwood observing lab equipment at the French National Institute for Agricultural Research (3.36317)
Date: April 27 2014Creator: The Morton Arboretum
Type: Photographic image
Description:Nicole Cavender, vice president of science and conservation at The Morton Arboretum, and Murphy Westwood, tree conservation specialist at The Morton Arboretum, observing lab equipment at the French National Institute for Agricultural Research
Nicole Cavender and Murphy Westwood looking at tree roots in France (3.36318)
Date: April 27 2014Creator: The Morton Arboretum
Type: Photographic image
Description:Nicole Cavender, vice president of science and conservation at The Morton Arboretum, and Murphy Westwood, tree conservation specialist at The Morton Arboretum, looking at tree roots at the French National Institute for Agricultural Research
The Global Trees Campaign and ArbNet - Working together to advance professionalism and tree conservation in arboreta (3.54091)
Date: 2015Creator: Westwood, Murphy
Type: Article
International interest in conservation collaborations with the VBG (3.54104)
Date: 2015Creator: Westwood, Murphy
Type: Article
North American Botanic Garden Strategy for Plant Conservation, 2016-2020 (3.54106)
Date: 2016Creator: Westwood, Murphy
Type: Article
Launching the Global Oak Conservation Initiative at The Morton Arboretum (3.54108)
Date: 2016Creator: Westwood, Murphy
Type: Article
Rescuing plant species with extremely small populations in China: the case of the Xichou oak, Quercus sichourensis (3.54109)
Date: 2016Creator: Westwood, Murphy
Type: Article
Preserving oak (Quercus sp.) germplasm to promote ex-situ conservation (3.54110)
Date: 2016Creator: Westwood, Murphy
Type: Article
A new Red List of Oaks: Informing conservation action and catalysing collaboration (3.54119)
Date: 2017Creator: Westwood, Murphy
Type: Article
The Red List of US Oaks (3.54127)
Date: 2017Creator: Westwood, Murphy, Jerome, Diana, Beckman Bruns, Emily, Wenzell, Katherine, Kua, Chai-Shian
Type: Article
Red List threat assessments for eastern Northern American ash trees (3.54128)
Date: 2017Creator: Westwood, Murphy
Type: Article
Coordinating the IUCN red list of North American tree species: a special session at the USFS gene conservation of tree species workshop (3.54133)
Date: 2017Creator: Westwood, Murphy
Type: Article
Phylogeography of Quercus glauca (Fagaceae), a dominant tree of East Asian subtropical evergreen forests, based on three chloroplast DNA interspace sequences (3.55371)
Date: 2015Creator: Deng, Min, Westwood, Murphy
Type: Article
Strengthening the conservation value of ex situ tree collections (3.55374)
Date: 2015Creator: Cavender, Nicole, Westwood, Murphy, Bechtoldt, Cathy, Donnelly, Gerard T.
Type: Article
Conservation genetics of rare trees restricted to subtropical montane cloud forests in southern China: a case study from Quercus arbutifolia (Fagaceae) (3.55383)
Date: 2016Creator: Deng, Min, Westwood, Murphy
Type: Article
Banking on the future: progress, challenges and opportunities for the genetic conservation of forest trees (3.55418)
Date: 2017Creator: Westwood, Murphy
Type: Article
Tissue culture using mature material for the conservation of oaks (3.55447)
Date: 2017Creator: Brennan, Andrea N., Taylor, Matthew, Westwood, Murphy
Type: Article
Improving genetic conservation of tree species (3.60067)
Date: 2017Creator: Westwood, Murphy
Type: Article
Description:Proceedings of Workshop on Gene Conservation of Tree Species—Banking on the Future
The effect of 6-benzylaminopurine, a cytokinin, on bud-forcing of twelve oak species (3.60068)
Date: 2016Creator: Westwood, Murphy, Brennan, Andrea N., Taylor, Matthew
Type: Article
Description:Proceedings of the 2015 Annual Meeting of the International Plant Propagators' Society
'Planted' Podcast: Episode 5: Navigating Multiple Opportunities with guests Dr. Murphy Westwood and Trinity Pierce (3.60764)
Date: 2018Type: Audio
Description:Sometimes, does it really come down to trusting your gut? Setting a course within your STEM/plant career can be difficult when you are presented with multiple opportunities, internships or programs to choose between. In this episode of Planted, Dr. Murphy Westwood and Trinity Pierce share their insight on how they chose the opportunities in their path into STEM, and the skills they built along the way.
Extent: 26:22:21
Planted: Finding Your Roots in STEM Careers: EP5: Dr. Murphy Westwood Photo Profile (3.60777)
Date: 2018Type: Document
Jake Miesbauer, Murphy Westwood, and Chuck Cannon talk on various research projects/initiatives (3.62058)
Date: 2015Creator: The Morton Arboretum
Type: Video
Description:Jake Miesbauer discusses tree root systems, use of sonic tomographs to gauge whether trees are solid or hollow, and testing branch attachment strength. Murphy Westwood discusses the Global Tree Conservation Program. Chuck Cannon discusses the Center For Tree Science.
Three Rarest Trees in The Morton Arboretum's Living Collections, web version 1 (3.62071)
Date: 2015Creator: The Morton Arboretum
Type: Video
Three Rarest Trees in The Morton Arboretum's Living Collections, web version 2 (3.62072)
Date: 2015Creator: The Morton Arboretum
Type: Video
Growing Brilliantly Campaign, Annual Dinner Party, 2018 (3.64096)
Date: September 24 2018Creator: The Morton Arboretum
Type: Video
Growing Brilliantly Campaign, Annual Dinner Party, 2018, high resolution (3.64097)
Date: September 20 2018Creator: The Morton Arboretum
Type: Video
Conservation Gap Analysis of Native U.S. Oaks (3.67005)
Date: July 2019Creator: Beckman Bruns, Emily, Denvir, Audrey, Westwood, Murphy
Type: Article
Description:Oaks are critical to the health and function of forest and shrubland habitats in the United States, but many native oaks are threatened with extinction in the wild. Ongoing conservation efforts exist for some species, but with growing threats and limited resources and time, prioritization and coordination of conservation actions is critical. To facilitate these efforts, we conducted a comprehensive survey of both the achievements and most urgent needs for in situ (on-site) and ex situ (off-site) conservation of priority at-risk oak species in the U.S.
Extent: 114 pages
Using Open Source Data to Identify Conservation Priorities at Large Spatial Scales (3.67073)
Date: 2019Type: Dataset
Description:We are in the middle of the sixth mass extinction, due in part to the intensification of human land use. Therefore it is vital to quickly and effectively identify species at risk of extinction if we are to save them. The effects of human land use can extend beyond habitat loss by severing gene flow between subpopulations, making them more susceptible to inbreeding depression. These genetic effects have a negative impact on species viability and need to be considered in long-term conservation planning. One way to address this is by assessing the vulnerability of populations that are unable to reproduce with one another due to habitat fragmentation. In this study we used open source satellite imagery and species occurrence data to create a method for assessing the vulnerability of subpopulations of species. We selected ten focal species of Quercus found in Japan to develop this methodology and were able to identify four subpopulations that are likely threatened. With these data, we were able to identify local gardens and protected areas best situated to aid these subpopulations. Our methods use open source data and do not require costly field expeditions. Thus, this methodology can aid conservationists, who are often limited by cost or location, in quickly assessing the state of a species and the viability of its subpopulations.