Dear Conchlers, I am back after a few days' absence. My computer is so full of unread email messages that the electrons are dripping onto the floor, and I am sitting in the slop. The following message is from the Taxacom listserve. Basically, it recommends not collecting any specimens (of rare plants) until the collector has seen 20 specimens at the same location. Obviously, paleontologists do not generally follow this kind of rule, except sometimes at sites that are reserved for student use. What about collectors of living shells? Would this sort of rule make a useful guideline, or is it unworkable? Andrew K. Rindsberg Geological Survey of Alabama Tuscaloosa, Alabama, USA +++++++++++++++++++++ David Wagner published his "Rule of thumb" in Oregon Flora On-line Newsletter and elsewhere. This is a version from BEN (Botanical Electronic News) # 180 (Dec. 12, 1997): A RULE OF THUMB FOR BOTANISTS: THE 1 IN 20 RULE From: Dr. David H. Wagner <[log in to unmask]> originally published in the Oregon Flora On-Line Newsletter Volume 1 Number 3 - Oregon State University - July 1995 There have apparently been instances in the past where well-meaning botanists have destroyed plant populations through over zealous collecting. The case most familiar to me concerns one of the world's rarest ferns, the pumice grape-fern, Botrychium pumicola. A student searching for new sites found two individuals of this species on Oregon's Tumalo Mountain in 1954 which he collected to make herbarium specimens. In the late 1970s I searched the top of Tumalo Mountain with friends. We were experienced fern hunters, but we found no Botrychium. I strongly suspect that the two plants removed in 1954 eliminated the population at this location. Today we would hope that botanists finding only one or two plants at a site would docu- ment their discovery with photographs and notes. Good photographs and careful field notes are increasingly acceptable for recording plant discoveries. Nevertheless, from time to time, a field worker may encounter a small population of a plant and feel it is necessary to collect a bit of it for positive identification and documentation. The Native Plant Society of Oregon's Guidelines and Ethical Codes for botanists urges that a collector use good judgement and rules of thumb when deciding whether or not to collect. But in this case, what is a good rule of thumb? During the past 10 years, I have been using what I call the "1-in-20 Rule." The 1-in-20 Rule dictates that a botanist never collect more than one out of twenty plants. It means NOT collecting ONE plant UNTIL you have found at least TWENTY. Only if twenty are found should you consider collecting one plant. And forty should be present before two are taken, and so on. The rule applies to parts of plants, also: remove no more than five percent (one- twentieth) of a shrub, one fern frond from a clump of twenty, 5% of a patch of moss, 5% of seeds from a plant. I use the 1-in-20 Rule whether I am collecting voucher specimens for the herbarium, doing rare plant work, or gathering common species for classroom use. The 1-in-20 Rule does not obviate the need for good judgement. Only when a botanist has the knowledge to assess whether col- lecting is both ecologically justified and legally permitted should a specimen be taken. Any pertinent factor relating to the survival of a population needs to be superimposed on the 1-in-20 Rule. The main value of this rule of thumb is to provide a clear point of reference from which to begin assessing a situation. It helps a botanist determine how much time should be spent inven- torying before sampling is appropriate. I suggest the 1-in-20 Rule as a minimal criterion to be met before any taking of a plant be considered. There is at least a modicum of scientific logic behind this rule. Statistically, a population sample of nineteen is not significantly different from a sample of twenty. One population geneticist I consulted advised me that contemporary statistical theory would support the 1-in-20 Rule. Another pointed out, however, that repeated collecting would tend to reduce every population to nineteen individuals. This caution serves to emphasize that the 1-in-20 Rule is a rule of thumb, not a license to ravage. An interesting line of argument in support of the 1-in-20 rule has developed since I first published the idea in the Bulletin of the Native Plant Society of Oregon in 1991. First, I received a letter from James Grimes of the New York Botanical Garden querying whether or not I had picked up the idea from a similar article he and others had published in the newsletter of the Idaho Native Plant Society a few years before. I honestly cannot recall seeing their note. Then, last year, four botanists from Australia and New Zealand published an article in the international journal, Taxon, which made essentially the same recommen- dation. Thus, three botanists or groups of botanists, deliberating independently, have arrived at the same standard. I submit that this concurrence from three separate sources speaks strongly for the sensibility of the 1-in-20 Rule.