The West African Plants Initiative

The West African Plants Initiative

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Nov 20, 2025
1 Min Read
The West African Plants (WAP) Initiative addresses the uneven global distribution of biodiversity data, which is often highest in wealthy but less biodiverse regions. By empowering local researchers to access, digitize, and mobilize plant collections, WAP has generated over 190,000 primary biodiversity records across 16 West African countries at minimal cost. This effort has increased the digital knowledge of West African flora by more than 50%, highlighting a model for equitable data sharing and capacity building in biodiversity research worldwide.

The global distributions of wealth and biodiversity, respectively, are uneven and often inversely proportional. Similarly, the availability of biodiversity data tends to be highest in the wealthiest but least biodiverse regions of the world.

This study presents the West African Plants (WAP) Initiative, exploring a general model of empowering users in countries who wish to have access to data to capture and mobilize it, rather than relying on institutions in other countries holding the collections.

By connecting motivated researchers across West Africa with herbaria in Europe and North America with a desire to have their collections digitized, WAP has enabled—at an average cost of $0.50 per sheet—the mobilization of more than 190,000 primary biodiversity records in 16 countries in the region. Not all of these have been shared through GBIF yet, but as a whole represent an increase in digital accessible knowledge of West African flora by more than 50 per cent.

The study further assessed 57 million GBIF-mediated records of plant specimens globally to calculate the proportion of records by country provided by institutions in other countries as a means for exploring the model of the initiative in different regions of the world.

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