Help:How to edit a plant article
The vast majority of the articles on Gardenology.org are plant articles, since the free plant encyclopedia we are building is one of the main goals of this site, and there are tens of thousands of plants out there. Our focus of course is to cover all of the garden plants in the world, with instructions on how to grow them. This article will go into great detail about how to edit each article, and what the goal is of a plant article.
How to edit
First, you can visit Help:Editing to see how much of the formatting on the pages is accomplished. Basically, you click on the "edit" tab at the top of the page and just start typing away. It's pretty basic. The help page though will give you a little detail on bold, italics, links, etc. The rest of this page will explain a lot of additional tips on what to include in terms of content, how to include it, and what a good article will ideally be.
Basic structure of a plant article
Each plant article should have a plant information box at the top. Directly below that comes a description of the plant, followed by subsections about cultivation, propagation, pests and diseases, varieties of the plant, a photo gallery, references and external links. Remember that throughout the text, the main goal is to have a focused article on growing a plant, in language that can be pretty easily understood.
Plant box
The plant box gives you the basic facts about a plant at your fingertips. When you click on the edit tab to edit an article, sometimes the edit page will show up with a form at the top of the page, followed by the text of the article. That form is where you can add all the plantbox information. It has drop down boxes, checkboxes and blanks where you just fill in all the information. The form was added as a feature in August 2010, so some of the older articles do not utilize it, and either have no plantbox at all, or an older style of text based plantbox. If you want to add the plantbox to any article, just click on "Add a plant" on the left side navigation menu on any page of this site, even if the plant has already been added. Put the name in the blank, and click "add or edit", and the form will show up on the top of the edit page. You can gather all the info you can from the old text which appears below, and add it to the form above. You can then remove the old text-based plantbox, or leave that for someone else to remove.
It is fine to leave anything blank on the form, if you either don't know it or it is not relevant.
You will find the following fields on the plant form:
- Taxonomy - This is the latin name of the plant. Most often you'll know the Genus and Species. Unless it is a subspecies or cultivar, those are left blank. If you want to find the family name, you can often find it on eol.com or wikispecies. The "Taxo author" is the person who gave the plant that name. If you know it, the preferred style is to use the accepted abbreviation for the authors name.
- Common name(s) - just as it says, this is a blank space where you can insert the common names of a plant. You will notice a space called "Reference" to the right. This is where you can write the name of the source you got the common name from whenever possible.
- Growth habit - is it a tree, bamboo, bulb, etc? Chose the right one from the list if you know it.
- Size - fill in the maximum height and width, as well as what units you are using from the drop down box. If you have a minimum height and/or width, you can fill those in, too.
- Origin - As abbreviated as possible. The article text can go into a little more detail, but this is a simple fyi, not meant to go into great detail.
- Poisonous - If you know of a part of the plant that is poisonous, by all means list it!
- Lifespan - perennial, annual or biennial?
- Exposure - sun, part-sun or shade? part-shade is the same as part-sun, and if it does well indoors, you can mark it as a houseplant under Features.
- Water - wet, moist, moderate, dry. Most instructions on plants will give you these descriptions for watering, but some use different terminology and need to be adjusted. Some plants need less water during winter or a dormant period, and there is a check box for that as well.
- Features - most are self-explanatory, but some are not quite.
- Flowers - only check off flowers if the plant is in part grown for its flowers. If they are hard to see or not ornamental, then do not check it off.
- Fruit - only check off fruit if the plant is grown for it's edible fruit.
- Edible - only check off edible if the plant is actually eaten by people - this does not just mean it is not poisonous to eat.
- Flower season - only fill this in if the plant is grown at least in part for its flowers.
- Flower features - again, only fill this in if the plant is grown at least in part for its flowers.
- Minimum temp - this is the lowest temperature a plant can survive before it normally would die.
- USDA zones - usually you'll at least know the lowest zone a plant will grow in, oftentimes you'll know the top as well.
- Sunset zones - please use the National Garden Book for these, or at least mention that you are using just the Western or other edition in the reference section!
- Infobox needs help? - this checkbox will display a message on the page if it is checked off, asking visitors to add information. If a few of the fields are already full, you can uncheck this.
- Image - just put the name of the file under filename, and if it has a vertical orientation, change the display size to 180. The image caption is what you want people to read about the picture when their mouse hovers over it.
Many of the fields have a space for a reference at the end. You can simply write in the name of the source(s) here. eg. "Wikipedia" or "Sunset National Garden Book". You can have more than one, separated by commas.
Plant description
This is where you describe the plant in general. What it looks like, the type of leaves, where it's from, how big it gets, why people grow it, etc. The goal is to have a useful description for gardeners, so keep non-gardening information to a bare minimum. It might be good to know that a plant comes from China, or even from coastal China, but to know what villages, what it is called by the locals, etc is too much information and distracts from the goal of imparting valuable gardening information.
It can also be a problem if the description is too technical. If things get too technical, they again make the article less useful for the average gardener. There is room for a technical description in an information box after the regular gardeners description. It is called a botanical description and when you put it in the special formatting explained here, it will be in a box that people can open when they visit the plant article. To add a botanical description, or move text into one, you have to have the following code after the regular plant description:
{{Botdesc| PASTE OR TYPE THE BOTANIC DESCRIPTION HERE }}
When you do that, it will show up on the page as you can see below
Botanic description |
---|
PASTE OR TYPE THE BOTANIC DESCRIPTION HERE
|
Cultivation
Propagation
Pests and Diseases
Varieties
Gallery
References
External links
Sources
There are many great plant encyclopedias out there with ideal information for this site. The text must be reworded if it is copyright, but other than that the information in it is perfect for use here. They usually have all kinds of information on the cultivation and propagation, among other things. There is also the Sunset National Garden Book I use for the Sunset Zones, many plants are missing this information that gardeners often prefer to the USDA zones. There are other garden books, including information on gardening techniques such as pruning, composting, worm farming, etc which can be used as sources. You can use any material you like without restriction from sites with a Creative Commons license such as Wikipedia.org, just make sure there is a link back to the page you got the information from. If you can get permission from other sites to use their copyright materials, that's also ideal. Photographs of many plants can be found on Flickr.com - but you should do an advanced search for Free License Photos first, and if that doesn't come up with good stuff, look at some of the copyright stuff and ask for permission. Any photo in the Wikimedia commons can be used here, and in fact you don't even need to upload it here, just use the photo filename as you would with any other photo on this site.