Archivist Page Review

Review parser variants for one source page, compare outputs, and jump directly to the source evidence.

Document: 7 Minnesota #1695

Source page: Open page 59 in document reader

Institution: University of Minnesota | Publisher: University of Minnesota | Year: | Pages: 138

Source URL: https://conservancy.umn.edu/server/api/core/bitstreams/891e96c2-d751-4fea-9f35-51fec97c7043/content

Selected Versions

Left: archivist-1.6.68-spark (fragment 900)

Right: archivist-1.0 (fragment 10905)

Next Step

Reprocess/promote controls are the next UI layer. The data foundation is now versioned and diffable.

Page Version Diff

Cultivars Added
  • Prunus Avium
  • Prunus Cerasus
  • Prunus Emarginata
Claims Added
  • Prunus Avium | description_snippet | P. avium (cherry) was described as moderately browsed relative to other tree species in the cited herbivory study.
  • Prunus Avium | entry_hardiness_observation | Herbivore pressure on P. avium was intermediate compared to heavily browsed oak, alder, and beech, and lighter-browsed ash.
  • Prunus Cerasus | anecdote_snippet | The page uses this figure in the broader context of Prunus establishment and reproduction behavior.
  • Prunus Cerasus | description_snippet | A source is cited stating that 14% of P. cerasus self-pollination was observed.
  • Prunus Emarginata | description_snippet | The text explicitly links bitter cherry performance to early survival gradients across micro-habitats.
  • Prunus Emarginata | entry_hardiness_observation | Greater openness improved emergence/survival but increases exposure to herbivores in this study context.
  • Prunus Emarginata | selection_origin_reference | Seedling emergence and survival of P. emarginata were highest in open environments and second-highest at habitat edges in the referenced study context.
Figures Added
  • none
Citations Added
  • Franken-Bembenek and Gruppe (1984) conclusion on P. cerasus self-pollination proportion.
  • Kolar and Lodge (2001) noted invasive potential rises for species with historical vegetative propagation under herbivory pressure.
  • Kullberg and Bergström (2010) observed preferential browsing by large herbivores on different deciduous species.
  • McNaughton (1983) argues that although high levels of herbivory do not result in maximum plant fitness, low to moderate levels may increase long-term fitness.
Cultivars Removed
  • none
Claims Removed
  • none
Figures Removed
  • none
Citations Removed
  • Franken-Bembenek and Gruppe (1984) reported a self-pollination statistic for Prunus cerasus.
  • Kolar and Lodge (2001) on invasive potential increasing with historical vegetative propagation and sucker induction.
  • Kullberg and Bergström (2010) observed preferential browsing by large herbivores across deciduous species; oak, alder, and beech were heavily browsed while P. avium was moderate and ash lightly browsed.
  • McNaughton (1983) on low to moderate herbivory increasing long-term fitness through induced vegetative growth.

Available Page Versions

IDVariantStatusModelSpecializationCountsSourceCompare
307archivist-1.6.68-sparkactivegpt-5.4visual_page_generalist0 cultivars / 0 claims / 0 figuresOpen source page
3351archivist-1.0candidategpt-5.4visual_page_generalist3 cultivars / 7 claims / 0 figuresOpen source pageCompare to active