Value of Collectons
Natural science museums are often asked to justify
not only their current biological research collections but also the
need to continue collecting modern specimens. The average person,
who is unfamiliar with scientific research, may look and only see
thousands of jars of dead fish, frogs, snakes, and lizards; steel
cabinets filled with drawers of mammal and bird carcasses,
freshwater mussels, fossils, bones and dried plant specimens; and
glass-top cases holding insects of every description. People may
wonder if these specimens are not on exhibit for the public to see,
what purpose do they serve. If these specimens are not on exhibit
for the public to see, people may wonder what purpose such
collections serves.
Research collections are often referred to as
biological libraries. Properly preserved specimens provide a
permanent snapshot in time and space and become only more valuable
through time. They can document locations and populations no longer
available to science due to habitat modification or outright
destruction. It was through the study of shell thickness in bird
eggs that the harmful effects of DDT were first elucidated, and the
analysis of fish collections has revealed increasing levels of
mercury in aquatic environments. By studying the stomach contents
of fish collected over a 30-year period at one locality in the
Pearl River, scientists were able to chart the precipitous decline
in water quality over that period based on the number and diversity
of diatoms (microscopic algae) contained in the intestines of the
preserved fish (M. Meister, 2000, Fish Preserves,
Tulanian).
Museum-based research collections are being used
increasingly in studying emerging infectious diseases such as
hantavirus, avian influenza, Ebola, and SARS. In 1993, the
hantavirus outbreak that occurred in the Southwest was soon linked
to deer mice as the host. Genetic studies on museum specimens of
deer mice showed conclusively that the hantavirus had been present
in rodent populations before 1993 and that, based on different
virus strains and different hosts, there was an ancient association
between the two. Subsequent ecological fieldwork, based on the
findings in the museum specimens, led to the discovery that rodent
populations increased significantly following the wet El Nino of
1992, confirming the relationship between increased precipitation,
large rodent populations, and a higher risk of human exposure to
hantavirus. By understanding these relationships scientists are
able to predict when the next disease outbreak may
occur.
Museums provide reference material that is used by
law enforcement, public health agencies, zooarchaeologists,
anthropologists, taxonomists, medical researchers, and many other
scientific disciplines. Most natural history field guides rely on
museum collections not only for life history and distributional
information about species but for accurate artistic renderings of
the subject matter. As our knowledge evolves and new methods of
scientific inquiry are developed, we are able to re-examine
interpretations of data derived from museum collections or to apply
new techniques to both historic and recently collected specimens.
Developments in molecular biology dictate that we now preserve and
archive more material from these specimens to allow us to examine
DNA and other genetic material.
It has been said that systematics (the
classification of living things) is the foundation of almost all
biology, and collections are the foundation of systematics. Just as
an author may go to a library to research subject matter for a book
he or she is writing, the systematist will visit biological
collections to examine specimens to understand the relationship
between and among various organisms. Only in these collections does
sufficient material often exist to make comparisons and draw
scientific conclusions, and in these collections specimens may
exist in a drawer or a jar that turn out to be new to
science.
In a world with such rapid industrial and urban
development, it is incumbent upon scientists to study and document
the effects of such development on organisms. It is only through
documenting the geographical distribution, habitat requirements,
food habits, reproduction, and other aspects of a species' natural
history that we can come to understand that particular species'
needs and that we can manage the environment to meet those needs.
But to understand much about a species, we need to preserve enough
individuals from different populations throughout the species'
range to demonstrate the degree of variation found in that
species.
As surprising as it may seem, there are many areas
of the United States and within Mississippi that have never been
the subject of a basic biological inventory of the species of
plants and animals inhabiting those areas. Surveys to establish
baseline information are desperately needed in many areas before we
can attempt to monitor the status of the species or its location
into the future. A basic premise of scientific methodology is the
ability of subsequent workers to repeat the study; therefore, the
collection, preservation, and deposition into museum collections of
voucher specimens is essential to these inventories. They provide
that snapshot in time and space, and permanently preserve for
future study examples of the fauna and flora that occurred at that
particular time in that particular place.
Scientific collecting can be an expensive, arduous,
time-consuming endeavor. From travel, equipment, and supplies
expenses to physically preparing and preserving the specimens to
identifying, cataloguing, and installing the specimens into the
collections is a long, meticulous process. Because of these
factors, scientists generally must focus their collecting efforts
on limited objectives or specific questions. Collectors are also
bound by professional ethics with respect to research and
understand the responsibility to justify the scientific collecting
of specimens. Most modern-day museum scientists are involved to
some degree in conservation biology and their field research can
directly impact how a species or its habitat is managed to benefit
perhaps an entire ecosystem. The effects of limited, judicious
scientific collecting on a population of plants or animals pales in
comparison to the detrimental effects of habitat destruction,
overexploitation, land use changes, invasive species, climate
change, and human population growth.
As wild places and the species inhabiting them
disappear around the world, the value of museum biological
collections becomes that much more important, not only to the
scientists who study these collections but ultimately to our
society as a whole. And it is imperative that we acknowledge and
educate society of the connection between the two so that these
collections will survive and grow and continue to provide answers
to questions that we may not yet know how to ask.
Additionl Resources