Subject: Natural history specimen salvage
Re: Beyond parataxonomy? ( paracollecting? ) The issue below emerged on the net and is relevant to several discussion groups of a biological, curatorial, and collections management nature. Like parataxonomy, and mass culling of museum and herbarium collections, it is a suggestion that is likely to evoke a diversity of views and opinion. I would like to know what some of them are. >Check out the sidebar article on P. 30 of the March 1993 issue of >Scientific American. It describes an article by physicist and science >fiction writer Gregory Benford, who, in last November's Proceedings of >the National Academy of Sciences, is advocating the flash-freezing of >samples of biota from endangered habitats. Given only the above background, I find this proposal a little naive, and if it is not naive, then it is disturbing: disturbing in that there is a lack off appreciation of the need for mechanisms to voucher and accurately identify the organisms on which we work and which we base environmental and conservation management decisions. It could be argued that if organisms are going extinct that rapidly, the analysis of their DNA is of academic interest only, especially so if no comparative specimen was collected on which to base an identification and pass systematic judgement. Perhaps the author was implying that at a later day biotechnicians could use these undocumented, unidentified DNA samples to call species back from extinction and recreate vanished biomes. For many groups this is still in the realm of science fiction (but then again, there have been some remarkable successes in the cryogenic storage of some plant germplasm). I have no problem with the rapid sampling (cryopreservation or whatever) of endangered habitats, but the samples must be identified, or at least identifiable, and this means the collection of scientific specimens prepared in the standard manner for the group, and their lodgement and curation in museums and herbaria. The importance of collecting data can not be overemphasized. The locality is not enough -- habitat, associated species, general appearance, colours, local uses, etc., should all be accurately recorded and tied to a scientific voucher specimen, not just a lump of plant or animal tissue. And the practical problems -- what institutions, especially in third world countries where much of the habitat threat occurs, have, or can afford, the capacity to store millions of frozen specimens? Yes, the problem of vanishing taxa and habitats is serious, but I do not believe this proposal (as I understand it) offers a practicable solution. jim Jim Croft [Herbarium CBG] Australian National Botanic Gardens GPO Box 1777, Canberra, ACT 2601, AUSTRALIA +61-6-2509 490 fax: +61-6-2509 599 Biodiversity Directorate Australian National Parks & Wildlife Service *** Conservation DistList Instance 6:46 Distributed: Friday, February 19, 1993 Message Id: cdl-6-46-002 ***Received on Thursday, 18 February, 1993