Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, V6T 1Z4.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2018 Nov 19;374(1763):20170386. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2017.0386.
Global change has become a central focus of modern biology. Yet, our knowledge of how anthropogenic drivers affect biodiversity and natural resources is limited by a lack of biological data spanning the Anthropocene. We propose that the hundreds of millions of plant, fungal and animal specimens deposited in natural history museums have the potential to transform the field of global change biology. We suggest that museum specimens are underused, particularly in ecological studies, given their capacity to reveal patterns that are not observable from other data sources. Increasingly, museum specimens are becoming mobilized online, providing unparalleled access to physiological, ecological and evolutionary data spanning decades and sometimes centuries. Here, we describe the diversity of collections data archived in museums and provide an overview of the diverse uses and applications of these data as discussed in the accompanying collection of papers within this theme issue. As these unparalleled resources are under threat owing to budget cuts and other institutional pressures, we aim to shed light on the unique discoveries that are possible in museums and, thus, the singular value of natural history collections in a period of rapid change.This article is part of the theme issue 'Biological collections for understanding biodiversity in the Anthropocene'.
全球变化已成为现代生物学的核心关注点。然而,由于缺乏贯穿全新世的生物数据,我们对人为驱动因素如何影响生物多样性和自然资源的了解十分有限。我们提出,存放在自然历史博物馆中的数以亿计的植物、真菌和动物标本具有改变全球变化生物学领域的潜力。我们认为,鉴于博物馆标本能够揭示其他数据源无法观察到的模式,这些标本在生态研究中尚未得到充分利用。越来越多的博物馆标本正在网上被调动起来,为人们提供了数十年甚至数百年的生理、生态和进化数据,这些数据是无与伦比的。在这里,我们描述了博物馆中存档的收藏数据的多样性,并概述了这些数据在本期特刊中所讨论的各种用途和应用。由于预算削减和其他机构压力,这些无与伦比的资源正面临威胁,因此我们旨在阐明在博物馆中进行独特发现的可能性,以及在快速变化时期自然历史收藏的独特价值。本文是“全新世生物多样性研究的生物收藏”主题特刊的一部分。