Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, 169 Tory Street, Wellington, 6011, New Zealand.
Universidade Metropolitana de Santos, Avenida Conselheiro Nébias 536, Santos, SP, 11045-002, Brazil.
Oecologia. 2020 Mar;192(3):641-646. doi: 10.1007/s00442-020-04620-0. Epub 2020 Feb 13.
Natural history collections are now being championed as key to broad ecological studies, especially those involving human impacts in the Anthropocene. However, collections are going through a crisis that threatens their present and future value, going beyond underfunding/understaffing to a more damaging practice: current researchers are no longer depositing material. This seems to be especially true for ecological studies that now benefit from historical collections, as those researchers are not trained to think about voucher specimens. We investigated indexed journals in Ecology and Zoology to assess if they have guidelines concerning voucher specimens. Only 4% of ecological journals presently encourage (but mostly do not require) voucher deposition, while 15% of zoological journals encourage it. In the first place, this goes contrary to scientific standards of reproducibility, since specimens are primary data. Secondly, this erodes the legacy we will leave for future researchers, because if this trend goes on unchecked, it will leave a massive gap in collections' coverage, undermining the quality that is presently acclaimed. The scientific community needs a wakeup call to avoid impoverishing the future value of natural history collections. Training and changing researchers' mindsets is essential, but that takes time. For the moment, we propose a stopgap measure: at the minimum, academic journals should encourage authors to deposit specimens in open collections, such as museums and universities.
自然历史藏品现在被推崇为广泛生态研究的关键,特别是那些涉及人类在人类世影响的研究。然而,藏品正面临一场危机,威胁着它们现在和未来的价值,这不仅仅是资金不足/人手不足的问题,还有一种更具破坏性的做法:现在的研究人员不再存放标本。对于那些从历史藏品中受益的生态研究来说,这种情况似乎尤其如此,因为这些研究人员没有接受过关于凭证标本的培训。我们调查了生态学和动物学索引期刊,以评估它们是否有关于凭证标本的指导方针。目前只有 4%的生态学杂志鼓励(但大多不要求)凭证存放,而 15%的动物学杂志则鼓励这样做。首先,这违反了可重复性的科学标准,因为标本是原始数据。其次,这侵蚀了我们将留给未来研究人员的遗产,因为如果这种趋势不受控制,它将导致藏品覆盖范围的巨大差距,从而破坏目前受到赞誉的质量。科学界需要警钟长鸣,以避免自然历史藏品未来价值的枯竭。培训和改变研究人员的思维模式至关重要,但这需要时间。目前,我们提出了一个权宜之计:至少,学术期刊应该鼓励作者将标本存放在开放的收藏机构中,如博物馆和大学。