The value of museums in the production, sharing, and use of entomological data to document hyperdiversity of the changing North
Author(s) -
Derek S. Sikes,
Matthew L. Bowser,
Kathryn M. Daly,
Toke T. Høye,
Sarah Meierotto,
Logan Mullen,
Jozef Slowik,
Jill Stockbridge
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
arctic science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2368-7460
DOI - 10.1139/as-2016-0038
Subject(s) - documentation , biodiversity , latitude , baseline (sea) , climate change , geography , population , value (mathematics) , high latitude , production (economics) , distribution (mathematics) , invertebrate , ecology , environmental resource management , physical geography , biology , computer science , environmental science , demography , sociology , fishery , mathematical analysis , mathematics , geodesy , programming language , macroeconomics , machine learning , economics
If the current rate of climate change continues, the composition, distribution, and relative population sizes of species in the higher latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere are likely to change considerably. Understanding the magnitude of this change requires a well- documented baseline against which to compare. Although specimen-less observations can help augment such a baseline for the minority of organisms that can be confidently identified in the field or from photographs, the vast majority of species are small-bodied invertebrates, primarily arthropods, that can only be identified from preserved specimens and (or) their tissues. Museum staff archive specimens and make them and their data available for research. This paper describes a number of challenges to the goal of thorough documentation of high-latitude arthropod biodiversity and their potential solutions. Examples are provided from ongoing and recently completed research that demonstrates the value of museum specimens and the sharing of their data via global portals like GBIF.org.
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