The Global Museum: natural history collections and the future of evolutionary science and public education

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Biodiversity and Conservation
Note that a Preprint of this article also exists, first published April 19, 2019.

Introduction

Natural history museums harbour the authoritative records of biological diversity across time and space and have always been meeting places for scientists, amateurs, and the public. By visiting a natural history museum and learning about nature, the lay citizen often tacitly endorses the information presented, so that museums are trusted resources, at a time when many other institutions are bitterly mistrusted (Foley, 2015). Natural history collections have a special role, in part because they not only serve public education, but in many cases they also are actively investigated to answer pressing problems in biology and beyond (e.g.,  Vane-Wright & Cranston, 1992).

Museum biological collections are more than meets the eye. Each specimen harbours many kinds of data, such as information on locality and collection parameters, or on associated pathogens, as well as biopolymers such as DNA and proteins, and metabolic compounds. This wealth of metadata across many specimens turns collections into powerful research tools, enabling scientists to test historic environmental hypotheses and carry out diverse studies ranging from public health & safety (as cornerstones in studies of environmental health and epidemiology; (Suarez & Tsutsui, 2004; Vo et al., 2011; DuBay & Fuldner, 2017); biomimetic design, where naturally-occurring architectures and systems inspire technological innovation (Jayaram & Full, 2016; Nirody et al., 2018); historical genomics (focussing on ancient alleles or past genotypes; (Bi et al., 2013; Besnard et al., 2014); to global and local change (tracking shifts in phenotype across specimens through time; (Jones & Daeler, 2018), something that a database of mere species observations cannot do. But natural history collections face challenges, many related to the need for long-term commitment to care and growth.

Survey methodology

This paper provides examples of how natural history museums have enabled discovery in evolutionary biology and environmental science; how that role has recently expanded to other fields of science; and how museums have helped foster the next generation of innovative thinkers.

Collections & types of museums

We broadly define natural history museums as institutions containing diverse physical specimens, including seed banks, substantial living, frozen, or dried tissue collections, and DNA banks, among others. These collections often include material from rapidly disappearing or extinct species, and often collected from the most inaccessible parts of the Earth. Collections may have innate, historic biases in taxonomic coverage and sampling design, which might need to be considered for their further development. Whereas historically natural history museums, in particular those in Europe, were linked to the colonialist enterprise, increasingly international specimen acquisition and study are conducted in strong partnership with local institutions. International agreements, such as the Nagoya protocol, rightly mandate such participation under the terms of Access and Benefit Sharing. Additionally, citizen science increasingly contributes to collections (see Box 1), which today are housed all over the world, and serve as gems of diverse global centres of cutting-edge research (see Fig. 1) and education, for an increasingly urban human population (e.g., Bates, 2007). Natural history museums may be located at universities without exhibits, or may include public exhibits, such as typically occurs in national, state or regional entities. In many cases, regional collections, and their exhibits, reflect and strengthen visibility, appreciation, identity and awareness of local culture, flora and fauna, therefore playing an important and confirmative role for the visiting public. Collections that span long periods of time reflect the history of science as well as changes in norms and values in society: what was sampled, how and why. This emphasis is especially visible in open, regional, collections on display. Regionality, therefore, can be considered a strength of collections by fulfilling an important role in sustaining knowledge and appreciation of the value of local biodiversity. Increasingly, regional museums were connected into the global network of collections.

Distribution, redundancy and digitization of collections

The distributed nature of the world’s museum collections increases long term data security. Collections of natural objects are vulnerable to theft, fire and water damage, but the distributed nature of collections and in some cases duplicate repository of specimens ensures persistence, such as for the tens of thousands of specimens of plants stored at the Berlin Herbarium that were almost completely destroyed during World War II. In contrast, the Butantã Museum in São Paulo had a world-renowned collection of 85,000 snakes and 500,000 arachnids that were not duplicated and shockingly destroyed by a fire in 2010 (Phillips, 2010). Despite these concrete recent examples of natural heritage loss, the infrastructure of many museums remains underfunded, exacerbating their vulnerability. A grim example is the Brazil National Museum in Rio de Janeiro, where a fire destroyed an estimated 90% of the collections in several divisions in September 2018 (Phillips, 2018), causing dramatic loss of both knowledge and data.

Creating overlap in collections, especially for extant species and genetic resource collections, is key to ensuring the longevity of these samples and associated data. Initiatives such as the Global Genome Biodiversity Network (GGBN; Droege et al., 2016) aim to collect, catalogue, and “democratise” genomic resources across global collections, covering 45,708 species (as of 30 September 2019). This enterprise represents an important step in the direction of a distributed collection, but would benefit from more coordination and financial support for data security, complementarity, and redundancy among collections. These aims are included in the mission of the pan-European Distributed System of Scientific Collections (http://www.dissco.eu) initiative, which aims at “Providing hard evidence on our planet’s natural diversity”, by enabling the transformation of a “fragmented landscape of the crucial natural science collections in Europe into an integrated knowledge base”. DiSSCo claims it “will allow Europe’s researchers and technology professionals to share and reuse the data linked to collections across disciplines and borders. It will mobilise and harmonise science collection data (collection metadata, traits, images, metabolites, nucleotide sequences, distribution or ecological information) and make them available as part of a highly connected linked-data graph”. In the US, the Integrated Digitized Biocollections (iDigBio) initiative supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF) has helped make data and images for millions of biological specimens available in electronic format “for the research community, government agencies, students, educators, and the general public” (Page et al., 2015). iDigBio serves as “the coordinating center for the national digitization effort” fostering partnerships, innovations, and content, but, crucially, is not assured of long-term funding by the NSF or other federal agencies. In contrast, DiSSCo, which has now been accepted into the EU’s Infrastructure Roadmap, started by securing government buy-in, with content being part of operational costs. Because it has become an established and recognized entity, governments fund the infrastructure because they need the services.

The centrality of natural history collections to evolutionary biology and public understanding.
Figure 1: The centrality of natural history collections to evolutionary biology and public understanding.
Users, contributors and stakeholders of natural history collections are indicated; yellow arrows represent data flow, green arrows the flow of specimens.

Despite their immense value, natural history museums are facing grand challenges. Taxonomic expertise is decreasing for many organism groups or is not represented in the curation of some collections. Funding often relies on public sources and may be adversely affected by political and socio-economic changes, comprising the long-term continuity of a museum’s activities (see for instance Andreone et al., 2014). New international regulations on the collection, export and use of specimens for non-commercial and commercial purposes are now increasing administrative burdens and may prevent further development of collections. Cross-institutional, international coordination of secure data standards has not yet been fully realised. At the global level, the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) is “an international network and research infrastructure funded by the world’s governments and aimed at providing anyone, anywhere, open access to data about all types of life on Earth”. As the main global biodiversity database, a large proportion of the >1 billion records comprise observations rather than specimens (see below). Smith, Johnston & Lücking (2016) and Yesson et al. (2007) discuss issues regarding data quality in GBIF, such as unreliable taxonomic identifications in the absence of voucher specimens, and non-global coverage of species distribution data. Verifying suspect occurrences through niche modelling, based on verified and geo- and DNA-referenced occurrences of the same species, is a step toward identifying unreliable records.

The value and diversity of biological specimens

All collections ultimately contain, or are dependent on, specimens. A specimen may consist of a complete organism (collected by naturalists over the past few centuries) or parts of a single individual organism. Increasingly, meta-data associated with the physical specimen, the ‘extended specimen’ (Webster, 2017), add value and increase data richness through videos, sound recordings, information on habitat, and photographs. For example, for birds, the extended specimen may be comprised of records of the song, or videos of behaviour of those organisms, prepared in a way that preserves them for the future. Bioacoustic tools provide unique collections that can include some of the last known evidence of extant species. Likewise, several films exist (e.g., https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nAzqGn-LHCw) portraying the behaviour of animal species, such as the Tasmanian tiger Thylacinus cynocephalus, the golden toad Incilius periglenes, and the Hawaiian crow Corvus hawaiiensis, that are now extinct in the wild. Museums currently host increasingly diverse collections, which, in addition to DNA and tissue banks, may be generated by core genomic facilities or imaging labs (isotopic, X-ray computed tomography data [CT], scanning electron microscopy [SEM] images). Examples now include rich stores of high-resolution CT data generated from museum specimens, which allow investigators to look inside material in a largely non-destructive way. These require different storage resources from those that traditionally constitute museum infrastructures, namely large-scale and secure long-term storage of image data. Integration of different data streams will allow bridging among disciplines and the involvement of fields underrepresented in natural history museums, such as engineering, biomedical sciences, and art. For instance, biomimetic design can benefit strongly from inspiration from natural history collections (for examples from robotics see Jayaram & Full, 2016), or solutions to global health or food security challenges can be based on exploration of natural history specimen collections (see Box 2 Specimens and pathogens).

Specimens are at the heart of the discovery process and technological advances are increasing the number and diversity of possible questions that can be addressed (e.g., Schmitt et al., 2018; see below). For instance, bone fragment identification using collagen barcoding was difficult to imagine before the rise of LC-MS and other technologies, but Welker et al. (2015) and Horn et al. (2019) used proteomics to identify Palaeolithic fragments of mammal bones and extinct species, respectively. Genomic analyses of single bone fragments can inform on the evolutionary and demographic history of our own species (e.g., Slon et al., 2018). Future technologies may include more advanced chemical, biochemical, isotope or micro-anatomical surveys, making specimens even more critical because they connect diverse data streams and facilitate data interoperability (see Box 3 for ‘best curation practices for the future’). At the same time, maintaining specimens is key to repeatability—a core requirement of science.

Specimen collections enable answers to a large number of other scientific questions, some of which have not yet been posed. The earliest museums facilitated interactions among scholar-travellers, to share observational data from across the planet and to help build the core of what would become natural history and modern evolutionary biology. Increasingly, museums are leveraging new data from their specimens, and this integration of data types allows training in techniques that bridge among disciplines, as well as the generation of data sets that are of relevance to disparate traditional fields such as engineering, biomedical sciences, and art. Today natural history museums serve increasingly as a nexus for work that disregards disciplinary boundaries and addresses questions we did not know to ask before. Because collections provide the opportunity to rigorously examine diverse aspects of taxonomic, morphological, genetic, and chemical variation across vast temporal and spatial scales, they can help diverse scientists bridge the gaps between traditionally distinct disciplines. Museum spaces ideally are filled with students who learn to think anti-disciplinarily and appreciate the importance of the specimen. These spaces can therefore be considered ‘Innovation Incubators’ where a next generation of critical thinkers in biology and beyond will be trained, embedded within the prerequisite of traditional taxonomic museum expertise.

A specimen constitutes a voucher, not only of the actual individual sampled at the time, but often also of its locality–including information about the soil and other biotic and abiotic conditions in which the specimen was collected (see below, the ‘holistic specimen’). In fact, the specimen can be seen as the outcome of a combination of genotype and past environmental change or conditions (e.g., Holmes et al., 2016), and a well-curated collection captures the variation in phenotype as well as genotype (see Bi et al., 2013; Rowe et al., 2011; Staats et al., 2013; Ruane & Austin, 2017). For instance, Cridland et al. (2018), comparing SNP patterns from historic museum and living specimens of bees, could not only infer ‘rapid change’ in genetic composition of honey bees in California, but also identify historic genotypes in candidate genes possibly involved in adaptation to new niches. Another, non-domestic, example involved reconstructing the shift to C4 photosynthesis in grasses using DNA from a 100-year-old Malagasy herbarium specimen for which both phylogenetic placement and genetic regulation of C4 photosynthesis could be assessed (Besnard et al., 2014). Therefore, specimen collections can provide a powerful reference for functional genomics studies, in a world where assessing phenotypes of different genotypes, retrievable from the specimen, is essential.

Specimens vs. observations in digital collections

Troudet et al. (2018) describe how over the past decades the proportion of specimen-based occurrences in GBIF has decreased from 68 to 18%, in favour of observation-based occurrences, either expert-validated or not, mostly from contributions by citizen science efforts such as iNaturalist and eBird (see Table 1, and Box 1). This will have affected repeatability and ‘richness’ of systematics and evolutionary studies and the authors urge that “when impossible to secure, voucher specimens can be replaced by observation-based occurrences”, particularly when combined with ‘ancillary’ data such as recordings, pictures, DNA samples etc. In cases where ethical, conservational, or practical concerns exist, observation data instead of collected specimens provide additional (or occasionally substitute) contributions to our knowledge on where and when particular species occur. Recorded sightings, such as those from iNaturalist or e-Bird, include occurrences of diverse temporal range, and are pretty much the only observation-based data that are allowed in GBIF. In addition to such observations recorded in the field, however, collected specimens, when available, offer additional options for confirming or extending the original work using new analytical techniques. Similarly, sound recordings can be re-studied within the context of new evidence, leading to reciprocal illumination. Boakes et al (2010) asked how species distribution data for a well-known clade (Gallus) from museum collections compared across literature records, banding (ringing) data, ornithological atlases, and birdwatchers’ trip reports in terms of completeness and consistency. They found that “..primary sources of biodiversity information are subject to a range of biases that fundamentally affect their interpretation and therefore their reliability in measuring biodiversity change” (Boakes et al, 2010).

Table 1:
Major global and local aggregators of biodiversity data.
Acronym Mission Funding; scope Type of data Volume of records (M)
ADBC Advancing Digitization of Biodiversity Collections US
ALA Atlas of Living Australia. https://www.ala.org.au/ Australia Observations, specimens 84.8
BOLD Barcode of Life Database Canada; global 7.76
DiSSCo Distributed System of Scientific Collections; digitization and databasing of european specimen collections Europe Specimens 1500
eBird Citizen science: the world largest biodiversity-related citizen science project, gathering information on bird sightings, archive it, and “freely share it to power new data-driven approaches to science, conservation and education.” https://ebird.org/home Global Observations 100 ‘yearly’
EOL Encyclopedia of Life; Global access to knowledge about life on Earth Australia, Egypt, US; global Species descriptions <1,9
GBIF Global Biodiversity Information Facility Global Observations, specimens 1300
GGBN Global Genome Biodiversity Network Global DNA, tissues, environmental samples 3.8
GloBI Global Biotic Interactions; species interaction data by combining existing open datasets. https://www.globalbioticinteractions.org/ US; global Species interaction data e.g., predator–prey, pollinator-plant, pathogen-host, parasite-host >0.7
HOLOS Berkeley Ecoinformatics Engine: accessing and visualizing integrated biological and environmental datasets to address questions of global change biology. https://holos.berkeley.edu/ US; global Different kinds of biological and environmental datasets n.a.
iBOL International Barcode of Life; extending BOLD’s coverage. iBOL’s forthcoming BIOSCAN will activate a biomonitoring system for half the world’s ecoregions, metabarcoding assemblages and studying species interactions from 2,500 sites. https://iBOL.org Canada; global DNA barcodes and metadata see BOLD
IDEA Island Digital Ecosystem Avatar; place-based systems ecology for building simulations of social-ecological systems US; Moorea Specimens, observations ?
iDigBio Integrated Digitized Biocollections; digitisation and databasing of US specimen collections US Specimens 117.5
iNaturalist Citizen science: one of the world’s most popular nature apps, sharing observations globally; https://www.inaturalist.org/ US; global Observations <1
LifeWatch Biodiversity research, -management and -conservation priority setting Europe Research tools n.a.
iSpot Citizen science: experts helping citizen community to identify its wildlife observations. https://www.ispotnature.org/ UK; global Species identifications 0.030
MoL Map of Life; providing species range and dynamics information and species lists for any geographic area. https://mol.org/ Global Occurrences, observations 8.8
NCBI National Center for Biotechnology Information Global Nucleotide and amino acid sequences; genome annotations 0.37 species covered
NEON National Ecological Observatory Network; continental-scale environmental data, infrastructure for research, educational tools to work with large data. https://www.neonscience.org/ US Observations ?
OToL Open Tree of Life; construct a comprehensive, dynamic and digitally-available tree of life by synthesizing published phylogenetic trees along with taxonomic data. https://tree.opentreeoflife.org/ US; global Phylogenetic trees and taxonomies 2.6 OTU’s in taxonomy
Traitbase Ecological species characteristics, individual level species information. https://traitbase.info/whatis Spain; global Specific characteristics e.g., body size, diet or fecundity ?
DOI: 10.7717/peerj.8225/table-1

The need for continued and comprehensive collecting

Continued field collecting ensures that museum specimens and data will be accessible for future generations and secures future access to time series of specimens, collected continuously over decades or even hundreds of years. These long-term archives provide valuable and unique information (Graham et al., 2004) on changes in species composition in environments and habitats, due to factors such as climate change, human-mediated nitrogen deposition, or other anthropogenic activities (Meineke et al., 2019; Meineke & Davies, 2019). An example is a large survey and collection of marine invertebrates from the Swedish west coast from the 1920’s and 30’s conducted by the Gothenburg Natural History museum, in which the exact sample locations could be deduced, and consequently revisited during a new survey in the 2000’s, revealing a 60% loss of biodiversity (Obst et al., 2017). Indeed, specimens collected by researchers 200 years in the past can be compared with contemporary (and future) sampling—as long as these collections and institutions persist.

Whereas the value of field collecting may be obvious within the broader museum community, justification for collecting specimens is not always clear for society and even some scientists (e.g., Rocha et al., 2014). There can be additional challenges for collectors in Buddhist countries where killing living things is problematic because of prevailing philosophies. In some sectors of the US, it is clear that the public misunderstands the mission of museums and does not appreciate the need for continued responsible collecting. One recent example is the unwarranted overreaction against scientific collecting of a bird specimen from the Solomon Islands, information about which was placed on the web by well-meaning media directors at the American Museum of Natural History (Johnson, 2018). This sad event, which resulted in death threats and cyber-harassment of the scientist involved, shows that many people see only the destructive aspects of collecting of individual specimens, but do not connect this act with the many beneficial services of museums to science and society. Additionally, some laypeople did not appreciate the relative insignificance of scientific collecting as an agent of species loss as compared with habitat loss and introduced or feral predators, such as house cats (see Marra & Santella, 2016; Woinarski, Legge & Dickman, 2019). In this case, the public seemed to place undue emphasis on the loss of life incurred by collection of a single bird, suggesting much more relevance of an emotional response rather than a scientific appraisal of the true impact of collecting data on populations.

Amending the idiosyncracies and biases of natural history collections

Historically, some of the largest collections have grown through the acquisition of specimens through professional collections, such as the ornithology collections at the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard. In the past 50 years, natural history collections have instead grown more through the research programs of individual scientists. Collections growth by these means can result in spectacular coverage of specific clades or localities, but often results in patchy coverage of biodiversity as a whole, or coverage in a way that is not maximally useful for studying the effects of global change on organismal diversity. Collections have also tended to emphasizing rarities (i.e., occurring as single individuals per species), a biological phenomenon which may actually be commonly-occurring, for instance in tropical herbivorous insects (Novotný & Basset, 2000). Such biases often result from efforts to conduct general collecting (Ter Steege et al., 2011). Like research-driven collecting, these efforts at generality have resulted in an invaluable reference specimen base in today’s museum collections, allowing comparison with living specimens, identifying relatives of medically- and economically-important species (for instance melon, Sebastian et al., 2010), or testing historic biological hypotheses (e.g., Délye, Deulvot & Chauvel, 2013). On the other hand, this patchy tradition of biological collecting has come at a cost to easily comparing organisms across large geographic regions or across temporal spans. For example, evolutionary biology would benefit from being able to analyze more common species represented in collections worldwide, because this would allow assessing phenotypic variation at much broader scales. In addition, assumptions about species ID based on morphology may be falsified by DNA data DeSalle, Egan & Siddall, 2005—but also the reverse—revealing an unexpectedly high level of cryptic diversity in certain groups (e.g., Hebert et al., 2004).

Increasingly, growth of museum collections is the result of their increased relevance for ecological studies, in addition to input from taxonomically-focused collecting activities, linked to specific inventories and research projects. Whereas museum staff and associated researchers and students still undertake expeditions to increase collections and make them available for future generations, some collections also now come from large scale ecological studies (e.g., NEON in the US), although they are often not conducted and archived in ways that maximize specimen value (Cook et al., 2016a; Cook et al., 2016b). Still, such systematic collecting raises the issue of what mandates should guide biological collections growth in the future. One such mandate would require a concerted effort of museums globally to collect and archive specimens in a coordinated manner that would help document current biodiversity and variation of common species across the globe. Such an effort was originally planned to be conducted by NEON in the United States, but in some cases has fallen short of this goal (Cook et al., 2016a; Cook et al., 2016b). Other ventures include the above-mentioned BOLD (with iBOL extending its coverage) which holds 7.76M DNA barcode records across 0.31M species, many of which are commonly-occurring and for a large part with vouchers present/documented. Future collections should continue to expand with specimens sampled widely across biodiversity, but in addition should amass commonly-occurring species, which can serve as environmental monitors, especially when sufficient metadata is also collected.

Place-based discovery: different specimen data sets connecting to a location

When collecting efforts from the perspective of different clades have focussed on a particular location, an additional layer of comparative information emerges, that of species-correlations, environment and edaphic correlations, and the evolution of communities i.e., the full-suite of local biodiversity. Taking ‘place’ into account enables asking different kinds of questions and can lead to ‘place-based discovery’. As Miller (2007) puts it, “Places are not simply a semantic convenience. They are a meaningful lens for viewing the world because it is orderly with respect to geographic space”. As such, ‘place-based’ approaches in general focus on the characteristics and meaning of particular places as a fundamental starting point for a particular development or project. Especially in charity and community development work, place-based approaches aim at “giving power to the community in guiding systemic change” and therefore “being recognised as critical to responding effectively to certain community challenges” (http://www.qcoss.org.au/). In education, place-based approaches are thought to “identify, recover and increase the values of local cultural specificities” (Monardo, 2019). Analytically, place-based approaches were successfully applied in a study on community-membership predictions (Caughlin et al., 2013). In marine resources management place-based approaches, including human activities and use along with biodiversity conservation have proven important since long ago (Carollo et al., 2009).

Place-based learning and education is well developed (Gruenewald & Smith, 2014) and provides a context for local understanding and societal change. Natural history museums are well suited for hosting place-based activities, as well as making direct links between collections and associated data and societal activities and needs. The developing Island Digital Ecosystem Avatar (IDEA) project is one example (Davies et al., 2016), entailing “a systems ecology open science initiative to conduct the basic scientific research needed to build use-oriented simulations (avatars) of entire social-ecological systems”. Many specimens will have been collected and stored, for instance for DNA barcode reference libraries, for making this possible.

For biological collections and their associated and ensuing process of discovery, the place-based approach is relevant as it seeks to understand how local information and processes are interconnected with those at a larger scale. Best practices for biological collections include a precise geographical reference for each item, as is included in the Darwin Core (see https://dwc.tdwg.org/). When collected together, sets of items are necessarily place-based. In addition to standardised metadata directly associated with biological items (Kissling et al., 2018), many other types of information are place-based and can be collected at the same location and super-imposed on point specimen data. Examples include information about geology, ground and atmospheric chemistry, and archaeology. These, and other data layers—such as from GBIF (species occurrences), NCBI (DNA and amino acid sequences), Open Tree of Life (phylogenetic trees), Map of Life (abundance data), TraitBase (traits), GloBI (biotic interactions), see Table 1—can be associated or combined with geographical location through a geographical information system (HOLOS), integrating across diverse data types and enabling testing hypotheses concerning causal impacts—the ‘holistic specimen’. In a sense, this approach is comparable to correlative species distribution modelling (SDM) approaches such as using Maximum Entropy (MaxEnt; Phillips & Dudik, 2008), focussing on mostly abiotic and edaphic correlates.

In addition, the place-based approach can provide a baseline for understanding changes over time (Billick et al., 2013; National Research Council, 2014). An understanding of historical processes provides a means for predicting, or forecasting, how biological systems may respond to change in the near future. For instance, Willis et al. (2008) studied how climate change may affect phenology in angiosperm species in Concord, Massachusetts. Slingsby et al. (2017) studied the interaction between fire and climate change on species diversity in the South African Cape Floristic Region, allowing modelling of future vegetation response.

In general, the additional value of place-based approach for scientific discovery includes the serendipity of collecting data over periods of change identified later, as well as the interaction of researchers sharing an interest in the same geographical location or region (Michener et al., 2009). Place-based initiatives associated with larger networks (see Table 1) can provide access and understanding to a diversity of communities, which is both democratic and allows broad participation in discovery. Examples of such initiatives include developing new natural history museums (Darwin Initiative, www.darwininitiative.org.uk) and establishing a reference DNA barcode library (with vouchers for each specimen) of local biodiversity (Van de Bank et al., 2008; Janzen & Hallwachs, 2016) representing a place- (not clade-)based, regional, effort. In addition to natural history museums, the benefits of a place-based approach are also shared with field stations, botanical gardens, and biological reserves (National Research Council, 2014).

The Global Museum

By ‘Global Museum’, we mean the potential global community of natural history museum collections that increasingly are becoming interconnected through digitization, thereby enabling both synergy and increased power of resolution in testing (mostly) evolutionary biological hypotheses. With the Global Museum, scientists worldwide are able to study and sample each other’s specimens (including from remote collections), perform geometric morphometric analyses of shapes or generate high-resolution CT data and compare related images. Phenomic and extended specimen; Box 3 data on particular populations, species or actual specimens would be available at a large scale, from databases either as part of or outside the Global Museum, enabling correlation and modelling studies at a global scale, and testing evolutionary hypotheses with unprecedented power. As indicated above, many museums serve regional communities, and collections in such institutions usually reflect regional interests, fauna and flora, funding and research questions. Given that science is an international endeavour, the question can be asked as to whether evolutionary biology would be better served by enhanced ability to document and analyse patterns across regions, such as with the use of GBIF. For instance, for taxonomy, having the virtual, global, workbench of the Barcode Of Life Database BOLD (http://www.boldsystems.org; Ratnasingham & Hebert, 2007) theoretically allows taxonomists globally to harmonise species delineations by collectively analyzing and interpreting DNA barcode (and associated distributional) patterns from global rather than regional data sets. Boufahja et al. (2015) present another interesting example of connecting regional and global scale in marine nematodes.

Museum communities are increasingly not confined by a single, local physical space but able to distribute their reach through innovations in technology. Databases and other online tools enable international access and an array of novel platforms facilitate participation of a broad swath of the public in discovery and documentation, from undergraduate classes to young children participating in aspects of the scientific process. Examples of such activities include encouraging children to make observations of butterflies in drawers, thereby likely building their sense of biodiversity. Another example is citizen science projects in which volunteers help in interpreting and digitizing information on old collection labels, as has been done for the Paris Herbarium (http://lesherbonautes.mnhn.fr/) and for brachiopod fossils at the Swedish Museum of Natural History (see Box 1).

From a Global Museum perspective, we may ask whether phenomena such as global change have been effectively documented in collections in the past so that we can use the ensemble of past collections to forecast future conditions. For instance, collections can help scientists document how C4 photosynthesizing plants have spread during recent decades as a response to the global increase in atmospheric CO2 concentration (Besnard et al., 2014), or how species extinctions may be overrepresented in particular clades or areas (e.g., Ricklefs, 2006). Such work would be impossible without having the integrated, properly digitised and databased platform that a Global Museum provides.

Large international data sharing initiatives (e.g., LifeWatch ERIC, GBIF, Encyclopedia of Life, BOLD and iBOL, see Table 1) allow access to collections by scientists and the public living far from privileged historic western centres for inquiry. For instance, GBIF alone provides access to now over a billion records of specimens and observations from around the world. iDigBio, GBIF, and the Atlas of Living Australia (ALA) and its affiliated atlases are the world’s largest and best-developed biodiversity data aggregators and mobilizers. As outlined above, DiSSCo is a developing initiative of major significance that will unify natural science collections in Europe. With increasingly distributed access to large datasets and online portals to large-scale computational resources, analysis of the “big data” of biodiversity records can also go global (see Antonelli et al., 2015 for an example in global angiosperm biogeography and speciation). Digitization of collections will be increasingly important in this respect; there are many valuable but undigitized collections (and literature resources) residing in museums, not in the least outside of developed countries.

But a Global Museum is more than increasingly inter-connected biodiversity databases across the globe. In order to be effective and truly innovative it should be synergistic in answering scientific questions, in a way that single museum collections cannot do. For instance, linking data on phenomes, including genomes, proteomes, parasites, secondary metabolite chemistry, distributions, morphology and generally all ‘extended specimen’ metadata, across global museum specimen collections would enable testing new hypotheses and correlations, and with synergy not unlike that observed in studies using synthesis radio telescopes (Levanda & Leshem, 2010). Exciting examples of such studies can already be found for instance in Lamichhaney et al. (2019) where the authors focussed on phenotypical convergence and its possible genomic correlations.

For a synergistic Global Museum to happen across a wide spectrum of museum situations and funding sources, there would need to be ample coordination in terms of setting-up an operational infrastructure, governance structure and data standards. Issues such as data ownership visibility and transparency could perhaps be improved using emerging blockchain technologies (see below). The level of funding required for such an initiative, and what balance between national and global funding is preferred and over what time frame, are questions that need to be explored, probably by museum communities and federal funding agencies. Additionally, how will policy makers as well as the general public be convinced of the importance of a Global Museum as a top-priority? Comparisons are often made with astrophysicists and how they are able, as a united community, to leverage unprecedented large sums of funding for ever more ‘extremely’ and ‘overwhelmingly’ large instrumentations (see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Overwhelmingly_Large_Telescope). How can global biodiversity scientists and museums achieve comparable goals? What role can existing platforms and museums play already? The best roadmap to follow towards a Global Museum is beyond the scope of this paper, but we do appreciate the reality of selling the concept to ‘the public’ may be a formidable challenge.

Increasing the relevance of museums through digitization and imaging

As indicated above, digitization of collections is important for achieving a global perspective on (big) biodiversity data. To facilitate the coordination of collection and databasing efforts between museums—a necessity to achieve a Global Museum—it is vital to increase awareness of what knowledge is available, not only at regional museums but across museums globally. This is most easily achievable through digitization of the collections. Moreover, such digitization also opens up the collections for a number of additional researchers interested in overall temporal or spatial patterns in biodiversity. iDigBio (see above) provides a good example of how digitization can be successful and provides outreach to a global user base. In its first 10 years, iDigBio and NSF have appropriately prioritized digitization of specimens that can drive collaborative research and answer specific biological questions. However, this specialization necessarily results in only a small fraction of available specimens being digitized.

For any information system to be successful, proper nomenclature and taxonomy of specimens involved are paramount, the bedrock of success. Names applied to specimens will change as science progresses but data will remain. Ideally, names applied to specimens are up-to-date but good museums do indeed worry about synonymy. A prime example of combining data bases and ‘vetting’ them is VertNet (Constable et al., 2010) which combines four global vertebrate networks: Mammal Networked Information System (MaNIS), Ornithological Information System (ORNIS), HerpNET and FishNet 2. These networks collectively mobilize over 52 million records from more than 70 institutions, representing about 70% of all the vertebrate species occurrence data that are accessible through GBIF. A good example for keeping track of synonyms is the Swedish Taxonomic Database DynTaxa (https://www.dyntaxa.se/), and for combining Biodiversity data bases see the Swedish LifeWatch Analysis Portal (https://www.analysisportal.se/).

A major question for the future is how the community should greatly expand the scope of digitized specimens. In the US, the Biodiversity Collections Network (BCoN) developed a strategy for the next decade to “maximize the value of our collections resource for research and education” envisaging building a network of Extended Specimen data (Biodiversity Collections Network, 2018; Webster, 2017; see also Biodiversity Collections Network, 2019). Just as incidentally collected historical specimens often prove useful for research questions not envisioned during the collecting event, it is also likely that specimens digitized without a specific research question in mind will prove useful for answering scientific or societal questions, especially if digitized on a large scale. But digitizing ‘blindly’ must of course be balanced with the pressure of meagre resources; enabling citizen scientists to assist offers a good solution (Rouhan et al., 2016). Large amounts of metadata remain to be digitized and would generate knowledge on biogeography (geographic data of specimens), disease spread (genetic material from parasites), biological interactions (pollination data), phenology, or shifts in species distributions (Suarez & Tsutsui, 2004; James et al., 2018). New advances in image recognition through deep learning using neural networks are also likely to enable easy identification of many species, such as already implemented in the iNaturalist platform, and hence help digitization.

Tracking specimen taxonomy

For research on temporal patterns of global change, such as global warming studies or analyses of movement of hybrid zones, museum records provide a unique source of historical records. Because they are backed up by physical specimens, records can be identified to individual species irrespective of how many taxonomic changes have occurred since specimen collection, an endeavour that is often impossible if the records were purely observational. However, an important caveat of this effort is that it is rarely obvious from online databases on what taxonomical opinion each identification was based. Indeed, to capitalize on the inherent strength of specimen-based records a citation to the taxonomic revision behind each identification would be ideal, but is not always available. The above-mentioned Biodiversity Collections Network (2018) report suggests exploring blockchain technology (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blockchain; Iansiti & Lakhani, 2017), which is a decentralized approach to data exchange that has already gained significant traction in the corporate, academic, and federal arenas and is applied to track items through complex supply chains. Blockchain technology involves an open, distributed ledger, or list of cryptographically linked records (‘blocks’), that can record transactions between two parties efficiently and in a verifiable and permanent way (Iansiti & Lakhani, 2017). It is considered to enable decentralised ‘incorruptible repositories of quality graded data’ (Hilsberg et al., 2018) and Biodiversity Collections Network (2018) expects it may provide “viable solutions for how data and products can be stored, linked and shared with collaborators and stakeholders, facilitating transparency and traceability. In addition, it is expected that it could be valuable for low-cost data-preservation (while enhancing data-reachability) as well as enhancing collection management (see also Hilsberg et al., 2018).

Combining specimen databases

Another challenge related to digitization and to the value of the physical specimens is that specimens may be one of the only clear, if frequently underutilized, ways to identify duplicates between different databases. For example, this challenge is often encountered among mammalian fossils where several databases, including ‘New and Old World Mammals’ (NOW) and ‘PaleoDB’, have been started independently. Together these databases completely document diversity for some groups, and out of ∼1,586 accepted species of carnivores and relatives (Carnivora, Hyanodonta and Oxyaenidae) in the fossil record, 1,460 species are included in at least one of them (Faurby, Werdelin & Antonelli, 2019). However, individually they are each highly incomplete (1,121 species, 6,385 records in NOW, 1,040 species (6,756 records) in PaleoDB). Analyses attempting to summarize the complete fossil record therefore needs to combine databases. For many uses, such as when http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/2041-210X.12263/abstract speciation or extinction rates (Silvestro, Salamin & Schnitzler, 2014), it would be highly desirable to resolve redundancy between databases, a challenging effort that could be made trivial if both databases contained the museum specimen ids for the records.

Big clades, large collections

Digitization will be extremely challenging for the most diverse taxonomic groups, such as typically large collections of insects, although there have been attempts to automate digitization of such groups (Hudson et al., 2015). Generally, though, a lack of professional staff, infrastructure and facile technology are usually limiting this process. For example, a competition sponsored by NSF with US $1M (see https://www.nsf.gov/news/news_summ.jsp?cntn_id=133377) as an award for developing technology to automate the digitization of insect specimens and metadata (often from hand-written specimen tags) failed to identify a winner because the proposals from all competing teams fell short of award criteria. For any specimen collection, knowing its limits, in geographical and temporal distribution and in size, especially for the most common groups, may suffice for further scientific analysis (see https://www.analysisportal.se). Finer scale distributional data in such cases can easily be supplemented by citizen science initiatives (e.g iNaturalist), especially if associated with pictures or movies with smartphones that contain georeferenced and timestamped records that facilitate re-validation through inspection of the images by experts (see for instance iSpot; Silvertown et al., 2015 and Beespotter, https://beespotter.org).

Museums still harbour large amounts of undiscovered and undocumented information. The total number of specimens deposited in museum collections around the world may be as large as 1–2 billion (Ariño, 2010), and for herbaria an estimated 350 M specimens are known to be deposited in 3,400 collections world-wide (Soltis, 2017). Moreover, statistical approaches to estimate the size of collections agreed in 2010 that less than 5% of the universe of natural history collections data is available in databases such as GBIF (Ariño, 2010), although this fraction has been decreasing, with the fast increase of observation data in GBIF (see above and Troudet et al., 2018). Wilson (2003) noted that the smaller the organism the more poorly known the group to which it belongs, exemplified by fungi, nematodes and microbes. For instance, a random selection of specimens collected in a tropical rain forest and deposited in jars at a natural history collection resulted in the description of almost 200 new species of ichneumonid parasitoid wasps to science (Veijalainen et al., 2012). Bebber et al. (2010) described a comparable case for angiosperm species, with an estimated 35,000 undescribed species already residing in herbarium collections. An abundance of undescribed species is only the tip of the iceberg on the amount of data undiscovered and undocumented in the world’s museums. Again, enough professional staff and infrastructure is needed to tackle this problem.

In terms of species diversity, and in addition to the hard curation work by thousands of taxonomists, DNA barcoding reference libraries such as BOLD (Ratnasingham & Hebert, 2007) and UNITE (Kõljalg et al., 2013) could provide a framework against which the extent of diversity deposited at natural history collections can be measured, using DNA barcodes as quick ID tool in cases where specimens may be hard to identify. For instance, for associating ana- and telomorphs in macrofungi such quick ID can be essential. However, molecular approaches to identify hidden diversity remain debatable (e.g., Brower, 2006) but can be overcome in large clades such as Lepidoptera (Hebert, DeWaard & Landry, 2010). In UNITE fungal species hypotheses are generated and named, but also tagged with a citable digital object identifiers (DOIs). This allows unambiguous communication, and harmonisation of species concepts throughout communities. In comparison, BOLD allows barcode index numbers (BINs) to refer to barcode clusters that have not been yet described taxonomically.

Programs like the UK Darwin Initiative train observers and scientists in countries rich in diversity but low in funding for conservation and science surveys. These programs can further support democratization of not just specimens and data but also the knowledge for performing analyses and conducting research. However, much more needs to be done in this area, especially in capacity building, infrastructural development, and task distribution.

Reference collections

A major need for collections worldwide is to develop basic molecular data associated with a given taxon, but possibly genomes, transcriptomes and phenomes too. For example, nearly all museum genetic resources collections are unsuitable for gene expression work, requiring new collection of fresh samples for this endeavour (Zhang et al., 2014). The key importance is the burgeoning use of metabarcoding in ecological studies that can be anchored to museum specimens, and thus linked to the associated metadata. Many museums have embarked on such endeavors, for example at CSIRO in Australia, and efforts of multiple museums ideally come together in clade-based DNA barcode projects in BOLD.

Promoting science through museums

To enhance the broader relevance of natural history museums it is also important to message effectively to industry and policy makers. In particular, the museum community should explore ways to use specimens to find novel ways to bridge the traditional chasm between the sciences, arts and humanities. Shared themes include place-based research and experiential learning, both encouraged in instructional efforts in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM fields) and the arts. Both the arts and sciences depend on inspiration, creativity, and critical assessment, and museum specimens serve well as sources for both inspiration and fascination. (The ‘Hall of Biodiversity’ at Porto’s Botanical Garden and Natural History Museum (MHNC), may serve as a prime example; see https://mhnc.up.pt/galeria-da-biodiversidade/). While scientific education and research offer rigorous methods for testing hypotheses and creating new knowledge, integration of experiential art and humanities into science fosters non-traditional ways of exploring and messaging about our world (Balengee, 2010). Natural history museums should continue their efforts to train scientists and artists to develop novel solutions to emerging problems, especially as we face an increasingly uncertain environmental future.

Efforts by a Global Museum to assemble collections that will fulfil their key roles in the future require facilitating international agreement and participation. Such a massive effort cannot remain the province of a relatively few marginally resourced programs. Identifying the answers to the most pressing questions facing society and our environment require fertile spaces for cultivating innovation in the context of training in knowledge of biodiversity. This task is impossible without museum spaces and collection resources. We cannot afford to ’waste’ the potential of natural specimens due to degradation, improper storage, or disposal, especially in the light of rapid biodiversity loss. They need space-efficient, climate-controlled and pest-free spaces. Innovations in these areas are likely needed to accommodate collections in the long term (hundreds to thousands of years) and to deal with preservation issues that may be exacerbated by global climate change (including increasing frequency of extreme weathers, hurricanes, flooding). Museum networks need to be global and there have to be initiatives and strategies developed to support and improve facilities throughout the world (see also Table 1).

Public perception of natural history museums

We argue that natural history museums should be regarded as ‘Innovation Incubators’, places where ‘anti-disciplinary’ science is thriving by building bridges between otherwise or so far improbable disciplines, and scientists from various ‘disciplines’ meet, an Academic Nexus of Integration. Because natural history collections can facilitate examining diverse aspects of taxonomic, morphological, genetic, and chemical variation across vast temporal and spatial scales, they can help diverse scientists bridge the gaps between traditional disciplines. In places where this situation is not yet in place the way to get there would be to enable ready access to both collections and research facilities, an effort that has been highly successful, for example, under the European SYNTHESYS Access scheme for the last decade. The K-12 education project “Exploring California Biodiversity” at the University of California, Berkeley (http://gk12calbio.berkeley.edu; Mitchell & Gillespie, 2007), which takes grade school students and teachers into the field, provides an excellent example of natural history museum collections broadening access and opportunities for education. Efforts such as AIM-UP! and its successor Biodiversity Literacy in Undergraduate Education (BLUE: https://www.biodiversityliteracy.com/) have combined the expertise of educators, curators, collection managers, database managers, and others in undergraduate education (Cook et al., 2014; Cook et al., 2016b; Lacey et al., 2017).

In terms of public perception of natural history museums, it is important to safeguard their role in society and justify long-term funding by continuing outreach and engaging the general public by proper messaging, for instance by initiating citizen science projects. Above, we outlined how issues regarding the justification of specimen collecting do not seem to be resolved within a vocal minority of the general public. Clearly, museum curators and scientists need to join forces in working proactively with the public to increase their awareness of, and appreciation for, the practice of rigorous biological sampling (see also Rocha et al., 2014).

Collecting for the future: integrated analysis of museum specimens for evolutionary biology

Museums need room to grow in targeted ways that will allow us to address scientific issues critical to looming societal issues such as emerging pathogens and food security (Morrison et al., 2017; Schindel & Cook, 2018) (see Box 2). Specimen-based field work should aim to preserve extensive sets of natural history material at a particular time and place that would represent multiple individuals of each species, multiple species per collecting locale, and multiple diverse aspects of individual specimens. For example, collection of mammals and their associated ectoparasites and digestive tracts has led to detailed understanding of co-evolution of hosts and parasites (Cook et al., 2017) and can fuel future studies of the role of the microbiome in such processes (Roggenbuck-Wedemayer et al., 2014; Greiman et al., 2018). Such holistic collection events can better capture the complex interactions of biotic communities and, if repeated, over time could provide key insights into changing conditions. Additionally, as mentioned above, focused, calibrated collecting of a subset of common, widespread species are necessary to provide baselines for studies of organismal response to global change. The recent attempt to estimate population numbers of North American Monarch Butterflies (Danaus plexippus) from museum collections (Boyle, Dalgleish & Puzey, 2019) met with some controversy, in part because there are clear biases and variation in collecting effort across years for this species, as well as their host plants (Riesa, Zipkin & Guralnick, 2019; Wepprich, 2019). Discussions should be held that address how we can best leverage collecting activities across the Global Museum and that planning should lead to a global effort to more rigorously inventory biodiversity.

Conclusions

For hundreds of years, natural history museums around the world have provided the general public and scientists with numerous opportunities to learn more about our natural world. Taken together, this ‘Global Museum’ must be seen as one of the most valuable assets of modern society and culture, providing the material to address challenges facing humanity today—such as baseline information against which to test hypotheses of local and global environmental change—and a critical regional cultural touchstone for the public. Natural history museums, as Academic Nexes of Integration, can function as inter-disciplinary meeting places, or innovation incubators, where questions are addressed that we did not consider asking before. The core of these institutions are the specimens. To maximise their use, it is therefore imperative to carefully consider how to best sample, preserve, handle, and store specimens in ways that not only meet today’s demands but also new, unforeseen needs. Viewing natural history museums as critical infrastructure for scientific inquiry and public understanding may help raise their profile and awareness, facilitating continued support.

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