4.6 Article

Rethinking the links between systematic studies and ex situ living collections as a contribution to the Global Strategy for Plant Conservation

Journal

BIODIVERSITY AND CONSERVATION
Volume 20, Issue 2, Pages 287-294

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10531-010-9985-8

Keywords

Accessibility; Botanic Gardens; Curation of ex situ plant collection; GSPC target 1; Herbaria; Living plant collections; Tropical glasshouses; Online access to data

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The Mus,um national d'histoire naturelle (MNHN) in Paris holds ca. 70 million specimens. The collections were in need of a strategy to ensure their long-term conservation. We discuss how the Department of Botanical and Zoological Gardens (DJBZ; tropical living collections), and the Department of Systematics and Evolution (DSE; herbarium) contribute to achieving GSPC's Target 1 ('a widely accessible working list of known plant species as a step towards a complete world flora'). The DJBZ started encouraging better management of the collections, evolving towards focused reference collections, where all specimens have well-documented collection data. The objective is to link all collections to a scientific referee. This has already been achieved for a number of taxa. The herbarium of the DSE (acronym P) is among the world's largest (11 million specimens, including 400,000 types). The collection's heterogeneity impedes access to its data, since P is a mix of recent well-documented collections and historical collections at various curational levels. P is currently under renovation, which started by mounting all ca. 2 million unmounted specimens. The project also includes databasing and imaging of every specimen. The database now holds around 1,000,000 records. For taxonomic studies, living collections are crucial, especially for plants that are not easily preserved as herbarium specimens. Living collections also enable studies impossible to forecast at the time of collecting. Herbaria and living collections should therefore be conceived as interoperable entities requiring common scientific curation. Through a combination of its assets and the expertise of its researchers, the MNHN is well prepared to tackle the new objectives of the GSPC beyond 2010.

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