An assessment of zoological research collections in South Africa

Natural science collections are accepted globally as critical research assets. A total of 71 zoological collections in South Africa, consisting of over 15 million specimens housed at 22 institutions, were assessed to determine their current status and to make recommendations for their future securi...

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Main Author: Michelle Hamer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2012-10-01
Series:Journal of Energy in Southern Africa
Subjects:
Online Access:http://192.168.0.108/index.php/jesa/article/view/9495
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spelling doaj-cc8039ca6e1b4dfa9d12e884cfe3d5d22021-02-18T13:40:10ZengUniversity of Cape TownJournal of Energy in Southern Africa1021-447X2413-30512012-10-0110811/12An assessment of zoological research collections in South AfricaMichelle Hamer0Biosystematics Division, South African National Biodiversity Institute, Pretoria School of Biological & Conservation Sciences, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg Natural science collections are accepted globally as critical research assets. A total of 71 zoological collections in South Africa, consisting of over 15 million specimens housed at 22 institutions, were assessed to determine their current status and to make recommendations for their future security. The two greatest challenges to the sustainability of the collections are (1) that natural science museums report to departments with an arts and culture rather than a science mandate and (2) staffing. The total staff complement within these 22 institutions is 115, with many collections understaffed or not staffed, and the loss of a single staff member often leaves a collection neglected and unused. Consolidation of collections so that there is a critical mass of staff is essential to address understaffing and would also allow for the establishment of a more dynamic research and curation environment. Consolidation under an appropriate department would also enable concentration of resources rather than dilution across all institutions, which would improve the storage environment (currently 28% of collections have reliable temperature control and only 8% (five collections) have humidity control), and increase the efficiency of the use of available funds (the curation budget was R1.08 million in 2009/2010 for all 71 collections). Consolidation could also ensure the improvement of data storage, management and dissemination, thereby increasing accessibility to the collections and the use of the collections for research. http://192.168.0.108/index.php/jesa/article/view/9495biodiversitytaxonomydatabasescurationnatural history
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michelle Hamer
spellingShingle Michelle Hamer
An assessment of zoological research collections in South Africa
Journal of Energy in Southern Africa
biodiversity
taxonomy
databases
curation
natural history
author_facet Michelle Hamer
author_sort Michelle Hamer
title An assessment of zoological research collections in South Africa
title_short An assessment of zoological research collections in South Africa
title_full An assessment of zoological research collections in South Africa
title_fullStr An assessment of zoological research collections in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed An assessment of zoological research collections in South Africa
title_sort assessment of zoological research collections in south africa
publisher University of Cape Town
series Journal of Energy in Southern Africa
issn 1021-447X
2413-3051
publishDate 2012-10-01
description Natural science collections are accepted globally as critical research assets. A total of 71 zoological collections in South Africa, consisting of over 15 million specimens housed at 22 institutions, were assessed to determine their current status and to make recommendations for their future security. The two greatest challenges to the sustainability of the collections are (1) that natural science museums report to departments with an arts and culture rather than a science mandate and (2) staffing. The total staff complement within these 22 institutions is 115, with many collections understaffed or not staffed, and the loss of a single staff member often leaves a collection neglected and unused. Consolidation of collections so that there is a critical mass of staff is essential to address understaffing and would also allow for the establishment of a more dynamic research and curation environment. Consolidation under an appropriate department would also enable concentration of resources rather than dilution across all institutions, which would improve the storage environment (currently 28% of collections have reliable temperature control and only 8% (five collections) have humidity control), and increase the efficiency of the use of available funds (the curation budget was R1.08 million in 2009/2010 for all 71 collections). Consolidation could also ensure the improvement of data storage, management and dissemination, thereby increasing accessibility to the collections and the use of the collections for research.
topic biodiversity
taxonomy
databases
curation
natural history
url http://192.168.0.108/index.php/jesa/article/view/9495
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