Type Collections
Rob Huxley
rh at NHM.AC.UK
Mon Dec 18 17:05:52 CST 1995
Here at the Natural History Museum, London (BM) we do not in
general separate any types from the main herbaria. The exceptions
being certain important historical collections which are also
particularly rich in types e.g. Acharius, Sloane, Clayton, Clifford etc..
However, the debate as to whether to separate or not rears its head
now and again. As there are valid arguments in favour of
both separating and not, we opt for the "if it isn't broken don't mend
it" philosophy." When we move to a new building then we may
reconsider but at present the question must be would the
considerable work involved in separating types be justified by the
benefits?
Amongst the advantages of retaining types in the main series are:
1. Only one part of the herbarium need be visited to obtain most
material of a taxon.
2. As types are being listed on computer, it will be relatively
simple to track down the current location of a type by
basionym.
3. It avoids "putting all your eggs in one basket". Should disaster hit
part of the herbarium only a percentage of types would be lost. A
direct hit on a separate type collection would be catastrophic.
Provision of a water/fire/bomb proof (and expensive) strong room
would presumably go some way towards alleviating this
concern.
4. There is a large percentage in some areas of the herbaria of
"hidden types" i.e. unannotated. Workers may assume that
separate type collections are complete and valuable material may
remain unexamined.
I would be interested in the views of others on this.
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Dr Rob Huxley
Head of Curation Division
Department of Botany,
The Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW7 5BD, UK
Phone 171-938-8823
Fax 171-938-9260
INTERNET rh at nhm.ac.uk
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