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Life after herbarium digitisation: Physical and digital collections, curation and use

Onderzoeksoutput: Bijdrage aan tijdschriftA1: Web of Science-artikelpeer review

  • Alan James Paton
  • Gabriel K. Ameka
  • Alexandre Antonelli
  • Alex Asase
  • Russell L. Barrett
  • Ann Bogaerts
  • Domingos Cardoso
  • Mark Carine
  • Alastair Culham
  • Syadwina H. Dalimunthe
  • Nina Davies
  • Sofie De Smedt
  • Sebebe Demissew
  • Rafaela Campostrini Forzza
  • Quentin Groom
  • Elspeth M. Haston
  • Abdulrokhman Kartonegoro
  • Paul Kersey
  • Isabel Larridon
  • Jana Leong-Skornickova
  • Lucia G. Lohmann
  • Jehova Lourenco
  • Hannah McPherson
  • Muthama Muasya
  • Nicky Nicolson
  • Marcelo Pace
  • Jack F. Plummer
  • Helene Ralimanana
  • Himmah Rustiami
  • Herve Sauquet
  • Emily B. Sessa
  • Eric Smets
  • Alex Sumadijaya
  • Jordan Teisher
  • Daniel C. Thomas
  • Eka F. Tihurua
  • Janine E. Victor
  • Sarah T. Wagner
  • Quiang Wang
  • Andrew Young
Societal Impact Statement Collections of dried plant specimens (herbaria) provide an invaluable resource for the study of many areas of scientific interest and conservation globally. Digitisation increases access to specimens and metadata, enabling efficient use across a broad spectrum of research. The value of physical specimens is enhanced by digitisation, but these specimens remain fundamental for the study of traits not yet captured digitally. We investigate the requirements for physical access and the curation and facilities needed to maximise specimen use and value. We present recommendations to ensure that specimens and data are both fully accessible to support research into global challenges.Summary Herbarium management has traditionally focused on providing direct access to the physical specimens, but this scope must now expand to also embrace digital collections. Advances in technologies such as artificial intelligence and high-throughput genomics are increasing the amount of information that can be extracted from specimens, and it is becoming commonplace to provide digital access to specimen images and collection metadata. These developments are facilitating the use of herbarium collections to inform conservation planning and in studies plant and fungal taxonomy, distribution and evolution. This paper examines how herbaria are transitioning from physical specimen-centric collection management practices to increasingly digitised curation, and the effects that digital availability of data are having on demands for physical access. We provide a set of recommendations to institutions holding herbarium collections. We emphasise the critical importance of further digitising herbaria of all sizes; the need to ensure that historical inequalities in deposition of specimens are not perpetuated; and that the capacity to utilise new technologies must be further developed, especially in biodiverse regions from which most herbarium collections are derived.
Originele taal-2Engels
TijdschriftPlants People Planet
DOI's
StatusE-publicatie voorafgaand op geprinte versie - 1-sep.-2025

DOI

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