The role of natural history collections in documenting species declines
Abstract
Efforts to document the decline of extant populations require a historical record of previous occurrences. Natural history museums contain such information for most regions of the world, at least at a coarse spatial scale. Museum collections have been successfully used to analyse declines in a wide range of plants and animals, at spatial scales ranging from single localities to large biotic and political regions. Natural history museum collections, when properly analysed, can be an invaluable tool in documenting changes in biodiversity during the past century.
- Publication:
-
Trends in Ecology and Evolution
- Pub Date:
- January 1998
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 1998TEcoE..13...27S
- Keywords:
-
- population declines;
- natural history museums;
- conservation biology;
- amphibians;
- collections;
- extinction