While many research teams work tirelessly to preserve nature, natural history museums could now come to their aid
A new US study looks at the role natural history museums could play in wildlife conservation.
Image: Bruno Uehara / Getty Images
There's now little doubt that the Earth's fauna and flora are in danger. While biodiversity loss is intensifying year after year, a new study suggests that museums could have a role to in saving nature.
Biodiversity continues to decline around the world. Indeed, the International Union for Conservation of Nature recently studied 138,374 species, and found that about 28% of them are under threat. At the organization's last assessment in 2014, 24% of species studied were endangered.
While many research teams work tirelessly to preserve nature, natural history museums could now come to their aid. So suggests a new study from researchers at the University of Vermont, together with international scientists, and published in the journal, Methods in Ecology and Evolution.
The scientists started from the assumption that fighting biodiversity loss presupposes an in-depth study of the world's different animal and plant species, in order to determine whether they are rare or common and, above all, whether their populations are in decline. However, such field surveys are often extremely costly and complex. The Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services, for example, called on 445 experts over a three-year period to prepare one of its reports on nature loss.