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Herbarium collections remain essential in the age of community science

Biology

Herbarium collections remain essential in the age of community science

I. Eckert, A. Bruneau, et al.

Discover how traditional herbarium specimens capture the diversity of vascular plants in Canada far more effectively than iNaturalist observations. This study by Isaac Eckert, Anne Bruneau, Deborah A. Metsger, Simon Joly, T. A. Dickinson, and Laura J. Pollock reveals that digitizing herbarium collections is a crucial investment for biodiversity modeling and conservation.... show more
Abstract
The past decade has yielded more biodiversity observations from community science than the past century of traditional scientific collection. This rapid influx of data is promising for overcoming critical biodiversity data shortfalls, but we also have vast untapped resources held in undigitized natural history collections. Yet, the ability of these undigitized collections to fill data gaps, especially compared against the constant accumulation of community science data, remains unclear. Here, we compare how well community science (iNaturalist) observations and digitized herbarium specimens represent the diversity, distributions, and modeling needs of vascular plants in Canada. We find that, despite having only a third as many records, herbarium specimens capture more taxonomic, phylogenetic, and functional diversity and more efficiently capture species' environmental niches. As such, the digitization of Canada's 7.3M remaining specimens has the potential to more than quintuple our ability to model biodiversity. In contrast, it would require over 27M more iNaturalist observations to produce similar benefits. Our findings indicate that digitizing Earth's remaining herbarium specimens is likely an efficient, feasible, and potentially critical investment when it comes to improving our ability to predict and protect biodiversity into the future.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Aug 31, 2024
Authors
Isaac Eckert, Anne Bruneau, Deborah A. Metsger, Simon Joly, T. A. Dickinson, Laura J. Pollock
Tags
biodiversity
iNaturalist
herbaria
vascular plants
Canada
digitization
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