Plant or animal, terrestrial or marine? Thoughts on specimen curation in university palaeontological teaching collections based on an example from Ohio, USA

Geological Curator Pub Date : 2018-10-01 DOI:10.55468/gc304
J. Thomka
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Abstract

Palaeontological teaching collections at universities are critical to accurately con- veying aspects of palaeobiology and palaeoecology to students who, in turn, may eventually disseminate that information to the general public via a variety of museum-related pathways. Unfortunately, curatorial rigor is often less strongly rein- forced in university teaching collections than in museum collections, leading to unlabeled or mislabeled specimens, or specimens grouped into collections with an excessive amount of missing data. Herein I describe one illustrative example of confounding specimen labeling from the palaeontological teaching collections of the University of Akron Department of Geosciences (Akron, Ohio, USA). The studied specimen represents a portion of the distinctive stem of the common Upper Carboniferous sphenopsid plant Calamites, but is labeled as the stem of a crinoid (Phylum Echinodermata). Thus, a land plant has been attributed to a portion of a marine invertebrate, a misidentification that transcends not only biological king- doms but also the continental-marine discrepancy. Aside from major morphological differences between these two organisms, the specimen is preserved in a way that is nearly impossible for crinoid columns but is relatively common for Calamites. This find illustrates a major potential source of confusion or misinformation among palaeontology students (and future museum workers) and highlights the significance of scrutiny in teaching collections in addition to museum collections. Individuals working with teaching collections inherited from a predecessor or consisting of organisms with which they are relatively unfamiliar are encouraged to contact a specialist for consultation, identification and correction.
植物还是动物,陆地还是海洋?对高校古生物教学馆藏标本管理的思考——以美国俄亥俄州为例
大学的古生物学教学收藏对于准确地向学生传达古生物学和古生态学的各个方面至关重要,而学生最终可能会通过各种与博物馆相关的途径将这些信息传播给公众。不幸的是,在大学教学馆藏中,策展的严谨性往往不如在博物馆馆藏中那么严格,这导致了未标记或错误标记的标本,或者标本被归类为具有过多缺失数据的藏品。在这里,我描述了一个来自阿克伦大学地球科学系(美国俄亥俄州阿克伦)古生物学教学收藏的混淆标本标签的说明性例子。所研究的标本代表了上石炭世常见的蝶科植物菖蒲的独特茎的一部分,但被标记为海百合(棘皮门)的茎。因此,陆地植物被认为是海洋无脊椎动物的一部分,这种错误的识别不仅超越了生物王国,而且超越了大陆-海洋的差异。除了这两种生物之间的主要形态差异之外,标本的保存方式几乎不可能在海百合柱中保存,但在菖蒲中相对常见。这一发现说明了古生物学学生(以及未来的博物馆工作人员)混淆或错误信息的主要潜在来源,并强调了除了博物馆藏品外,教学藏品审查的重要性。鼓励个人处理从前人那里继承下来的教学收藏品或由他们相对不熟悉的生物体组成的教学收藏品,以便与专家联系进行咨询、鉴定和纠正。
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