Abstract

We compiled the main results of a second diagnosis of Brazilian ornithological collections. Our starting point was the survey by A. Aleixo and F. Straube, with data up to 2005 and published in 2007. Ten years later, in 2015, curators or managers from 35 collections of birds (out of 59) answered 12 questions related to the status of the collection they curate. These collections cover all regions of the country, and many have grown in number of specimens, especially in northeastern Brazil. As verified by Aleixo & Straube, most ornithological Brazilian collections are concentrated in southeastern and southern Brazil (66%). Also, some basic shortcomings persist, such as the lack of specialized curators, taxidermists, and access to digitalized information. The three oldest and biggest collections (Museu Nacional da Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro - MN, Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi - MPEG and Museu de Zoologia da Universidade de São Paulo -MZUSP) together continue to hold more than half of all Brazilian ornithological specimens and 83% of all type specimen. Some collections, (especially new ones) have been actively collecting and preparing specimens in a much-diversified way, saving different body parts of a single individual as distinct types of materials. Government and other online data information systems (e.g., Brazilian Biodiversity Information System -SiBBr and Center for Reference in Environmental Information -CRIA) have been developed, and now provide digital data from some relevant collections. Brazilian ornithological collections are completely or partially digitized (85%), although for most specimens and collections, data are not freely available and is mostly accessed between researchers. Despite the efforts of some researchers and institutions, improvements in the maintenance and protection of the collections are still necessary. Nevertheless, we conclude that the situation of Brazilian ornithological collections has improved in the past 10 years. Finally, herein we propose a rank for Brazilian ornithological collections classifying them according their role for both research and education activities, which are considered in the current bibliography as key roles of natural history collections.

Highlights

  • Collections of biological specimens, which in the past were the privilege of aristocratic collectors and/or curious people interested in nature, have come to be recognized as repositories of evidence or results of evolution (Joseph 2011)

  • In October 2014 and from January to March of 2015, an online Google questionnaire was sent to all specialists responsible for maintaining the collections of birds in Brazil, identified in Aleixo & Straube (2007) or found using the keywords “bird collections” and “ornithological collections” within search engines, such as the Lattes platform of the Brazilian National Council for Scientific Development and Technological (CNPq)

  • In October 2014, we were informed that the Museu de História Natural da Universidade Estadual do Centrooeste (MEHS) in Guarapuava (Paraná state - PR) was closed, but that few specimens are stored, and that the skins were only for didactic purposes, since they did not have data of origin

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Summary

Introduction

Collections of biological specimens, which in the past were the privilege of aristocratic collectors and/or curious people interested in nature, have come to be recognized as repositories of evidence or results of evolution (Joseph 2011) Even today they serve this purpose, supporting research on taxonomy, systematics, distribution and biology, as well as studies of changes in populations, species and the environment, playing a very important role in research and education, defined as key internal scholarly museum functions, and in the education of the non-specialized public (external museum function) (Allmon 1994, Cracraft 2002, Suarez & Tsutsui 2004, Winker 2004). This is accompanied by a growing demand for information availability

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