Published 2021 | Version v1
Journal article Restricted

The Open-Specimen Movement

Description

(Uploaded by Plazi for the Bat Literature Project) The open-science movement seeks to increase transparency, reproducibility, and access to scientific data. As primary data, preserved biological specimens represent records of global biodiversity critical to research, conservation, national security, and public health. However, a recent decrease in specimen preservation in public biorepositories is a major barrier to open biological science. As such, there is an urgent need for a cultural shift in the life sciences that normalizes specimen deposition in museum collections. Museums embody an open-science ethos and provide long-term research infrastructure through curation, data management and security, and community-wide access to samples and data, thereby ensuring scientific reproducibility and extension. We propose that a paradigm shift from specimen ownership to specimen stewardship can be achieved through increased open-data requirements among scientific journals and institutional requirements for specimen deposition by funding and permitting agencies, and through explicit integration of specimens into existing data management plan guidelines and annual reporting.

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Additional details

Identifiers

URL
hash://md5/4e6f638f249848c6a9730f05e7caa0ad
URN
urn:lsid:zotero.org:groups:5435545:items:PBDS3GPQ
DOI
10.1093/biosci/biaa146

Biodiversity

Kingdom
Animalia
Phylum
Chordata
Class
Mammalia
Order
Chiroptera