1. Herbarium collections policy of the Finnish Museum of Natural History
- Author
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Markku Oinonen, Aino Juslén, Marko-Tapio Hyvärinen, Leena Myllys, Risto Väinölä, Björn Kröger, Pasi Sihvonen, Henry Väre, Anniina Kuusijärvi, Gunilla Ståhls-Mäkelä, Leif Schulman, Botany, Finnish Museum of Natural History, Zoology, Risto Väinölä / Principal Investigator, Biosciences, Gunilla Ståhls-Mäkelä / Principal Investigator, Natural Sciences Unit, and Plant Adaptation and Conservation
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,natural history collections ,accessioning ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Collections management ,03 medical and health sciences ,bryophytes ,deaccessioning ,best practices ,collections management ,vascular plants ,lichens ,lcsh:Science ,Lichen ,herbarium ,030304 developmental biology ,algae ,0303 health sciences ,General Medicine ,Archaeology ,Natural history ,Geography ,Herbarium ,1181 Ecology, evolutionary biology ,lcsh:Q ,fungi - Abstract
The herbarium collections are sub-collections of the Finnish Museum of Natural History Luomus that manages national natural history collections, as referred to in the Universities Act. The general collections policy defines the overall principles and guidelines concerning the collections practices. The sub-collections policies specify its guidelines and instructions, considering the special nature of the sub-collections. The policy for the botanical and mycological herbarium collections guides the activities related to all botanical, mycological and phycological collections in herbaria, hence excluding digital collections, DNA and tissue samples as well as living collections, which have separate policies. The herbarium collections policy defines and outlines the purpose of the collections as is to accrue and preserve natural specimens representing biodiversity for research and university-level teaching. The policy defines the objectives and content of related activities, the division of responsibilities for the administration and care of the collections within the organisation, and the general principles and practices for the acquisition, preservation, availability and use of the collections. Non
- Published
- 2020
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