The New Zealand Herald

Te Papa mustn’t shrink its areas of expertise

NZ museums’ chiefs, boards should listen to scientists

- Nic Rawlence Radio NZ Nic Rawlence is a lecturer in ancient DNA at the University of Otago.

Museums are cathedrals of science, but they are under threat worldwide as part of a malaise of undervalui­ng museum collection­s and the field of taxonomy, the science of naming biodiversi­ty.

The Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa is the latest example. Te Papa confirmed a restructur­e in July, following leaked reports. Facing sustained backlash and disquiet in the science community, the museum announced an internatio­nal review of its collection­s and has since scaled back its restructur­e plans.

But jobs remain on the line even though the review panel found the museum didn’t have enough staff to look after all of its collection­s.

Taxonomy a keystone of natural history

Taxonomy underpins everything from health to conservati­on, and biosecurit­y to the economy.

The internatio­nal review shows Te Papa is doing a good job in most areas, but needs to improve on several aspects, including access to collection­s, cataloguin­g a backlog of specimens and digitisati­on.

These areas of concern were seriously exacerbate­d by the panel’s finding that Te Papa was understaff­ed.

The review panel was not asked to comment on the restructur­e. At that stage, the proposal was to cut 25 positions, 10 of which were in the collection­s team. This has now been scaled back to at least five jobs in the collection­s team.

Staff members whose positions could be affected were told only a day before the review recommenda­tions were made public.

Museum collection­s more than sum of parts

Te Papa’s latest leaked restructur­e document remains a cause for concern.

Curators are no longer in the firing line.

However, the five natural history collection­s managers are gone, to be replaced by three assistant curators and two general technical positions.

All of this would appear to fall at a lower pay scale.

I congratula­te Te Papa on listening to internal and external feedback and increasing its curatorial expertise in neglected strengths, such as marine mammals and seaweeds.

Ironically, in the case of marine mammals, this seems to rectify a mistake in making the previous marine mammal expert redundant in 2013.

A member of the internatio­nal review panel, Tim White at the Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History, told that Te Papa could use more profession­al collection­s staff.

“If they’re going to promote the use of their collection­s . . . then they need to think creatively about how they could get more staff.”

Taking into account the recently published Decadal Plan for Taxonomy and Biosystema­tics and the 2015 Royal Society Te Apa¯ rangi report on National Taxonomic Collection­s in New Zealand, this is a good opportunit­y to increase collection­s staff rather than, at best, approximat­e the status quo.

It is my hope that the filling of positions in the proposed structure will not result in a loss of areas of taxonomic expertise.

Many of Te Papa’s scientists are leaders in their fields, including in areas where Te Papa leads the way internatio­nally. One should not boost the curatorial team at the expense of collection­s management.

The bigger picture

As an isolated archipelag­o with unique flora and fauna, New Zealand needs diverse taxonomic expertise to handle biosecurit­y and conservati­on crises.

If Te Papa, or museums in general, shed their taxonomic expertise like an unwanted sloughed-off snake skin, it will be up to other institutio­ns to pick up the slack. If not, our biodiversi­ty will suffer.

There has already been a 10 per cent decline in the taxonomic workforce in Australia in the past 25 years, with declines of about 22 per cent in New Zealand over a similar time period.

In both countries, a steadily growing proportion (now about a quarter) of taxonomist­s are unpaid or retired. Let’s not make it worse.

Undervalui­ng museum collection­s and taxonomic expertise is not just limited to New Zealand. The scientific world does not want to see another museum disaster, such as the preventabl­e fire that destroyed Brazil’s National Museum.

Whether it is collection­s under threat or museum libraries being lost in the digital age, or even false assumption­s resulting in the closure of a museum, if chief executives and museum boards listen to their scientists and the scientific community, hope remains.

Undervalui­ng collection­s and taxonomic expertise is not limited to NZ.

 ??  ?? A review panel found Te Papa didn’t have enough staff to look after all of its collection­s.
A review panel found Te Papa didn’t have enough staff to look after all of its collection­s.

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