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Grow with KARE: Treasure trove discovered at Bell Museum

Behind the scenes at the Bell Museum Biodiversity Collection on the St. Paul campus of the University of Minnesota.

A month ago we showed you the amazing Bell Museum of Natural History on the St. Paul campus of the University of Minnesota.  What we found behind the scenes blew Bobby and I away.  An amazing collection of 900,000 plant specimens that date back in the 1800s that really tell the complex botanical story of our state.  

This is what they have collected in their own words:

In 2016, the Bell Museum launched the first web portal providing access to all of its biodiversity collections. The Minnesota Biodiversity Atlas is an online digital resource offering public access to hundreds of thousands of plant and animal specimens, from algae to zebras. The Atlas–the midwest’s first portal to integrate such disparate collections–houses over 5 terabytes of data from the museum’s botanical and zoological collections. More than 16,000 species from Minnesota and around the world are represented.

Other museums have their collections online, but often they are in separate databases—one for mammals, one for birds, etc. This makes it hard to see the big picture when it comes to biodiversity, especially in a unique place like Minnesota, where three major biomes come together along with an incredible variety of life.

The Atlas serves critical needs like guiding field surveys, providing images for identification in the field, and enabling conservation planning by partners including the Department of Natural Resources and the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency.

“This is one of the greatest research and conservation resources at the University of Minnesota, and now it’s the most accessible,” said Keith Barker, principal investigator and Bell curator of birds and genetic resources. “With a few clicks, anyone from nature enthusiasts to educators can locate records of life in Minnesota and beyond.”

Museum specimens provide the best record of historical distribution of life. The Bell Museum has accumulated more than 750,000 specimens of wildlife, plants and fungi from the Mississippi and western Great Lakes region over the past 125 years. The debut of the Atlas already contains over 400,000 biodiversity records and 175,000 high resolution specimen images that span from the founding of the museum in 1872 to the present.

Here is the link to do your own amazing research!

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