Space Limitations in UT’s Fluid-preserved Fish Collection – An Opportunistic Test of a Space-efficient Shelving Strategy

December 18, 2019 • by Adam Cohen, Dean Hendrickson, and Melissa Casarez
header

Photo: Alex Wild


esox

TNHC 44309, Chain pickerel (Esox niger) from Cass County, Texas. Example of preserving a part of an individual to save space. The complete specimen would have filled at least a gallon jar, but its head alone fits into a quart. Although the specimen identification can be made with a head only, this limits greatly the potential research value of the specimen.

Fishes are stored, sometimes rather inefficiently, in “lots” – all specimens of a species collected at a point in space and time into one container. Thus, a single small specimen can consume an entire jar that could otherwise hold hundreds of specimens. To better utilize wasted space we laboriously vialed single small specimen lots and combined them into multi-lot quart jars (up to 30 vials each) and multi-lot tanks for larger specimens (up to 65 specimens each). That massive effort resulted in 5,352 lots (8% of the total collection) moving to multi-lot containers of some sort. Next, we moved a large subset of our collection to a nearby building lacking the environmental controls in our primary building. We also started packing our smallest jars (8 oz) into high-density boxes and stacking them on dollies in aisles. Then, we filled space freed up by the removal of an entomology collection from our building.

img

Example of a multi-lot quart jar holding Mimic shiner (Notropis volucellus) specimens that were once housed singly in approximately two dozen 8 oz jars. This saves space, but is very time consuming to do, increases the possibility of data loss, and takes longer to retrieve and shelve.

Our collection is now spread across four spaces in two buildings. Although we do not regret those actions, because they allowed us to continue growing, each method used to gain space is flawed in one way or another. Collection management is now complicated by fragmentation. Though three of the four spaces retain the same taxonomic ordering arrangement, specimens of virtually every species are now in at least two (and most in three) different places. Housing specimens in separate buildings doubles the effort required for monitoring environmental conditions and coordinating maintenance. Plus, supplies like spill kits, extra jars, ethanol, broken glass disposal containers, step ladders etc., are doubled to satisfy requirements in both buildings. As for multi-lot jars, not only does their creation take considerable time, it also introduces possible errors, allowing for the opportunity to lose original jar labels (which can’t fit into vials), and now makes specimen retrieval and re-shelving more time consuming. Multi-lot tanks now clog up aisles and hallways. While we have saved space, the workload for collection managers, curator and staff has increased as a result of the move. Still battling space, and assuming it might be some time before we’d get more, we concluded that we needed to be even more creative about resolving our space problem.

It took us a while to start thinking “out-of-the-box” about some of the most basic and ingrained traditions. But, after many years of battling space limitations and considerable wracking of brains, we realized that our active and nearly exponentially growing collection (>72,000 lots) would be a perfect test bed to conduct an assessment comparing the taxonomic arrangement of jars to a more space-efficient arrangement. The new system requires that jars be placed on shelves in catalog number order and maximizes space by co-shelving jars of the same size only. The elimination of spaces resulting from variable sized jars being co-shelved allowed us to hold an additional 24 jars per square meter of shelf space. In addition to space savings, there are other benefits, and a qualitative comparative assessment of fourteen tasks we routinely perform in our collection revealed that the catalog number ordered section of jars out performed the taxonomic system in nine of them, while the taxonomic arrangement outperformed in four. One task we could not determine an advantage.

toa

Taxonomically arranged shelf (after spaces for growth between taxa were removed). Notice that space is wasted by co-shelving jars of various sizes.

coa

Catalog number ordered shelves. Little space is wasted when jars of the same size are on each shelf.

Share


header

Features

Meet Stengl-Wyer Scholar: Marina Hutchins

header

Features

Meet Thomas Schiefer