Richard
Conniff, 4/1/16, New York Times
When people
talk about natural history museums, they almost always roll out the well-worn
descriptive “dusty,” to the great exasperation of a curator I know. Maybe he’s
annoyed because he’s spent large sums of his museum’s money building decidedly
un-dusty climate-controlled storage sites, and the word implies neglect. (“Let
me know,” the curator advises by email, “if you want to hear me rant for an
hour or so on this topic.”)
Worse, this
rumored dustiness reinforces the widespread notion that natural history museums
are about the past — just a place to display bugs and brontosaurs. Visitors may
go there to be entertained, or even awe-struck, but they are often completely
unaware that curators behind the scenes are conducting research into climate
change, species extinction and other pressing concerns of
our day. That lack of awareness is one reason these museums are now routinely
being pushed to the brink. Even the National Science Foundation, long a
stalwart of federal support for these museums, announced this month that it was
suspending
funding for natural history collections as it conducts a yearlong budget
review.
It gets
worse: A new Republican governor last year shut down the renowned Illinois
State Museum, ostensibly to
save the state $4.8 million a year. The museum pointed out that
this would actually cost $33 million a year in lost tourism revenue and an
untold amount in grants. But the closing went through, endangering a trove of
10 million artifacts, from mastodon bones to Native American tools, collected
over 138 years, and now just languishing in the shuttered building. Eric Grimm,
the museum’s director of science, characterized it as an act of “political
corruption and malevolent anti-intellectualism.”
Other museums
have survived by shifting their focus from research to something like
entertainment. A few years ago, in the Netherlands, which has a rich tradition
of scientific collecting, three universities decided to give up their natural
history collections. They’re now combined in a single location, at the Naturalis
Biodiversity Center in Leiden, and the public displays there struck me
on a recent visit as a sort of “Animal Planet” grab bag, with cutout figures of
a Dutch version of Steve Irwin steering visitors, with cartoon-balloon
commentary.
The
pandering can be insidious, too. The Perot Museum of Nature and Science in
Dallas, which treats visitors to a virtual ride down a hydraulic fracturing
well, recently made headlines for avoiding explicit references to climate
change. Other museums omit scientific information on evolution. “We don’t need
people to come in here and reject us,” Carolyn Sumners, a vice president at the
Houston Museum of Natural Science, explained to The Dallas Morning News.
Even the
best natural history museums have been obliged to reduce their scientific staff
in the face of government cutbacks and the decline in donations following the
2008 economic crash. They still have their collections, and their public still
comes through the door. But they no longer employ enough scientists to
interpret those collections adequately for visitors or the world at large.
Hence the journal Nature last year characterized natural history collections as
“the
endangered dead.”
This view of
the natural history museum as moribund is a terrible misunderstanding, on many
counts. Natural history museums do indeed store specimens from millions or even
billions of years in the past. (They even store dust, only it’s called
“pollen.”) Their collections, one museum director told me, are where “we have
placed our entire three-dimensional record of the planet that sustains us.” But
these collections are less about the past than about our world and how it is
changing. Sediment cores like the ones at the Illinois State Museum, for
instance, may not sound terribly important, but the pollen in them reveals how
past climates changed, what species lived and died as a result, and thus how
our own future may be rapidly unfolding.
These
specimens routinely affect our lives in ways we barely recognize. In the summer
of 1996, for instance, a New York developer named Ingram S. Carner noticed that
the sugar maples in the Greenpoint neighborhood of Brooklyn were struggling. He
collected
a suspect beetle, and Richard Hoebeke, then an entomologist at Cornell
University, soon identified it as an Asian long-horned beetle, the first to be
found in this country. If it had gone undetected, a study by the United States
Forest Service later estimated, it could have killed a third of the trees in
cities nationwide. Instead, the discovery touched off a major campaign to
contain the invasion at a handful of sites. The unsung hero? A natural history
museum: Dr. Hoebeke was able to identify the species so quickly only because
Cornell happened to have a single specimen from China in its collections.
Natural
history museums are so focused on the future that they have for centuries
routinely preserved such specimens to answer questions they didn’t yet know how
to ask, requiring methodologies that had not yet been invented, to make
discoveries that would have been, for the original collectors, inconceivable.
THE people
who first put gigantic mammoth and mastodon specimens in museums, for instance,
did so mainly out of dumb wonderment. But those specimens soon led to the stunning
18th-century recognition that parts of God’s creation could become extinct. The
heretical idea of extinction then became an essential preamble to Darwin, whose
understanding of evolution by natural selection depended in turn on the
detailed study of barnacle specimens collected and preserved over long periods
and for no particular reason. Today, those same specimens continue to answer
new questions with the help of genome sequencing, CT scans, stable isotope
analysis and other technologies.
These museums
also play a critical role in protecting what’s left of the natural world, in
part because they often combine biological and botanical knowledge with broad
anthropological experience. So when museum curators travel to a difficult
habitat to conduct an environmental inventory, said Debra Moskovits of
Chicago’s Field Museum, a team will typically work at the same time to
understand the needs of surrounding communities.
After one
such inventory in Ecuador, Dr. Moskovits stood up to withdraw from a meeting when
it seemed as if an outsider should not be part of the discussion. The attendees
told her to sit down again, saying: “You have no nationality. You are
scientists. You speak for nature.” Just since 1999, according to the Field
Museum, inventories by its curators and their collaborators have been a key
factor in the protection of 26.6 million acres of wilderness, mainly in the
headwaters of the Amazon.
It may be
optimistic to say that natural history museums have saved the world. It may
even be too late for that. But they provide one other critical service that can
save us, and our sense of wonder: Almost everybody in this country — even
children in Denver who have never been to the Rocky Mountains, or people in San
Francisco who have never walked on a Pacific Ocean beach — goes to a natural
history museum at some point in his life, and these visits influence us in deep
and unpredictable ways.
Paul
B. MacCready, for instance, became famous in the 1970s for
building Gossamer Condor, the first successful human-powered aircraft, and then
Gossamer Albatross, the first such craft to cross the English Channel. But
growing up in New Haven, before engineering took hold of him, he used to visit
the Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History to indulge a childhood obsession
with winged insects. Years later, Dr. MacCready revisited the museum. One thing
he still vividly recalled, in the aftermath of his triumphs, was an image on
the wall of a diorama he came across, something between an entomological
drawing and Breugel’s “Fall of Icarus”: It depicted a dragonfly on the wing,
over a body of green water.
Maybe it was
a trivial detail. Maybe most of our visits to natural history museums can seem
trivial, just a way to pass Sunday afternoon with the family. But standing
beneath the figure of Tyrannosaurus, or staring back at the skull of an early
primate, or reliving the feats of Polynesian mariners, we dimly begin to
understand the passage of time and cultures, and how our own species fits amid
millions of others. We start to understand the strangeness and splendor of the
only planet where we will ever have the great pleasure of living.
Richard
Conniff is the author of the forthcoming book “House of Lost Worlds: Dinosaurs,
Dynasties, and the Story of Life on Earth” and a contributing opinion writer.
A version of
this op-ed appears in print on April 3, 2016, on page SR4 of the New York
edition with the headline: Natural History, Endangered.
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