Q5. Natural history Museums collect for a different reason. Their accumulations are part of attempts to identify
and understand the natural world. Some of the plants and animals they hold are "type speciments". In other
words, they are the standard reference unit, like a reference weight or length, for the species in question.
Other speciments are valuable because of their age. One of the most famous demonstrations of natural
selection in action was made using museum speciments. A study of moths collected over a long period of
time showed that their wings became darker (which made them less visible to birds) as the industrial
revolution made Britain more polluted.
Q6. Year after year, the value of such collections quietly and valuably increases, as scientists find uses that
would have been unimaginable to those who started them a century or two ago. Genetic analysis,
pharmaceutical development and so on would have been unimaginable to the museum's founders.
Q7. But as the collections grow older, they grow bigger. Insects may be small, but there are millions of them
and entomologists would like to catalogue every one. And when the reference material is a pair of giraffes
or a blue whale, space becomes a problem. That is why museums such as the Smithsonian are increasingly
forced to turn to out of town storage facilities. But museums that show the public only a small fraction of
their material risk losing the goodwill of governments and the public, which they need to keep running.
Hence, the determination of so many museums is to make their back room collections more widely
available. YOUR ANSWERS QUESTIONS Q1