Duke University is closing its herbarium, a move that鈥檚 drawn criticism from faculty and researchers nationwide. Established more than a century ago, the is one of the largest herbaria in the country, containing more than 800,000 specimens of fungi, plants and algae.
Scientists across the country use Duke's herbarium to conduct, for example, climate change research.
Duke Herbarium director Kathleen Pryer has a high school student who's using herbarium data to research the pink lady鈥檚 slipper.
鈥淚t's a very distinctive, cute plant that everybody who's gone for a hike has probably seen in May,鈥 Pryer said. 鈥淭he pink lady's slipper in North Carolina flowers 17 days earlier than it did 150 years ago, and that can be attributed to climate change.鈥
The project is just one of the many ways scientists across the country can use the contents of Duke's herbarium. Pryer said more than 200 institutions across the world currently have Duke Herbarium samples on loan.
However, Pryer said she was told in February that Duke would be closing its more than 100-year-old herbarium. That鈥檚 largely due to funding, according to Duke officials, who said it would cost about $25 million to maintain the herbarium.
A media relations email statement attributed to Susan Alberts, Duke鈥檚 dean of natural sciences, said the closure was a 鈥渄ifficult decision.鈥
Pryer said faculty were given up to three years to relocate the contents to new homes, which she described as 鈥渁n impossible task.鈥
鈥淣obody has room for the entire collection,鈥 Pryer said. 鈥淓ven if somebody did, it would take them at least 10 years to build a facility that could accommodate it, to raise the money, to write the grants. That's sort of the message the administration repeats over and over, that 鈥榳e want it to be protected and moved somewhere.鈥 It's protected now. It's fine now.鈥
Our ability to continue responsibly hosting such a valuable collection at Duke would require the investment of significant, long-term resources to support both substantial facilities renovations and expert personnel at the expense of other urgent priorities. 鈥 Susan Alberts, dean of natural sciences
A matter of money. And priorities.
鈥淐hange is hard. That's really the bottom line,鈥 said professor Mohamed Noor, a former dean of natural sciences at Duke.
According to Noor, these funding decisions typically come down to the department and college leadership. The current dean of natural sciences, Susan Alberts, was unavailable for an interview at the time of reporting.
The $25 million figure in projected costs comes from a few places. Noor said the two buildings that house herbarium specimens will need renovations in the coming decades. And, he said herbarium faculty will need to be endowed in the future.
鈥淢aintaining a herbarium of this size and value would absolutely require that we hire faculty specifically to study its collections, consistently and without any lapses,鈥 Noor said, which he added limits departmental flexibility. 鈥淭he department could not maintain the facility without losing the freedom to hire other faculty based on new areas of scientific discovery.鈥
Funding the herbarium positions through an endowment would free up other funding, Noor said, allowing the department to hire faculty in those other desirable areas.
Apart from funding, Noor said the closure is really a matter of priorities.
鈥淲e do prioritize natural history,鈥 Noor said. 鈥淏ut deciding what specific sub-areas of natural history that Duke biology will follow up on in the next 100 years can't be locked into what it has been doing in the past 100 years.鈥
Director Kathleen Pryer disputes that $25 million price tag, as she said herbarium faculty have never been endowed before. As for one of the herbarium's buildings, with almost half a million specimens 鈥 鈥淢ost institutions would die to have a herbarium that well set up,鈥 Pryer said.
Relocating Duke鈥檚 鈥榞em鈥
Relocating the herbarium鈥檚 collection may ultimately mean dividing it up, which Pryer said risks specimens being lost. That could be a problem, Pryer said, considering the grants Duke has received from the National Science Foundation (NSF).
鈥淎s infrastructure, we're concerned with how long any improvements that we're funding are going to last,鈥 said Reed Beaman, a NSF program director. Its current funding program is called "Capacity: Biological Collections."
鈥淎nyone writing a proposal to the Capacity program is expected to address issues of how the collection will be sustained over time and made available to the community over time,鈥 Beaman added.
Beaman said relocating the contents of Duke's herbarium doesn't violate that sustainability criteria or disqualify Duke from receiving future awards. But Duke does still need to make sure the collection is accessible.
Given the size of Duke's collection, Beaman said relocation is going to be a challenge 鈥 one where Duke needs to ensure herbarium contents are properly protected and not lost as a resource.
Former dean Mohamed Noor emphasized that access is a key consideration with all of this.
鈥淒uke isn鈥檛 destroying the herbarium,鈥 Noor said. 鈥淒uke is not limiting the scientists鈥 access to the herbarium. We're just moving the collections to other facilities that are more prepared to preserve them for posterity.鈥
But director Kathleen Pryer said moving the herbarium's collection is ultimately risking Duke's legacy.
鈥淚 love Duke,鈥 Pryer said. 鈥淲hat it's doing is a terrible mistake. And it needs to realize that this is a gem that has to stay here. Otherwise, its value will be destroyed.鈥
Pryer said she's going to continue fighting to keep the herbarium open, stating that its future shouldn鈥檛 rest in the biology department, but rather as an entity that reports directly to the provost. Such an entity could fundraise and would no longer compete with departmental interests, according to Pryer.
Meanwhile, an urging Duke to reconsider the closure has garnered over 18,000 signatures.