Difference between revisions of "Fluid Collections"
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==Importance of stable environment for long-term preservation== | ==Importance of stable environment for long-term preservation== | ||
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Unstable storage environment accelerates deterioration | Unstable storage environment accelerates deterioration | ||
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-Warmer temperatures speed up deterioration processes | -Warmer temperatures speed up deterioration processes | ||
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―An increase of 10°C doubles chemical reactions | ―An increase of 10°C doubles chemical reactions | ||
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―Extraction of lipids and proteins goes faster | ―Extraction of lipids and proteins goes faster | ||
− | -Cooler temperatures condense lipids and promote | + | |
− | paraformaldehyde formation | + | -Cooler temperatures condense lipids and promote paraformaldehyde formation |
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-Fluctuations | -Fluctuations | ||
-Stress specimens | -Stress specimens |
Revision as of 17:19, 10 November 2022
Contents
Statement of Purpose
These links and documents contain information about best practices for fluid collections relevant to natural history collections.
Introduction
Importance of stable environment for long-term preservation
Unstable storage environment accelerates deterioration
-Warmer temperatures speed up deterioration processes
―An increase of 10°C doubles chemical reactions
―Extraction of lipids and proteins goes faster
-Cooler temperatures condense lipids and promote paraformaldehyde formation
-Fluctuations -Stress specimens -Stress containers and container seals -Relative humidity is temperature dependent -Short-term exposure to relative humidity >65% can trigger mold outbreak
Contributors
Source Material
Text sourced from Baseline Standards for Fluid Collections, workshop by Dirk Neumann & Julian Carter https://pfc2018.sciencesconf.org/data/program/Workshop_baseline_standards_fluid_collections_part2_Carter.pdf
Links
Consensus Documents
Community Standards
Review Documents
References
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