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Guidelines for use
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Usage
guidelines |
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Students
and researchers are encouraged to visit the herbarium, and these guidelines
are intended to facilitate its use and ensure its Any
questions should be directed to members of the herbarium
staff. In addition, all visitors are asked to “sign in”
at the entrance to the herbarium. This information helps us document usage
of the herbarium, and provide better services to those who visit. Working with specimens Handling
specimens — Herbarium specimens are fragile! This is especially
true at KSU, due to the historical collections (included in the general
collections).
Locating a specimen — The families are arranged following a system of 400+ families, of which we use about 380 (arrangement of flowering plant families follows Cronquist, 1981). This arrangement is posted on several cases at the ends of the herbarium aisles. Within each family, the genera are arranged alphabetically (generic nomenclature generally follows that of "Flora of the Great Plains"). Within each genus, species are arranged alphabetically. Furthermore, Kansas specimens are separated and placed in folders with a green tag (filed at the beginning of each genus), and specimens of cultivated material are separated and placed in folders with a red tag (filed at the end of the genus). Researchers looking for type material should consult the Curator. Treatment of specimens for proper pest management — We operate under an “Integrated Pest Management Plan" that aims to minimize the use of pesticides. It is thus imperative that all workers adhere to the following policies:
All plant material entering the herbarium will be hard frozen, and this must be arranged by a staff member. The only non-frozen plant material permitted in the herbarium will be for identification by Mark Mayfield and must be delivered directly to him; if Dr. Mayfield is unavailable, such material will be deposited on the cart outside of the main herbarium door. Policy on destructive sampling — Projects involving removal of material (e.g., for pollen or DNA studies) must be approved in advance by the Curator. Specific guidelines will be followed for such projects, and specimens from which material is removed must be annotated. Researchers should be aware that sampling of some specimens (especially those that are historical, and those containing sparse material) may not be allowed.
Other herbarium resourcesThe
herbarium library — The herbarium houses an extensive collection
of floras, other books, journals and reprints for use in taxonomic research
and plant identification. These materials are intended for in-house use
(permission to borrow an item must be obtained from the Curator).
Citing
the herbarium — KSC is our recognized acronym, and should
be used to cite all of our specimens. When study (in-house and/or via
specimen loans) of KSC material has proven useful, the herbarium should
be cited. Furthermore, we request that workers notify the herbarium staff
of dissertations and papers citing KSC (this can be done readily via email).
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