Month: August 2022

Publication: Operation bone rescue!

Kuprewicz, Erin K., Frank MS Muzio, and Greyson Nackid. 2022. Operation Bone Rescue—A case study of remediating flood damage to mammal specimens.  Collection Forum 35: 21–31. pdf

Abstract reads: Water damage to natural history collections can result from both natural and human caused environmental disasters. Floods can result in irreparable damage to scientific specimens, depending on the scale of the disaster, types of specimens affected, and availability of remediation resources. In April 2021, the mammal skeletal collection in the Biodiversity Research Collections (BRC) of the University of Connecticut (UConn) experienced a ceiling flood that affected 612 specimens. In this paper we detail all steps of our specimen rescue process and all materials and equipment we used to complete this remediation in an endeavor we termed “Operation Bone Rescue.” Because we were able to immediately respond to this emergency and implement a complete remediation plan, facilitated by funding from our university, we not only rescued all water-affected specimens, but also improved specimen storage and metadata. We highlight the holistic nature of this successful operation and the key roles played by personnel in the BRC, UConn Facilities Operations, Fire Department, and College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Dean’s Office. A deep appreciation of the value of natural history collections is shared widely on our campus and resulted in the favorable outcomes of this complex, coordinated specimen rescue effort.

New publication – Operation Bone Rescue

Recently, BRC Vertebrate Collections Manager (Dr. Erin Kuprewicz) published a paper co-written by EEB graduate student Frank Muzio and EEB undergraduate student Greyson Nackid:

Kuprewicz, E. K., F. M. S. Muzio, and G. Nackid. 2022. Operation Bone Rescue—A case study of remediating flood damage to mammal specimens. Collection Forum 35(1): 21-31. https://doi.org/10.14351/0831-4985-35.1.21  

We described how a ceiling flood in April 2021 affected 612 mammal bone specimens in the Biodiversity Research Collections. We called our ambitious rescue and remediation effort “Operation Bone Rescue.” Spoiler alert: all waterlogged specimens survived the flood unscathed and actually ended up in better boxes + storage conditions—thanks to our amazing BRC Squad, intrepid volunteers, and supportive UConn administration!