I agree. I haven't attempted to affix ID labels to specimens in many years -- things change much too quickly! Instead, I place a "drawer label" at the head of each series, as in the photo below. They are easy to generate and can be changed out as needed. Even museums don't use specimen ID labels anymore, as labeled unit trays serve that purpose. Due to space constraints, I don't personally use unit trays, but I manage to keep each series separated, so there is no confusion about what specimens go with each label. I just hope that whomever processes my collection at a museum down the road will keep the IDs straight, but I have no control over that. That being said, a lack of staff at many museums often means that incoming collections are often kept in their original drawers, which are inserted into empty spaces in their compactors. It sometimes takes many years to integrate those specimens into their collections, if that happens at all.Chuck wrote: Sun Mar 02, 2025 4:04 pm I don't even bother with ID labels on most specimens these days. That's what they have graduate students for, generating soon-to-be-outdated specimen labels.
John
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