Nik Sylvan

Coastal Forest Specimens

Nik Sylvan Art & Illustration  

  • Coastal Forest Specimen 001

    Coastal Forest Specimen 001...

  • Coastal Forest Specimen 002

    Coastal Forest Specimen 002...

  • Coastal Forest Specimen 003

    Coastal Forest Specimen 003...

Specimen collection has gone on for hundreds of years, preserving all manner of things in museums.

These collections let scientists study changes in organisms over long periods of time.

At the same time, plants, animals, and even ecosystems are in danger of disappearing, dying out.

Let's not let a museum drawer be the only place we can find the vast variety of nature in the future...

Coastal Forest Specimens

Specimen 003
Specimen 003.

Many habitats—and with them the species they support—have vanished beyond recovery. With each that disappears, the world loses some of its wonder and richness. It is important to preserve what is left, by creating reserves and by educating the public about what might be lost if we don’t work together to take care of it. It is also important, however, to maintain (and expand) museum collections, because often they are all we have left of vanished places and their web of living things.

The Garry Oak, and the Propertius Duskywing butterfly that lives on the tree’s foliage, are only two of the vast diversity of species that are supported in this landscape. Let’s not see them vanish, as so many creatures already have, only to become two more dusty specimens in a museum drawer.

Coastal Forest Specimens

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