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VIDEO: B.C. man donates 140,000 mollusk specimens to biodiversity museum

UBCsa国际传媒檚 Beaty museum grateful for Bill Merileessa国际传媒檚 historical record of B.C. marine biodiversity

A Nanaimo mansa国际传媒檚 140,000-specimen mollusk collection has found a new home at a B.C. biodiversity museum.

Bill Merilees, a retired B.C. Parks regional information officer, collected mollusk shells ranging from large clams to tiny snails found on the B.C. shorelines for nearly 50 years. In that time he amassed and catalogued more than 140,000 shells, and possibly the most extensive collection of micro mollusks ever gathered from B.C.sa国际传媒檚 coast. 

Merileessa国际传媒檚 interest in mollusks was sparked when he was five years old by his father who gave him a clam shell, but his hobby of collecting shells took off after he moved to Nanaimo in 1978.

sa国际传媒淚 really had a glorious opportunity, because my job with B.C. Parks took me up and down the Island, all over the placesa国际传媒a国际传媒 he said. sa国际传媒淚sa国际传媒檇 have this spoon and Isa国际传媒檇 find a nice rock at low tide and scrape all the slime and goop off it, put it into a plastic bag and bring it home and put it in [my wifesa国际传媒檚] freezer, which of course, wasnsa国际传媒檛 very popular.sa国际传媒

Merilees would thaw the samples, screen out shells between one and five millimetres in size and then ,with a pair of watchmakersa国际传媒檚 forceps, sit for hours peering through a microscope and picking out the sa国际传媒渕icro molluskssa国际传媒 which hesa国际传媒檇 preserve in vials.

sa国际传媒淭his came about in an interesting way,sa国际传媒 Merilees said. sa国际传媒淲hat the Canadian Wildlife Service were trying to find out was what some of our shorebirds are feeding on. Theysa国际传媒檇 analyze the stomach [contents], but they had nothing to identify the little snails they found, so I started gravitating to getting smaller, smaller and finally ended up getting down to what I call micro mollusks.sa国际传媒

Merilees gathered specimens from Vancouver Island, Haida Gwaii and Washington state, accompanied at times by his friend, marine biologist Rick Harbo.

Merileessa国际传媒檚 collection, stored in wooden cabinets he built, fills a bedroom in his Departure Bay-area home. Vials containing micro mollusks fill just one of dozens of cabinet drawers, yet account for about 126,000 of the estimated 140,000-specimen collection. Each sample is accompanied by particulars, such as date, time, location, tide conditions, surface type (rock or sand), size of scraping, number of species and how many of each were found. He also used methods to preserve specimen DNA, which might one day help further species identification efforts.

sa国际传媒淧eople would say, sa国际传媒榶ou silly bugger,sa国际传媒 and Isa国际传媒檇 say, sa国际传媒榶ousa国际传媒檙e quite right, Isa国际传媒檓 bloody crazy, absolutely stupid,sa国际传媒 but the fact is nobody in B.C. has ever done anything quite like thissa国际传媒a国际传媒 he said. sa国际传媒淲hat yousa国际传媒檝e got here is a snapshot in time of a particular day, particular tide, season sa国际传媒 You could go back to these areas in the future and you can do a comparison and no one has ever, to my knowledge, in British Columbia or even on the west coast of North America, done something quite like that.sa国际传媒

Merilees said some of his specimens are new to the field of mollusk study, but havensa国际传媒檛 been formally recognized. Samples were sent to James Hamilton McLean, a malacologist and former curator at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, who included some of them in a 2,000-page monograph he compiled. Unfortunately McLean died in 2016 before it could be published.

Merilees, now 81, stopped making collection trips in 2020, but he hopes his donation, bound for the University of British Columbiasa国际传媒檚 Beaty Biodiversity Museum, will become a learning resource for future biology students.

Sheila Byers, a marine biologist and former interpreter for the Beaty museum, and Colin MacLeod, a zoologist with UBCsa国际传媒檚 Biodiversity Research Centre and museum curatorial assistant, spent Tuesday, July 20, packing up Merileessa国际传媒檚 collection. It will be stored in isolation for three weeks to prevent any potential insect infestation from escaping into the museum before it is catalogued into the museumsa国际传媒檚 online database and some of it will be put on display.

Merileessa国际传媒檚 collection, the two scientists said, is important for making comparisons between species in collection locations 50 years ago versus today and to help people understand the huge diversity of local marine life.

sa国际传媒淎 lot of people donsa国际传媒檛 realize how beautiful and diverse local species can be, so I think this collection gives a huge opportunity to understand their own marine life by this hugely diverse collection,sa国际传媒 Byers said.

She said Merilees did an sa国际传媒渁mazing jobsa国际传媒 of record-keeping.

sa国际传媒淎nother key thing is just the amazing amount of data Bill has associated with these specimens,sa国际传媒 MacLeod said. sa国际传媒淚n terms of climate change or any large-scale change to the ocean, having a date of collection associated means that we can go back to that site and collect again and maybe that species will have disappeared as ranges shift, caused by climate change or harvesting sa国际传媒 so just having these reference points back in time are invaluable for museums and also for conservation biologists who want to record how things are changing.sa国际传媒

Merileessa国际传媒檚 wish for his collection to be become a teaching resource will also be realized.

sa国际传媒淭heresa国际传媒檚 so many interesting species in here sa国际传媒 some not described sa国际传媒 that itsa国际传媒檚 going to make really cool research projects for a lot of students at UBC too,sa国际传媒 Byers said.

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Bill Merilees, a retired B.C. Parks regional information officer, collected mollusk shells from B.C. and Washington state coastlines for 50 years and has donated his 140,000-specimen collection to University of British Columbiasa国际传媒檚 Beaty Biodiversity Museum. (Chris Bush/News Bulletin)
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Sheila Byers, marine biologist and former interpreter for the Beaty Biodiversity Museum, and Colin MacLeod, zoologist with UBCsa国际传媒檚 Biodiversity Research Centre and museum curatorial assistant, prepare Bill Merileessa国际传媒檚 mollusk shell collection for transport to Vancouver this past Tuesday, July 20. (Chris Bush/News Bulletin)


Chris Bush

About the Author: Chris Bush

As a photographer/reporter with the Nanaimo News Bulletin since 1998.
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