Participating Museums and Institutes

Christian-Albrechts-Universität Kiel, Zoologisches Museum

The historical collections in Kiel consist of four parts, which build on each other. The earliest collections were made by Karl August Möbius, who began to collect the fauna of the Kiel Bight systematically for his comprehensive publication „Die Fauna der Kieler Bucht“. Beginning in 1871, the Kiel Commission for the Investigation of German Seas (“Kieler Kommission zur Untersuchung der deutschen Meere“) conducted systematic research cruises in North and Baltic Sea using exactly located sampling stations. Around 1900, the so-called “Terminfahrten” took place with the research vessel “Poseidon”. The “Poseidon” routinely sampled a dense network of exactly located stations (see fig. 1 and 2). The extent of the collections can only be gauged roughly at this point, as much of the Kiel collection has not yet been recorded. The majority are mega-epibenthos samples, and the most important animal taxa are crustaceans, mollusks and echinoderms/tunicates. The Baltic Sea collection encompasses ca. 1800 samples, and the North Sea collection 8000 samples. In addition, few much older samples were collected by Wilhelm Behn in the 1840s, as well as an unknown number of dried samples, probably predominantly mollusk shells. From the “Terminfahrten”, 30 glass jars have not yet been sorted, and contain probably another 300 to 400 samples. Figures 1 and 2 provide an overview of the sampling stations. The samples are all preserved in ethanol, and preliminary tests showed that the samples are well-suited for molecular and morphological studies.

Senckenberg Forschungsinstitut und Naturmuseum, Frankfurt

The Kiel collections are complemented by a second major collection, the benthos samples of the Senckenberg Naturmuseum in Frankfurt am Main (see fig. 3). It is the worldwide largest cohesive and representative collection of North Sea fauna. For the past 45 years, scientists of Senckenberg have sampled the benthos from exactly located stations in the coastal North Sea on a monthly or quarterly basis. The longest time series has been maintained from the Jade region, which is close to the institute “Senckenberg am Meer” in Wilhelmshaven. Since 1970, coastal samples are routinely collected, and since 1974, nets are used to fish at exact stations. Other routine sampling takes place off Norderney and in the “Helgoländer Tiefe Rinne”, a deep sink in the North Sea, which began in 1976 and 1977, respectively. Besides these main areas, locations in the southern North Sea and in the German Bight are regularly sampled. At present, the Senckenberg collection contains faunal samples from over 4000 North Sea locations.


Museums and Institutes of the NORe Association

The two major collections are supplemented by the smaller collections of the NORe association. These smaller collections might contain important small time series or single specimens, which fill temporal or spatial gaps, thereby improving our understanding of faunal changes.

Übersee-Museum Bremen (Stiftung Öffentlichen Rechts)
Universität Hamburg, Zoologisches Museum Hamburg
Universität Rostock, Zoologische Sammlung
Museum für Natur und Umwelt, Lübeck
Staatliches Naturhistorisches Museum, Braunschweig
Niedersächsisches Landesmuseum für Natur und Mensch Oldenburg
Zoologisches Institut und Museum Greifswald
Müritzeum, Waren (Müritz)
Stiftung Deutsches Meeresmuseum, Stralsund

Liste der beitragenden Institutionen

Deutsches Meeresmuseum Stralsund DMM
Niedersächsisches Landesmuseum für Natur und Mensch Oldenburg LMNM
Museum für Natur und Umwelt Lübeck MNUL
Müritzeum Waren MUW
Senckenberg Forschungsinstitut und Museum Frankfurt SMF
Staatliches Naturhistorisches Museum Braunschweig SNMB
Senckenberg Staatliche Naturkundliche Sammlungen Dresden SNSD
Überseemuseum Bremen UMB
Zoologisches Museum der Universität Greifswald ZIMG
Centrum für Naturkunde (CeNak) der Universität Hamburg ZMH
Zoologisches Museum der Universität Kiel ZMK
Zoologische Sammlung der Universität Rostock ZSRO