Lost Indonesian Plant Collection Discovered in Basel
Historical Sarasin brothers' plant specimens, thought destroyed in WWII Berlin, found intact at Basel institution, providing valuable botanical research material.
Historical Sarasin brothers' plant specimens, thought destroyed in WWII Berlin, found intact at Basel institution, providing valuable botanical research material.

"in a dusty box"
History has been rewritten in Basel. In a stunning revelation that defies the catastrophic losses of the Second World War, invaluable plant collections once believed incinerated in the 1943 bombing of Berlin have surfaced intact. For over 80 years, the scientific community operated under the grim assumption that the pocket herbaria of the legendary naturalists Fritz and Paul Sarasin were lost to the flames that consumed the Berlin herbarium. They were wrong. The Swiss Natural History Collections Network (Swisscollnet) has confirmed that these botanical treasures survived the chaos of war and have been hiding in plain sight within Swiss archives. This is not merely a recovery; it is a resurrection of scientific heritage. The discovery of these four distinct collections shatters previous historical narratives and restores a vital link to 19th-century exploration. While the world lamented the cultural and scientific erasure caused by the war, Basel unknowingly safeguarded a piece of Indonesian natural history that can now finally be studied. The survival of these delicate specimens is nothing short of miraculous, offering a rare victory for preservation in the face of historical devastation.
The scientific weight of this discovery is staggering. Buried within the recovered pocket herbaria are 28 distinct 'type specimens'—the absolute gold standard in botany. These are not just dried leaves; they are the original physical references used to scientifically define species for the first time. Without these types, the taxonomic classification of biodiversity remains incomplete and vulnerable to error. The recovery includes unique flowering plants and ferns from the Indonesian island of Sulawesi, species that are found nowhere else on Earth. Among the recovered treasures is the Thelymitra sarasiniana, a rare orchid species named after the explorers, which was also presumed extinct from the scientific record. This recovery provides modern botanists with the genetic and morphological blueprints necessary to validate current biodiversity data. In an era where biodiversity is plummeting, recovering the original benchmarks of these species is critical. The Sarasin find does not just fill a gap in a museum shelf; it restores the foundational data for dozens of unique Indonesian species.
Paul and Fritz Sarasin were titans of exploration, and their legacy has just been forcefully reclaimed. Between the late 19th and early 20th centuries, these Basel-based naturalists ventured into the dense, uncharted jungles of Sulawesi, Indonesia, amassing bulging collections of flora previously unknown to Western science. Their expeditions were perilous and prolific, resulting in a scientific bounty that defined the region's biological profile. The brothers returned to Switzerland with crates of material that would fuel decades of research. However, the fragmentation of their collection during the war years threatened to obscure their full contribution. This discovery reconnects the Sarasin brothers' daring fieldwork with modern Swiss academia. It highlights the pivotal role Swiss explorers played in mapping global biodiversity. The plants they plucked from the Indonesian soil over a century ago are now once again available to tell the story of an island ecosystem that has likely changed drastically since their time. It is a potent reminder of Switzerland's deep, often overlooked, footprint in the history of global scientific exploration.
The breakthrough came not from a jungle trek, but from a 'dusty box' in a university archive. A massive digitization push by the University of Basel and Swisscollnet has exposed what physical audits missed for decades. In a relentless drive to modernize Switzerland's natural history assets, the team has uncovered a total of over 140 type specimens across various collections, far surpassing initial expectations. This digital revolution is stripping away the obscurity of neglected archives, proving that the next great scientific discovery often lies in our own basements. The audit revealed that alongside the Sulawesi flowering plants, critical fern collections and specimens from New Caledonia were also hiding in the dark. This success validates the urgent need for the digitization of scientific collections worldwide. As Swiss institutions aggressively digitize their holdings, they are unlocking data that is vital for climate change research and conservation biology. The Sarasin discovery is likely just the tip of the iceberg, signaling a new era where technology forces history to give up its secrets.