Science
The library of life: collecting natural history
Why collect biological specimens?

Natural history inventories are archives of biodiversity that provide reference materials for research to help us better understand our world, our past, and our future.

Museums collect biological material for three quite separate functions: display, reference, and documentation of scientific advances. It is unusual for a single specimen to fulfill all three functions. Unlike the objects in most other kinds of museums, all biological material requires some form of preparation to arrest biodegradation. Prepared specimens must then be kept in conditions that will forestall further decay. Different kinds of specimens are handled in different ways often dictated by their intended use.

The museum and research center’s inventories of plant and animal specimens are maintained as vouchers of its scientific work and to allow new work to refine our current understanding of earth’s species.

Collections: A quick profile
Birds
  • Specimens: 100,000
  • Rank: Sixteenth in the nation. The skeleton research inventory is the third largest in the world.
  • Significance: Focus on the Americas; large inventories from Borneo, Kenya, Australia, and Papua New Guinea
Fish
  • Specimens: 630,000 & 7,400 tissues
  • Rank: Among the top 25 in the nation
  • Significance: Strong in fishes from the continental U.S., Ecuador, and Nepal; one of the largest collections of frozen tissue samples in the world
Fossil plants
  • Specimens: 250,000
  • Rank: Second-largest fossil plant inventory in the nation
  • Significance: World’s largest inventory of fossil plants from Antarctica, strong inventories of Pennsylvanian and Cretaceous fossils from the Midwest
Insects
  • Specimens: 4.3 million
  • Rank: Among the top five among university museums, top 10 overall
  • Significance: World’s best bee and scorpionfly research inventory
Invertebrate fossils
  • Specimens: 800,000
  • Rank: Fourth in the nation among university museums
  • Significance: Strong in Late Paleozoic invertebrates and microfossils, Cambrian faunas including trilobites and inarticulated brachiopods
Invertebrate Zoology
  • Specimens: a thousand-plus lots
  • Significance: A growing collection of mid-continent non-insect invertebrates, including earthworms, crayfish, and unionid mussels; the major repository of voucher specimens for the cnidarian Assembling the Tree of Life grant.
 
Mammals
  • Specimens: 165,000
  • Rank: Fifth in the nation
  • Significance: Extensive inventories from the Great Plains; west, southwest, and southeast United States; and Central America
Plants
  • Specimens: 350,000
  • Rank: Top 75 National Resource Collections
  • Significance: Nation’s premier herbarium for Great Plains flora
Reptiles and amphibians
  • Specimens: 292,000
  • Rank: Fourth in the U.S.
  • Significance: Inventories from the Great Plains, Mexico, and Central and South America are especially strong.
Vertebrate fossils
  • Specimens: 141,000
  • Rank: Sixth in the nation
  • Significance: Extensive inventories of Paleozoic, Mesozoic, and Cenozoic vertebrates; notable inventories of South American vertebrates, North American small mammals, Jurassic dinosaurs, Cretaceous marine invertebrates, and Pleistocene mammals

Comments or questions may be directed to the assistant director for public programs.
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