[Nhcoll-l] Dried lizard?
Dirk Neumann
d.neumann at leibniz-lib.de
Tue Apr 4 01:42:19 EDT 2023
Hi Tonya,
that depends a bit on the circumstances of storage. Even though the lizard was dry in a dry, aerated environment, it not necessarily means it stays dry indoors and would not decay. A second question is how large the specimen is - and perhaps how fatty, if you want to keep it as a dry specimen
While it usually is not a huge problem keeping millions of specimens dry if they are small enough (entomology), you still need to keep them shielded against climatic effects inside the storage room.
Not long before I left the museum in Munich, we received 50 kg of confiscated, sun-dried shark fins that were intercepted on their way from a Central American country to an Asian country. After shock-freezing and treating the fins in 2 freezing/thawing cycles at below -25°C for several weeks in open boxes to get rid of some obvious pest issues, I bagged them in strong PE foil in the -25°C room and immediately heat sealed the bags in the adjacent cooling room (+4°C), adding a pre-packed silica-gel net bag into each fin bag. Heat sealing them frozen in basically frozen air-condition removed further humidity (fins were basically freeze-dried). The fins were all individualised and tissue samples had been removed for molecular identification to evaluate their CITES status.
Sorted bags with fins of an indefinite number of specimens were then placed into large ground stopper jars (including recycling cracked jars which no longer could be used for fluid storage but still would shield the bags from rH shifts in the storage room and would keep pests out). Bags were placed on small meshes for keeping them well elevated above the container bottom to support pest monitoring.
Several years back, we received an very rare but large fish from Africa which also in fact was a mummy (> 60cm), and we treated it in a very similar way (freezing to remove pest, bagging and heat sealing, placing it then in a tall glass cylinder. Specimen was very stable all the year without any obvious deterioration.
Hope this helps
With best wishes
Dirk
[cid:part1.RZ53dzLY.ZIB9hk0b at leibniz-lib.de]
Am 04.04.2023 um 04:52 schrieb Haff, Tonya (NCMI, Crace):
Hi everyone,
We just received a large lizard specimen that is desiccated... apparently it sat for a month under a bush in the desert this summer before it was retrieved. It smells a little but is basically totally dry and not in bad shape, considering. Not eaten and not rotten. I'm wondering if anyone might have suggestions for the best way to keep it in the collections? It's an important record so we definitely want to keep it, and it's in good enough shape I don't want to skeletonise it. Perhaps dry it out some more in a fume hood and then keep it in a jar dry? I thought that might contain any smells, but I don't want to risk it going mouldy. Any thoughts appreciated!
Cheers,
Tonya
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Stiftung Leibniz-Institut zur Analyse des Biodiversitätswandels
Postanschrift: Adenauerallee 127, 53113 Bonn, Germany
Stiftung des öffentlichen Rechts;
Generaldirektion: Prof. Dr. Bernhard Misof (Generaldirektor), Adrian Grüter (Kaufm. Geschäftsführer)
Sitz der Stiftung: Adenauerallee 160 in Bonn
Vorsitzender des Stiftungsrates: Dr. Michael Wappelhorst
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