[Nhcoll-l] Mold or fungal growth in herpetology collection
Carl Mehling
cosm at amnh.org
Fri Aug 22 08:55:20 EDT 2025
I feel like I’ve seen this happen when certain types of metal are used for the specimen tags. That might be something else to consider.
Carl Mehling
Senior Museum Specialist
Fossil Amphibian, Reptile, and Bird Collection
Fossil Plant Collection
Division of Paleontology
American Museum of Natural History
200 Central Park West
New York, NY 10024
212-769-5849
From: Nhcoll-l <nhcoll-l-bounces at mailman.yale.edu> On Behalf Of Indah Huegele
Sent: Tuesday, August 19, 2025 3:35 PM
To: nhcoll-l at mailman.yale.edu
Subject: [Nhcoll-l] Mold or fungal growth in herpetology collection
EXTERNAL SENDER
Hello everyone,
I was wondering if I could get feedback on some scary-looking growths on a few herpetology specimens in our collection (photos attached here). Any thoughts on what these residues are and/or advice on how to treat them would be much appreciated!
Orange-brown bumps. (images 143927 and 143900) There are small, orange-brown, round bumps on one specimen that has had its tail exposed from fluid levels that are too low. I completely replaced the ethanol for this specimen and tried to gently scrape off the growth, but most of it was quite dried on, so I left it soaking in fresh 70% ethanol for the time being. Is this definitely fungal? Should I try to scrape the rest of the growth off the specimen's tail or leave it alone?
White layer of residue. (all other images) On a few salamander specimens, there is this opaque, white layer of residue. This is occurring on salamander specimens that are completely submerged in ethanol. (However, I am not sure what the concentration of this ethanol is or the last time that it was changed out; I worry it might have lost ethanol concentration over time.) Any thoughts on what this might be and how to treat it?
I took over this collection a few months ago, so I am still discovering issues with specimens. I appreciate any suggestions that you folks have to offer on how to help these poor specimens!
Thanks,
Indah
Indah B. Huegele, PhD
Life Sciences Collection Manager | Idaho Museum of Natural History
Museum Bldg | Room 220
921 S 8th Ave, Stop 8096 | Pocatello, Idaho 83209
(208) 282-2815 | indahhuegele at isu.edu<mailto:indahhuegele at isu.edu>
[Image removed by sender.]
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