Thursday, May 9, 2024
Thursday, May 9, 2024
HomePet NewsBird NewsInside the Smithsonian Museum's Hidden Collection of Bird Specimen

Inside the Smithsonian Museum’s Hidden Collection of Bird Specimen

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This bird collection is among the biggest worldwide. It’s typically utilized for research study and determining birds associated with plane mishaps.

A drawer of blue-cheeked bee-eater birds at the Smithsonian National Museum of Nature.

Michelle Yan Huang/Insider.


The collection consists of 7 classifications: installed birds, skins, skeleton, fluid, eggs, nest, and genes.

Museum specialist Jacob Saucier showing drawers of mounted ducks.

Museum expert Jacob Saucier strolling me through the installed bird area.

Michelle Yan Huang/Insider.


Installed birds are taxidermied for exhibition display screen. When they retire, they’re kept here far from insects, dust, and light, which would trigger colors to fade.

Close up of a mounted chick specimen.

A chick that was formerly on display screen at the Smithsonian National Museum of Nature.

Nicole Raucheisen/Insider.


This substantial bustard bird is among the heaviest flying birds worldwide. A typical adult male weighs 30 pounds.

A drawer with a mounted bustard bird specimen.

An installed bustard bird specimen at the Smithsonian National Museum of Nature.

Michelle Yan Huang/Insider.


Considering that genuine eyeballs do not maintain well and can draw in insects, these unblinking eyes are made from glass.

Three mounted owl specimens: long-eared owl, great grey owl, and a barn owl.

From delegated right, a long-eared owl, an excellent grey owl, and 2 barn owls at the Smithsonian National Museum of Nature.

Nicole Raucheisen/Insider.


These macaws, discovered in tropical America, have actually been taxidermied. Plumes keep their color, however the birds might require glass eyes and paint touch-ups.

Two colorful mounted macaw specimens in a drawer.

A blue-and-yellow macaw and a faded scarlet macaw at the Smithsonian National Museum of Nature.

Michelle Yan Huang/Insider.


Specimens can be a time pill to a community that no longer exists. These extinct Carolina parakeets were belonging to the eastern United States and would’ve been identified in 1918.

A green mounted Carolina parakeet specimen.

Extinct Carolina parakeets specimens, belonging to Washington D.C. or Maryland, at the Smithsonian.

Nicole Raucheisen/Insider.


The skins collection are birds with their withins gotten rid of. There are 2,000 specimen cases here, filled with bird skins packed with cotton.

A table with bird specimens at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History.

Drawers of bird specimens at the Smithsonian National Museum of Nature.

Michelle Yan Huang/Insider.


This substantial ostrich was a present from King Menelik of Jordan to previous President Theodore Roosevelt.

A drawer with a male Somali ostrich specimen in it.

A male Somali ostrich in a drawer at the Smithsonian National Museum of Nature.

Michelle Yan Huang/Insider.


This ostrich resided in the Smithsonian zoo up until it passed away from aging in 1930. It was then contributed for scientists to reference 92 years later on.

A close up of a tag with information about the Somali ostrich specimen.

A tag with info about the Somali ostrich.

Nicole Raucheisen/Insider.


Roosevelt had his own nature collection, which he contributed to the Smithsonian in 1882. He even prepared his specimens.

A fox sparrow bird specimen.

A fox sparrow that Roosevelt personally prepared in 1874.

Nicole Raucheisen/Insider.


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