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Zoos and aquariums
The missing link

A new paper from Yale University demonstrates how zoos, aquariums and museums could collaborate for the benefit of all earth sciences, explains Mike Cummings


The animal collections housed at zoos and natural history museums – living specimens in the first case, preserved in the other – constitute an exhaustive trove of information about Earth’s biodiversity. Yet zoos and museums rarely share data with each other according to new research from Yale University.

Published in the journal BioScience, the paper – ‘Bridging the research gap between live collections in zoos and preserved collections in natural history museums’ – lays out a pathway to increasing collaboration between these groups that would enhance our understanding of the animal kingdom.

“Museums have a wealth of preserved specimens that provide scientists with massive amounts of information, but very little data about how the animals lived their day-to-day life,” says Gregory Watkins-Colwell, collection manager for herpetology and ichthyology at the Yale Peabody Museum and a co-author of the paper.

“Zoos and aquariums, on the other hand, have rich data on an animal’s life history, behaviour and health. Combining this complementary information would be a boon to scholars and serve the research and educational missions of both museums and zoos.”

A billion specimens
Institutions accredited by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums hold around 800,000 living animals, primarily in the United States.

Zoos and aquariums keep extensive records for each animal in their care, including information on their life history, behaviour, health, pedigree, physiology and the husbandry protocols used during their life – such as diet and veterinary treatments. They also periodically collect and preserve biological samples such as blood, plasma and DNA.

Natural history museums house roughly 500 million to a billion biological specimens in the United States and about three billion worldwide, according to the paper. A specimen’s records typically include information on where, when, and by whom it was collected, as well as its taxonomy and method of preservation. These records tend to capture the moment in the animal’s life immediately preceding its death but offer little information about all the time before that, Watkins-Colwell explains.

“Natural history museums would clearly benefit from having access to the detailed life-history records kept by zoos, which are largely unavailable to museums and the researchers who rely on them,” he says. “For example, the blood chemistry of a cheetah could be very valuable to a researcher. At the same time, zoos can also be important sources of preserved specimens for museums.”

Many zoos house species that are rare, endangered or even extinct in the wild, making them extremely difficult, if not impossible, for museums to collect ethically, according to the paper, whose 35 co-authors represent zoos and museums located across the US. Disposing of deceased animals is a logistical and often a legal necessity for zoos, which lack the expertise and facilities to house preserved specimens, the authors add. As an alternative, zoos could deposit specimens of high scientific value with natural history museums, extending the research and teaching value of their collections and strengthening their credibility as conservation-oriented scientific organisations.

Rare and endangered
Depositing specimens in museums can help zoos learn more about the health of the animal while it was living under their care – perhaps an elephant had an infected tooth that went undetected while it was living – knowledge that could inform a zoo’s practices and benefit its collections, Watkins-Colwell explains.

“Depositing a specimen from a zoo into a museum can extend the ‘life’ of that animal in perpetuity – providing research, education and conservation opportunities for years to come,” says Alex Shepack, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Notre Dame and co-author on the paper.

There are existing partnerships between zoos and museums; the Peabody Museum for example has received specimens from zoos across the United States. Since 2010, the Sedgwick County Zoo in Wichita, Kansas has donated more than 770 specimens and tissue samples to the museum. Those materials have been used in 22 research projects and courses at Yale.

The barriers to increased collaboration are largely cultural, Watkins-Colwell says.

“When we started discussions between zoo and museum staff, we realised how little each understood of the ways we all use collections and maintain data,” says co-author Steven Whitfield, a conservation biologist at Zoo Miami.

“As we worked together over three days to organise this manuscript, we saw great interest in collaborations from people who had never really been in a room together.”

Varied emphasis, shared value
The two types of institution vary in their emphasis on research. While many museums are heavily focused on research, zoos place more emphasis on the health and welfare of their living specimens. There can also be legal hurdles to transferring animal specimens between zoos and museums and digital record management systems are often incompatible.

“However, what should unite these institutions is a shared interest in preserving biodiversity in its various forms and contributing to our collective knowledge of these animals,” says Sinlan Poo, senior research scientist at Memphis Zoo and lead author of the paper.

Ultimately, enhanced collaboration will require staff at zoos and museums to build relationships and share their ideas and scientific approaches with each other. The new paper, Watkins-Colwell says, is a first step in initiating that dialogue.

Credit: Yale University. NB Gary P. Aronsen, a biological anthropologist and supervisor of the Yale Biological Anthropology Laboratories, is a co-author of the paper.

Read more from this issue of Spa Business magazine

View contents of Spa Business 2022 issue 3
Natural history museums contain around three billion specimens worldwide
Natural history museums contain around three billion specimens worldwide / photo: elRoce/Shutterstock
The paper has generated interest in collaboration between zoos and museums
The paper has generated interest in collaboration between zoos and museums / photo: Irina Wilhauk/Shutterstock
Studying autopsies of animals such as elephants can reveal useful scientific knowledge
Studying autopsies of animals such as elephants can reveal useful scientific knowledge / photo: Craig Morrison/Shutterstock
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Zoos and aquariums
The missing link

A new paper from Yale University demonstrates how zoos, aquariums and museums could collaborate for the benefit of all earth sciences, explains Mike Cummings


The animal collections housed at zoos and natural history museums – living specimens in the first case, preserved in the other – constitute an exhaustive trove of information about Earth’s biodiversity. Yet zoos and museums rarely share data with each other according to new research from Yale University.

Published in the journal BioScience, the paper – ‘Bridging the research gap between live collections in zoos and preserved collections in natural history museums’ – lays out a pathway to increasing collaboration between these groups that would enhance our understanding of the animal kingdom.

“Museums have a wealth of preserved specimens that provide scientists with massive amounts of information, but very little data about how the animals lived their day-to-day life,” says Gregory Watkins-Colwell, collection manager for herpetology and ichthyology at the Yale Peabody Museum and a co-author of the paper.

“Zoos and aquariums, on the other hand, have rich data on an animal’s life history, behaviour and health. Combining this complementary information would be a boon to scholars and serve the research and educational missions of both museums and zoos.”

A billion specimens
Institutions accredited by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums hold around 800,000 living animals, primarily in the United States.

Zoos and aquariums keep extensive records for each animal in their care, including information on their life history, behaviour, health, pedigree, physiology and the husbandry protocols used during their life – such as diet and veterinary treatments. They also periodically collect and preserve biological samples such as blood, plasma and DNA.

Natural history museums house roughly 500 million to a billion biological specimens in the United States and about three billion worldwide, according to the paper. A specimen’s records typically include information on where, when, and by whom it was collected, as well as its taxonomy and method of preservation. These records tend to capture the moment in the animal’s life immediately preceding its death but offer little information about all the time before that, Watkins-Colwell explains.

“Natural history museums would clearly benefit from having access to the detailed life-history records kept by zoos, which are largely unavailable to museums and the researchers who rely on them,” he says. “For example, the blood chemistry of a cheetah could be very valuable to a researcher. At the same time, zoos can also be important sources of preserved specimens for museums.”

Many zoos house species that are rare, endangered or even extinct in the wild, making them extremely difficult, if not impossible, for museums to collect ethically, according to the paper, whose 35 co-authors represent zoos and museums located across the US. Disposing of deceased animals is a logistical and often a legal necessity for zoos, which lack the expertise and facilities to house preserved specimens, the authors add. As an alternative, zoos could deposit specimens of high scientific value with natural history museums, extending the research and teaching value of their collections and strengthening their credibility as conservation-oriented scientific organisations.

Rare and endangered
Depositing specimens in museums can help zoos learn more about the health of the animal while it was living under their care – perhaps an elephant had an infected tooth that went undetected while it was living – knowledge that could inform a zoo’s practices and benefit its collections, Watkins-Colwell explains.

“Depositing a specimen from a zoo into a museum can extend the ‘life’ of that animal in perpetuity – providing research, education and conservation opportunities for years to come,” says Alex Shepack, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Notre Dame and co-author on the paper.

There are existing partnerships between zoos and museums; the Peabody Museum for example has received specimens from zoos across the United States. Since 2010, the Sedgwick County Zoo in Wichita, Kansas has donated more than 770 specimens and tissue samples to the museum. Those materials have been used in 22 research projects and courses at Yale.

The barriers to increased collaboration are largely cultural, Watkins-Colwell says.

“When we started discussions between zoo and museum staff, we realised how little each understood of the ways we all use collections and maintain data,” says co-author Steven Whitfield, a conservation biologist at Zoo Miami.

“As we worked together over three days to organise this manuscript, we saw great interest in collaborations from people who had never really been in a room together.”

Varied emphasis, shared value
The two types of institution vary in their emphasis on research. While many museums are heavily focused on research, zoos place more emphasis on the health and welfare of their living specimens. There can also be legal hurdles to transferring animal specimens between zoos and museums and digital record management systems are often incompatible.

“However, what should unite these institutions is a shared interest in preserving biodiversity in its various forms and contributing to our collective knowledge of these animals,” says Sinlan Poo, senior research scientist at Memphis Zoo and lead author of the paper.

Ultimately, enhanced collaboration will require staff at zoos and museums to build relationships and share their ideas and scientific approaches with each other. The new paper, Watkins-Colwell says, is a first step in initiating that dialogue.

Credit: Yale University. NB Gary P. Aronsen, a biological anthropologist and supervisor of the Yale Biological Anthropology Laboratories, is a co-author of the paper.

Read more from this issue of Spa Business magazine

View contents of Spa Business 2022 issue 3
Natural history museums contain around three billion specimens worldwide
Natural history museums contain around three billion specimens worldwide / photo: elRoce/Shutterstock
The paper has generated interest in collaboration between zoos and museums
The paper has generated interest in collaboration between zoos and museums / photo: Irina Wilhauk/Shutterstock
Studying autopsies of animals such as elephants can reveal useful scientific knowledge
Studying autopsies of animals such as elephants can reveal useful scientific knowledge / photo: Craig Morrison/Shutterstock
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ABOUT LEISURE MEDIA
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