Picture of a mouse-liked sengi.
Employee Favorite Specimen: This sengi may look like a shrew, but it’s more closely related to elephants.

Hidden Treasures

UM Upgrades Zoological Museum for 125th Anniversary

University of Montana
Vision Magazine 2023
4 min readMay 22, 2023

--

Story by Raequel Roberts
Photos by Ryan Brennecke

If you happen to be a researcher looking to study the fur follicles of Ovis canadensis, there’s a good chance your quest will start and end at UM — not just because the Treasure State is home to Montana bighorn sheep, but because the University has a zoological museum with an international reputation for its vast collection of animal specimens and a muscular online database to access it.

And by “vast” we mean more than 22,000 intact specimens and thousands upon thousands of claws, clavicles and cranial pieces from animals as diverse as grizzly bears, pelicans, kangaroos and hummingbirds.

Celebrating its 125th anniversary this year, the Philip L. Wright Zoological Museum is both a time capsule of species from decades past and a living laboratory for students and researchers to study biodiversity, anatomy, evolution and emerging diseases.

Museum curator Angela Hornsby holds a walrus skull.
Museum curator Angela Hornsby holds one of the museum’s larger specimens, a walrus skull. The museum boasts other hefty items, including a moose pelt and elephant tooth.

“Our specimens give us a snapshot in time,” says museum curator Angela Hornsby as she opens a drawer lined with toucans and other vibrantly hued birds. “This isn’t just a loon chick — it’s a loon chick from a specific place and time. With it, we can ask questions not only about growth and development of loons, but we can ask questions about the population it was in and what the environment was like at that time.”

Every specimen that comes into the collection — some are donated by other collections, some from researchers and many from the public — goes through a prep and preservation room staffed by students and volunteers, all members of an appropriately named Carcass Club. (One of its more famous alums is Emily Graslie, star of the popular science YouTube series “The Brain Scoop,” whose work inspired UM to start an internship program to support interdisciplinary student projects in the museum.)

The center of attention for most visitors to the prep room is a desk-sized plastic box that’s home to a carcass-cleaning crew of Dermestid beetles, known for their ability to strip a skull to the bone in just a few days and a favored tool of taxidermists. The beetles spend their entire life cycle in the lab’s box, breeding, laying eggs and eating.

“This colony has been going strong for at least 15 years,” said Hornsby. “They are the hardest workers in here.”

Once crammed into a single campus classroom, the museum has undergone a transformation the past few years thanks to a grant from the Natural Science Foundation and funding from Friends of the Philip L. Wright Zoological Museum. The museum more than doubled its footprint, and that original classroom location has been unearthed and is now a more spacious study laboratory for students.

The physical expansion and upgrades, though, are only one part of the story, says Jeff Good, the museum’s faculty director and a professor in biological sciences and wildlife biology.

Its preeminence has been bolstered, too, thanks to the updated online database, curated as well by Hornsby, that allows researchers and others to see what the museum has in its collection and when and where a specimen was collected.

“There is one camp in this field that thinks ‘don’t touch, it’s my job to preserve and protect this collection’ and another camp that believes a collection is only as useful as it is used and accessible to promote science, and we are very much in that second camp,” Good says. “We’ll take small clips of tissue and send for DNA analysis, for example, as long as it promotes the science and doesn’t compromise the specimen.”

The work of the museum, Good adds, has never been more critical as climate change intensifies and the globe continues to warm.

“Museums like UM’s provide a valuable baseline but only if you have people collecting contemporary specimens,” he said. “So, it’s important that we continue to collect and preserve because there’s never been a time when things are changing so quickly. This collection will continue to be critical as we monitor and respond to continuing changes in the northern Rockies and in Montana.” •

A picture of four birds with tags on their feet.
Oldest Specimens: These Spotted Sandpipers date from the 1880s and early 1900s.
A picture of a rare desman rodent.
Rarest Specimen: This Russian desman was collected in Kazakhstan.
Pictures of yellow parasite worms in a jar.
The museum contains vials of collected parasites — some tiny, and some not so little.
Drawers holding many specimens.
Biggest Collection: The museum stores a huge variety of small mammals such as deer mice and shrews.
A vampire bat specimen in a jar.
Oddities: The museum is home to some unusual things, including this fully preserved vampire bat in a jar.
A picture of a skunk next to an albino skunk.
Strangest Specimens: We’ll have to go with the albino skunk. (There is also a two-headed fish.)
A picture of a grizzly skull.
Wide Variety: The skull of a female grizzly.
A picture of two emperor penguins.
Other Strange Specimens: The museum has emperor penguins!

--

--