Current:Home > NewsUniversity of Michigan slithers toward history with massive acquisition of jarred snake specimens -Clarity Finance Guides
University of Michigan slithers toward history with massive acquisition of jarred snake specimens
View
Date:2025-04-15 03:27:35
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) — Greg Schneider scans rows upon rows of liquid-filled glass jars containing coiled snake specimens, just a portion of the University of Michigan Museum of Zoology’s reptile and amphibian collection believed to be the largest held by any research institution in the U.S. thanks to a recent donation.
The museum this fall acquired tens of thousands of reptile and amphibian specimens from Oregon State University, many of which are snakes. The development places the university in a unique position, according to Schneider, the research museum collections manager for the museum’s division of reptiles and amphibians.
“I’m fairly confident we’ll have the largest snake collection in the world,” he said. The extensive new additions also will allow scientists to conduct new snake and amphibian research, perhaps looking at trait evolution in mothers and their offspring.
Numerous studies have been conducted in recent years about declining amphibian and reptile populations, Schneider said, noting they “are very good biological indicators of the health of the environment and ecosystems,” especially the amphibians.
“Amphibians, unlike people, breathe at least partly through their skin, which is constantly exposed to everything in their environment,” he said, adding that “the worldwide occurrences of amphibian declines and deformities could be an early warning that some of our ecosystems, even seemingly pristine ones, are seriously out of balance.”
Boxes containing water snakes, garter snakes, woodland salamanders, dusky salamanders and other species arrived last month. They were euthanized and ultimately placed in a solution that is 75% ethanol. The donations represent the lifetime work of two retired Oregon State professors, Lynne Houck and Stevan Arnold, who received a doctorate from Michigan in 1972.
Schneider has yet to complete the painstaking process of cataloging the new material, but estimates it contains around 30,000 snakes. He said that would give Michigan a total of between 65,000 to 70,000 of the slithering vertebrates, surpassing collections at the Smithsonian in Washington, the American Museum of Natural History in New York and the University of Kansas. Some of the specimens housed at the museum prior to the Oregon State donation predate the Civil War.
The “largest snake collection” title would be nice, but Schneider said the true promise of a big collection is new research opportunities.
“The more stuff you have and the more associated materials that you have, the more things you can do,” Schneider said.
The newly acquired Oregon State collection also includes about 30,000 associated frozen tissue samples. Along with advances in molecular genetics and more sophisticated DNA analyses, the samples will allow research that could result in a better understanding of inheritance, evolutionary relationships and “has huge applications in medicine,” said Hernán López-Fernández, an associate professor in Michigan’s Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology.
A number of the newly acquired jars contain both snakes and litters of their newborns, which Michigan professor Dan Rabosky said “is very, very rare for museum collections and is incredibly powerful for research, because it lets researchers ask questions about genetics that would otherwise not be possible.”
Despite the daunting task of organizing the new collection, Schneider said he and his colleagues have noticed renewed excitement in team members who staff the university’s 153,375-square-foot (14,249-square-meter) Research Museums Center, where the specimens are housed.
“Since these specimens arrived, people are very, very, very enthusiastic and supportive,” Schneider said. “And excited about the kinds of research that are going to be done with these collections.”
veryGood! (2)
Related
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- 2 Kansas prison employees fired, 6 punished after they allegedly mocked and ignored injured female inmate
- Jury selection set to begin in the first trial in the Georgia election case against Trump and others
- Too much red meat is linked to a 50% increase in type 2 diabetes risk
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- Dutch court convicts man who projected antisemitic message on Anne Frank museum
- Sterigenics will pay $35 million to settle Georgia lawsuits, company announces
- Federal judge again rules that California’s ban on assault weapons is unconstitutional
- Jamie Foxx reps say actor was hit in face by a glass at birthday dinner, needed stitches
- Canada removes 41 diplomats from India after New Delhi threatens to revoke their immunity
Ranking
- Average rate on 30
- Mortgage rates touch 8% for the first time since August 2000
- Baltimore firefighter dies and 4 others are injured battling rowhouse fire
- $249M in federal grid money for Georgia will boost electric transmission and battery storage
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- UEFA-sanctioned soccer matches in Israel halted indefinitely amid Israel-Hamas war
- How Justin Timberlake Is Feeling Amid Britney Spears' Memoir Revelations
- ‘Drop in the ocean': UN-backed aid could soon enter Gaza from Egypt, but only at a trickle for now
Recommendation
Trump suggestion that Egypt, Jordan absorb Palestinians from Gaza draws rejections, confusion
Biden to ask Congress in Oval Office address for funding including aid for Israel and Ukraine
Drones attack a US military base in southern Syria and there are minor injuries, US officials say
Black dolls made from 1850s to 1940s now on display in Rochester museum exhibit
Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
Martin Scorsese on new movie ‘Killers of the Flower Moon’: ‘Maybe we’re all capable of this’
14 cows killed, others survive truck rollover crash in Connecticut
Earthquake country residents set to ‘drop, cover and hold on’ in annual ShakeOut quake drill