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The collection is being digitised
Peltorhamphus novaezeelandiae © The Trustees of the Natural History Museum, London
The collection is being digitised
Please get in touch if you would like to use any specimens for research.
800,000
12,000
16,000
Historically, fish specimens were prepared dried as half-skins or stuffed and mounted skins until the middle of the 18th century.
Thereafter, fishes began to be preserved whole in alcohol and this eventually became the prime method of preserving animals of this group, particularly after its advocacy by Albert Gunther in his 1880 Introduction to the Study of Fishes.
From 1900 onwards the use of formaldehyde as a fixative also became standard practice for fishes.Routine tissue sampling prior to fixation did not become established until 2010.
There is a total of 1.3m specimens in various categories in the Museum fish collection including:
The taxonomic and geographical strengths of our fish collection reflect the activities of prominent ichthyologists who have worked here.
[Dates in brackets are biographical, those in square brackets are periods in office.]
Oliver Crimmen
Eleanor Adamson
Jonathan Cox
Ralf Britz
Antonia Ford
George Turner
Access to some collections will be affected as we prepare for the move to our new collections, science and digitisation centre.
Scientists and collections management specialists can visit the collections and borrow specimens for research.
Our duty is to provide a safe and secure environment for all of our collections.