GGBN Object - https://id.ggbn.org/33DJA8 https://id.ggbn.org/33DJA8

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Material Entity: tissue

Disposition: In collection

Identifier Status: ACTIVE

Last Update: January 29, 2025

Identification

Accepted NameLemur catta Linnaeus, 1758
TaxonomyAnimalia > Chordata > Mammalia > Primates > Lemuridae > Lemur
Name According toCatalogue of Life
Original NameLemur catta
Taxonomy Original NameAnimalia > Chordata > Mammalia > Primates > Lemuridae > Lemur > catta
Status Original Nameaccepted species
Resolving Stateresolved on species level

Gathering

CountryUnknown
Localityunknown
Collector(s)Collector(s): Michelle Sauther; Frank Cuozzo; Preparator(s): Julie Thomas
Collector's numbers.n.
Collection Date2000-01-01/2018-04-01
Collecting Sourcecaptive/cultivated

Tissue

GUID/Occurrence IDhttp://arctos.database.museum/guid/DMNS:Mamm:19862?pid=28643133
Catalog NumberDMNS:Mamm:19862
Previous IDsDZTM: Denver Zoology Tissue Mammal=7994, other identifier=CUA-1009,
Collection CodeMamm
Institution CodeDMNS
Institution Full NameArctos/Denver Museum of Nature & Science
Record BasisPreservedSpecimen
Sample Typetissue
Establishment Meanscaptive

Preparation

Typemuscle (frozen)
StaffAndrew Charles Doll

Permits

Status: Permit not available
Unknown permit type

Dataset Description

Denver Museum of Nature and Science (DMNS) Mammal specimens (Arctos) for GGBN

DescriptionThe Denver Museum of Nature & Science Mammal Collection currently consists of approximately 21,000 specimens, which includes 20,000+ cataloged specimens. The collection spans 1870 to the present, is worldwide in coverage, and includes specimens from the three major extant mammalian lineages (monotremes, marsupials, and placentals) distributed across 21 orders, 266 genera, and 381 species. The collection’s primary strength is its focus on the southern Rocky Mountains and Great Plains. Approximately 82% of the collection is from the western United States, with specimens from Colorado (73%) representing the largest percentage. Small mammals, such as shrews, rodents, lagomorphs, and bats, constitute the majority (84%) of specimens in the collection. The composition of the collection is primarily study skins and skeletal material, with a growing wet collection. High-quality specimen data, frozen tissues, and parasites are associated with most of the specimens archived since 2006.
RightsThis work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC-BY-NC) 4.0 License.
CitationDenver Museum of Nature & Science Herp Collection

Contacts

Assistant Collections Manager, Department of Zoology
Andrew Doll, andrew.doll@dmns.org , 2001 Colorado Blvd., CO US, 80205-5798, 303-370-8387
Curator of Vertebrate Zoology
John Demboski, john.demboski@dmns.org , 2001 Colorado Blvd., CO US, 80205-5798, 303-370-6443
Information Architect
John Wieczorek, gtuco.btuco@gmail.com , 2242088267
Information Architect
John Wieczorek, gtuco.btuco@gmail.com , Bariloche, Río Negro AR, 8401
Arctos Database Programmer
Dusty McDonald, dustymc@gmail.com
Collections Manager, Department of Zoology
Jeffrey Stephenson, jeffrey.stephenson@dmns.org , 2001 Colorado Blvd., CO US, 80205-5798, 303-370-8319
no coordinates provided

Loan information

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not blocked tissue available for loan

Disposition: In collection

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