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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – There’s definitely something fishy happening on The
University of Alabama campus Saturday, Nov. 20 prior to the Alabama-Auburn football
game.
More than two dozen species of preserved fish, including sharks, eels and seahorses
will be on display Saturday from 11:30 a.m. until 1:30 p.m. in a hands-on format inside
UA’s Alabama Museum of Natural History. Admission
is $1. Dr. Bernie Kuhajda, collections manager of UA's ichthyological collection,
will display the fish and field questions.
The 25 displayed species represent a small portion of the approximate 1 million fish
specimens that make up the University’s collection. The specimens, cataloged
within a computer program with data available via the Internet, serve to inventory
both the state's fish diversity and also the general health of its ecosystems. Alabama
is home to more freshwater fish species (more than 300) than any other state in the
nation, Kuhajda said.
The UA collection is regularly used to help answer ecological and environmental
questions and questions pertaining to the formation and upkeep of the existing biodiversity.
The collection also includes the original specimens used in writing the scientific
descriptions of many new species from North America.
The fish were originally preserved in formaldehyde, then rinsed in water and permanently
stored in 70 percent ethanol. The collection also includes frozen specimens and others
preserved directly in 95 percent ethanol for DNA research.
UA’s Alabama Museum of Natural History is located in Smith Hall on 6th Avenue
near The University of Alabama Quad. To see a complete list of the Museum’s
upcoming activities and events visit the website at www.museums.ua.edu.
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