Natural history museums with live animals

My memory might not be fully correct, but I believe the HMNS location in Sugar Land actually has more live animal exhibits than the main one in Houston, at least as far as amphibian exhibits are concerned. I would be happy to post correlating photographs in the forum.

Yes, please do, that would be very interesting to see.
 
@UngulateNerd92 Thank you so much for listing these museums !

That is quite an impressive list of different institutions that you have visited.

I'm intrigued, what live specimens do these museums keep in their collections ?

Thank you for your interest, despite my offering, that is a loaded question, so let me start with the one I last visited, which was just before the start of the pandemic.

Las Cruces Museum of Nature & Science in Las Cruces, Dona Ana County, New Mexico. Of the live animal displays, this one happens to be one of my favorites.

Here is a species list from my correlating notes and photographs;

Big Bend slider (Trachemys gaigeae)

Collared lizard (Crotaphytus collaris)

Desert kingsnake (Lampropeltis getula splendida)

Yellow mud turtle (Kinosternon flavescens)

Red eared slider (Trachemys scripta)

Western painted turtle (Chrysemys picta)

Common snapping turtle (Chelydra serpentina)

Black-masked desert scorpion (Hadrurus spadix)

Glossy snake (Arizona elegans)

Gila monster (Heloderma suspectum)

Bluegill (Lepornis macrochirus)

Canyon tree frog (Hyla arenicolor)

Madrean alligator lizard (Elgaria kingii)

Queretaro kingsnake (Lampropeltis ruthveni)

Red spotted toad (Bufo punctatus)

Desert millipede (Orthoporus ornatus)

Colorado river toad (Allotis alvarius)

Sonoran gopher snake (Pituophis catenifer affinis)

Woodhouse's toad (Anaxyrus woodhousii)

Tiger salamander (Ambystoma tigrinum)

Great Plains toad (Anaxyrus cognatus)

Western green toad (Anaxyrus debilis)

Side blotched lizard (Uta stansburiana)

Prairie fence lizard (Sceloporus undulates)

Marbled whiptail (Cnemidophorus marmorata)
 
Thank you for your interest, despite my offering, that is a loaded question, so let me start with the one I last visited, which was just before the start of the pandemic.

Las Cruces Museum of Nature & Science in Las Cruces, Dona Ana County, New Mexico. Of the live animal displays, this one happens to be one of my favorites.

Here is a species list from my correlating notes and photographs;

Big Bend slider (Trachemys gaigeae)

Collared lizard (Crotaphytus collaris)

Desert kingsnake (Lampropeltis getula splendida)

Yellow mud turtle (Kinosternon flavescens)

Red eared slider (Trachemys scripta)

Western painted turtle (Chrysemys picta)

Common snapping turtle (Chelydra serpentina)

Black-masked desert scorpion (Hadrurus spadix)

Glossy snake (Arizona elegans)

Gila monster (Heloderma suspectum)

Bluegill (Lepornis macrochirus)

Canyon tree frog (Hyla arenicolor)

Madrean alligator lizard (Elgaria kingii)

Queretaro kingsnake (Lampropeltis ruthveni)

Red spotted toad (Bufo punctatus)

Desert millipede (Orthoporus ornatus)

Colorado river toad (Allotis alvarius)

Sonoran gopher snake (Pituophis catenifer affinis)

Woodhouse's toad (Anaxyrus woodhousii)

Tiger salamander (Ambystoma tigrinum)

Great Plains toad (Anaxyrus cognatus)

Western green toad (Anaxyrus debilis)

Side blotched lizard (Uta stansburiana)

Prairie fence lizard (Sceloporus undulates)

Marbled whiptail (Cnemidophorus marmorata)

Thank you for sharing these species being kept !

Seems like a very decent collection of amphibians, reptiles and inverts that they have at the Las Cruces Museum.

What marks it out as being different from others you have visited ?

Also, the Queretaro kingsnake kept there stands out to me as an interesting addition as it is a "near threatened" species and a Central Mexican endemic.
 
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It seems that quite a number of natural history museums in Europe and North America (and presumably in other parts of the world) have gone with the concept of having a live butterfly house / exhibit on site as a part of the institution.

Why does everyone think this is a popular practice for these museums ?

Is it to attract more influx of visitors / money ?

Is there greater educational potential and recreational enjoyment for the visitors ?

Could it be the ease of care and inexpensiveness of raising the butterflies is a "win / win" ?

If a lot of places have them, they must be popular. The one in Houston is spectacular, I go in there on most of my visits! It's definitely very educational. You can get a guide to identify different species while you're in the butterfly area. Part of the Butterfly Center is the Hall of Entomology, more like a regular museum exhibit, with a lot of signs, videos, and activities, along with some smaller insect displays. My favorite is the Chrysalis Corner, you can watch the butterflies break out. If I visit the Butterfly Center I just HAVE to see at least one break out before I move on, lol. But sometimes I'll stay and watch for a long time.
 
If a lot of places have them, they must be popular. The one in Houston is spectacular, I go in there on most of my visits! It's definitely very educational. You can get a guide to identify different species while you're in the butterfly area. Part of the Butterfly Center is the Hall of Entomology, more like a regular museum exhibit, with a lot of signs, videos, and activities, along with some smaller insect displays. My favorite is the Chrysalis Corner, you can watch the butterflies break out. If I visit the Butterfly Center I just HAVE to see at least one break out before I move on, lol. But sometimes I'll stay and watch for a long time.

The good thing about these kind of displays too is that they are interactive and that is a very good thing for a museum to have and particularly when so much is either off limits or behind the panes of glass display cabinets.

I think there is often a stereotype by the public of museums being "boring" places full of dead things and butterflies are both alive and colourful and exhibits with them sort of fly in the face (pun intended) of these generalizations and help attract greater visitor numbers.

I can totally understand why butterfly houses are popular features of museums but even so I would also like to see more live specimens being kept and particularly those of conservatin concern.
 
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Though I haven't personally visited yet, the Steinhardt Museum of Natural History which is on the campus of Tel Aviv University in Tel Aviv, Israel has live invertebrate displays inside it's museum building. Those include several stick insects, hissing cockroaches, lubber grasshoppers, a nest of Camponotus, Gryllotalpa, crickets, grasshoppers, assassin bugs, scorpions, and a few spider species etc. The collections manager in their entomology department is friend of mine. I actually thought about sending him some specimens of Arizona native insects I have stored in my freezer. He doesn't oversee the live invertebrate displays, another curator and collection manager deal with that.

Meir Segals Garden University Zoo which is situated next to the museum building is actually a part of the museum, similar to Ralph Perkins II Wildlife Center & Woods Garden at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History. Like the wildlife center at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History, Meir Segals Garden University Zoo specializes in taxa native to its region, but that is not all they keep. Native Israeli/Palestinian species and subspecies kept at Meir Segals include Syrian rock hyrax, Palestine blind mole rat, Syrian striped hyena, Palestine jungle cat, Syrian golden jackal, Anatolian wild boar, Mesopotamian fallow deer, Palestine mountain gazelle, Nubian ibex, Palestine red fox, Tristam's jird, Sundevall's jird, Long eared hedgehog etc.

As far as natural history museums with live animal exhibits that I have personally visited, boy do I have a lot to contribute! I will share such examples in further posts I plan to make in this thread.

These examples that you mention in Israeli natual history museums sound particularly interesting. Great to hear that both a wide variety of inverts are kept at the Steinhardt Museum of Natural History and that you have connections with this institution.

Are these insects just kept on display or also used educationally at this museum ?

The Meir Segals Garden University Zoo also sounds interesting and especially to me because it seems to have a focus entirely on native and endemic Israeli / Palestinian species which is what I have already believe that a zoo should aim for.

Do they just keep mammals or are there also birds, reptiles and amphibians kept ?
 
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These examples that you mention in Israeli natual history museums sound particularly interesting. Great to hear that both a wide variety of inverts are kept at the Steinhardt Museum of Natural History and that you have connections with this institution.

Are these insects just kept on display or also used educationally at this museum ?

The Meir Segals Garden University Zoo also sounds interesting and especially to me because it seems to have a focus entirely on native and endemic Israeli / Palestinian species which is what I have already believe that a zoo should aim for.

Do they just keep mammals or are there also birds, reptiles and amphibians kept ?

Good question. Yes they do keep birds, reptiles, and amphibians, but the only examples I listed were mammals.
 
Museo de historia natural, Manuel Martínez Solórzano, Morelia, Mexico - This natural history museum (named after a famous Mexican naturalist from the region) is on one of the cities university campuses and has a live collection of the endemic Lake Patzcuaro salamander / "achoque" (Ambystoma dumerilii). There are also some endemic freshwater fish species kept (haven't been able to discover what these are).

Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi, Pará, Brazil- This natural history is located in the city of Belém, it is named after the famous Swiss naturalist who discovered amongst other species the Goeldi's monkey. The museum has a botanical garden and a collection / zoo of native animals including jaguar, lowland tapir, white cheeked spider monkey, capybara, giant otter, several amazon parrots, several macaw species,currosaws, guans, owls, toucans, freshwater turtles and caiman.
 
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@vogelcommando I just noticed that you uploaded many photographs taken at the Natural academy of sciences in Belgium on the Zoochat gallery.

These pictures show live exhibits of inverts (phantasmids, tarantula, scorpions, black widow spider), amphibians, fish (marine fish and cichlids) and reptiles (venomous snakes and monitor lizards).

Do you have any observations of this museum and its live collections ?
 
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The Catavento museum, located in the city of São Paulo has/had 1-2 fish tank(s) with saltwater fish. I was able to see the aquarium/aquaria every single time I went there.
 
@Enzo Thank you for your comment, I haven't been to the Catavento yet so haven't seen this, do you remember what species are kept ?
I remember seeing yellow and regal tangs, as well as common clownfish and lionfish. Searching a bit on the internet, I could find photos of one of the tanks showing other three species of tang (purple, sailfin and one I can't recognize) as well as a yellow fish that looks like a basslet and a yellowtail clownfish.
 
Germany & Austria

Museum fur natur und umwelt:

European pond turtle exhibit :
full

European grass snake exhibit:
full

Beehive exhibit:
full

Freshwater fish (housing ruffe and perch) tank:
full

Freshwater fish (housing eel, rudd, roach and nase) tank:
full


Stuttgart museum of natural history:

Stick insects (species?):
full

full


Photo credits to @German Zoo World.




Photo credits to @Hvedekorn.
 
Belgium

Museum of Natural Sciences:

Reptiles and amphibians at the museum:

Uracoan rattlesnake :
full

Diamond back rattlesnake:
full

Monocled cobra :
full

Ceylon pit viper:
full

Puff adder:
full

Baron's racer snake:
full

Gaboon viper:
full

Eyelash viper:
full

King cobra:
full

Copperhead:
full

Kimberly rock monitor:
full

Gila monster:
full

Oriental fire belly toads :
full

Yellow headed poison dart frog:
full

Waxy monkey frog:
full

Smooth sided toad:
full


Photo credits to @vogelcommando and @fishpod.
 
Belgium

Museum of Natural sciences

Inverts at the museum:

Newly described stick insects and terrarium:
full

Great thin stick insect:
full

full

Peruvian stick insect:
full

Black widow spider:
full

Mexican red knee tarantula:
full

Malagasy hissing cockroaches:
full

Flower beetles :
full

Brazilian salmon pink bird eating spider:
full



Photo credits to @vogelcommando and @fish pod.
 
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UK

Horniman museum (aquarium)

Giant frogfish:
full

Bioluminescent coral aquarium:
full

Lobster tank:
full

Starfish tank:
full

Four eyed fish:
full

Pool frog:
full

Common frog:
full

Leaf fish:
full

Moon jelly fish:
full

Marine aquarium Fijian reef :
full

Caribbean mangrove aquarium:
full

Native freshwater fish aquarium (carp, tench, sticklebacks and rudd ):
full

Sea horse aquarium:
full

Harvest mice:
full

Sea anenomes in a fully functioning Victorian era aquarium:
full

Amazonian aquarium (several tetra fish species, blue-spotted corydoras, discus, ram, creeping burhead and Indian shot lily ):
full




Photo credits to @Giant Panda and @devilfish.
 
UK

Manchester museum (herpetarium)

Golden poison frog:
full

Strawberry poison dart frog:
full

Variable harlequin toad:
full

Eastern casque headed lizard:
full

Pictured tree frog:
full

Blue headed anole:
full

Phantasmal poison dart frog:
full

Lau banded iguana:
full

Golden mantella:
full

Panther chameleon:
full

Green tree python:
full

Yellow headed day gecko:
full

Tomato frog:
full

Neon day gecko:
full

Alison's anole:
full

View of terrariums / gallery:
full

Terrarium example:
full

Splendid leaf frog:
full


Photo credits to @TeaLovingDave , @Javan Rhino , @Bwassa, @devilfish , @gentle lemur , @ThylacineAlive ,
 
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