Annotated Catalog of Type Specimens in the Illinois Natural History Survey Fish Collection
Sabaj, Mark H.; Cummings, Kevin S.; Page, Lawrence M.
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https://hdl.handle.net/2142/26523
Description
Title
Annotated Catalog of Type Specimens in the Illinois Natural History Survey Fish Collection
Author(s)
Sabaj, Mark H.
Cummings, Kevin S.
Page, Lawrence M.
Contributor(s)
Rice, Thomas E.
Issue Date
1997-10
Keyword(s)
type specimens
fish
catalog
collection
Illinois Natural History Survey
Illinois
Abstract
The Fish Collection of the Illinois Natural
History Survey (INHS) dates back to the late
1800s and the extensive surveys of Illinois
fishes led by Dr. Stephen A. Forbes, director of
the Survey's predecessor, the Illinois State
Laboratory of Natural History (ISLNH). From
1876 to 1903 Forbes, assisted by his esteemed
colleague Robert E. Richardson and numerous
field and laboratory personnel, collected and
preserved over 200,000 specimens from more
than 450 localities distributed in 93 of the 102
counties of Illinois. During this time, the
ISLNH Collection served as the basis for
several catalogs of Illinois fishes (Nelson 1876;
Jordan 1878a; Forbes 1884; Large 1903), and
provided material for the description of at least
25 species. This work culminated in the classic
Fishes of Illinois written by Forbes and
Richardson, published by the Survey in 1909
and reprinted in 1920 (although no publication
date is given for the original volume, H.C.
Oesterling, former INHS editor, lists the date as
1909 in Howard 1932:46). Accompanied by a
separate atlas of distribution maps of 98
species, this comprehensive treatment of the
state's ichthyofauna still is recognized as one of
the finest publications on fishes.
The INHS Fish Collection was expanded
by Dr. Philip W. Smith, who worked as a
systematic biologist at the Survey from 1942
until his retirement in 1979 (Burr and Page
1987). Over a period of 1 1 years from 1962 to
1972, Smith assembled a large collection of
fishes from Illinois and neighboring states. The
ichthyological surveys conducted by Smith, his
students, and INHS staff led to the publication
of a second Fishes of Illinois (Smith 1979).
Smith's monograph provided identification
keys, information on the ecology and taxonomy
of Illinois fishes, and detailed distribution maps
that documented changes in the state's fish
fauna that had occurred since the survey of
Forbes and Richardson.
The size and geographic scope of the
INHS collection have been considerably
expanded in the past three decades; the
collection now contains about 7 1 1 ,000 cataloged
specimens (over 7 1 ,000 lots) of more
than 1,800 species. A recent literature survey
identified over 250 publications citing the use
of INHS specimens over the past 40 years.
Included are two publications that have greatly
advanced both the professional and popular
understanding of North American fishes: the
Handbook of Darters (Page 1983) and A Field
Guide to Freshwater Fishes of North America
North of Mexico (Page and Burr 1991).
Publisher
Champaign, Ill. : Illinois Natural History Survey
Series/Report Name or Number
Illinois Natural History Survey Bulletin; v. 035, no. 05
ISSN
0073-4918
Type of Resource
text
Language
en
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http://hdl.handle.net/2142/26523
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