Eagle-eyed experts assess museum bird collection
- Published
A collection of some of the world's largest birds has received an eagle-eyed check by museum experts in Leeds.
Each more than a century old, the taxidermied feathered friends have been cleaned, measured and assessed by curators at the city's Discovery Centre.
The collection includes a wandering albatross displayed behind Victorian glass to showcase its wingspan and the towering skeleton of an ostrich.
The birds form part of a wider collection of thousands of animals at the centre, with many collected in the 1800s by wealthy industrialists.
"If you were man in Leeds showing off how wealthy and interested in science you were, then you would commission people to send you animals from around the world," said Clare Brown, of Leeds Museums and Galleries.
The biggest avian species in the Discovery Centre is the skeletal remains of a moa.
Standing as tall as 12ft (3.6m), the wingless birds were once found across New Zealand but were hunted to extinction about 700 years ago.
Ms Brown, a curator of natural sciences, said: "I spend a lot of my time fighting clothes moths.
"We want to make sure that anything that likes eating museum specimens is not involved in museum specimens."
Staff took measurements of its albatross during the work, with the specimen carrying a wingspan of 9.8ft (3m) despite only being a juvenile.
The albatross has the longest wingspan of any bird alive today.
A mounted emperor penguin was also given attention, along with the skeleton of a fully-grown ostrich - the world's largest bird.
Ms Brown said the collection was available for the public to view, but also served as an important resource for scientists.
"Everything we have is a really good indication of what the world should look like and how we should be protecting the environment," she said.
"We have some wonderful things for visitors to look at, but it's great for scientists to do some proper interrogation."
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