San Diego State University Biodiversity Museum - Mammals (SDSU)

The San Diego State University Biodiversity Museum houses thousands of plant and animal specimens. This resource is available for research and teaching to both students and faculty and is located at the university in rooms within the Life Science buildings. Our museum is known to be one of the richest university collections in the nation and includes both native and exotic species of birds, mammals, fish, reptiles, amphibians, arthropods, and plants. Some of the specimens housed in the museum are quite rare and a few date back as far as the 1800's.

The purpose of the museum is to provide instructional models for teaching all levels of biology with a broad taxonomic representation. It is used by professors and graduate students for research in the areas of systematics, evolution, paleontology and anthropology. Many graduate students rely on the extensive data provided by the museum to research and produce their thesis projects, as it is extremely helpful for the identification of live plants and animals.

Contacts: Mike Simpson, msimpson@sdsu.edu
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Global Unique Identifier: 879e569c-876b-40f6-94d9-c3e9b02a3da0
Digital Metadata: EML File
Collection Statistics
  • 2 specimen records
  • 2 (100%) georeferenced
  • 2 (100%) identified to species
  • 2 families
  • 2 genera
  • 2 species
  • 2 total taxa (including subsp. and var.)
Extra Statistics
Geographic Distribution
Click on the specimen record counts within the parenthesis to return the records for that term