Subject: Manta ray wing
Sarah-Jane Rennie asked about how to deal with odorous Manta Ray specimens. I actually did have experience with odor removal from a set of sting ray jaws. Solvent soaking had no effect on removing the oily compounds that were responsible for the rancid odor. I placed the jaws in a Labconco vacuum chamber with a tray of zeolites at the bottom. It took approximately 2 months for the majority of the smell (a non-instrumental, empirical observation only) to be reduced to where the jaws could be handled without an overt gastric reaction. The wing section might be too large to fit into the typical lab-size vacuum chamber. You might have to fabricate a custom chamber. The zeolites will adsorb the molecules responsible for the odor, but I think given your short time frame, it would be more effective in a vacuum. For the fleshy tail section, could you slit the tail and remove the remaining flesh and restuff the skin? If not, you might want to consider freeze-drying that specimen, and possibly the wing section as well. There is a Minneapolis company, Freezedry Specialties, Inc., that has developed a specialized taxidermic freeze-dryer that might be applicable to this type of problem. Check out their web site at <URL:http://www.freezedry.com>. If you start soon with treatment, you might be able to prepare the objects for exhibit by November. You might also want to design well-sealed display cases with accessible trays of zeolites in the bottom for odor adsorption and control. Let me know if you have any other questions on this. Paul S. Storch Objects Conservator John and Martha Daniels Objects Conservation Laboratory (JMD-OCL) B-109.1, Minnesota History Center 345 Kellogg Blvd West St. Paul, MN 55102-1906 651-297-5774 Fax: 651-297-2967 *** Conservation DistList Instance 12:21 Distributed: Thursday, August 27, 1998 Message Id: cdl-12-21-003 ***Received on Thursday, 27 August, 1998