The massive collections brought back from the Philippines by the Albatross were unprecedented
in their volume and scope. They were deposited at the Smithsonian Institution where they remain
to this day. The fishes were kept in the care of the Bureau of Fisheries until 1921, when they
were formally accessioned into the Smithsonian's Division of Fishes. They comprise approximately
27,000 catalogued lots, a lot being one species (one or more specimens) collected at one place and one time. The total
number of specimens is probably between 100,000 and 150,000. The Philippine lots represent
between seven and eight percent of the entire catalogued collection of the Division of Fishes today.
In 1910, when the last of the Philippine material was returned to Washington, there were fewer than
70,000 catalogued lots of fishes in the museum. In other words, the fishes from the Philippine
expedition equaled nearly 40 percent of the entire existing collection! It was the largest single
accession of fishes ever received by the museum.
The collections are as important qualitatively as they are quantitatively. The Albatross explored
waters that had never been sampled before and, in many cases, have never been sampled again.
Some of the fishes taken by the Albatross have never been collected since. For example, the
peculiar congrid eel, Congrhynchus talabonoides, was described from three
specimens collected by the Albatross. This species has never been collected again, and were it not for
the Albatross we would not know it existed. The same is true of another congrid eel,
Bathyuroconger parvibranchialis; the Albatross collected several specimens, but the species has never been taken again.
The Wrasse Specimens
The material is in good condition, in spite of its age and the fact that it was not fixed in formalin before
being preserved in alcohol. As an example, above are photographs of the
same species, the wrasse Halichoeres melanochir, collected by the Albatross in 1909 (left)
and by the Divison of Fishes staff in 1995 (right). Even delicate larval fishes have stood up
well over time. These young cardinal fishes were collected in a plankton net by the Albatross; the distinctive
markings are still clearly visible. Ninety years after the expedition departed, the collections
are still a valuable resource and providing grist for scientific studies. In that sense, although
the ship and the men who served on her are long gone, the story of the Philippine Expedition
lives on.