3 
DISTRIBUTION OF SPECIMENS IN THE COLLECTION (CONTD) 
Neoplastic 
Non-neoplastic 
Indeterminant 
Total 
Reptiles 
38 
53 
0 
91 
Amphibians 
41 
36 
0 
77 
Bony fish 
252 
156 
22 
430 
Sharks 
3 
7 
0 
10 
Lampreys 
1 
3 
0 
4 
Tunicates 
0 
6 
0 
6 
Mo Husks 
68 
61 
1 
130 
Echinoderms 
0 
5 
1 
6 
Arthropods 
6 
73 
3 
82 
Annelids 
0 
22 
0 
22 
Acanthocephala 
0 
1 
0 
1 
Platyhelminths 
0 
10 
0 
10 
Coelenterates 
0 
7 
7 
14 
Porifera 
0 
1 
1 
2 
Protozoa 
0 
1 
0 
1 
Fungi 
0 
1 
0 
1 
409 
443 
35 
887 
The non-neoplastic lesions include infectious and parasitic granulomas 
developmental anomalies, and 
injury and wound 
repair. Indeterminant le- 
sions either have 
not been fully examined or 
the material is 
inadequate for 
diagnosis„ 
Among the accessions with neoplasms, additional diseased specimens can 
be field collected in the following cases: 
Tiger salamander 
Cunner 
White croaker 
Atlantic eel 
Various flatfish 
Rock oyster 
American oyster 
Leopard frog 
Green turtle 
Northern pike 
Various catfish 
Yellowfin goby 
Goldfish 
Muskellunge 
Fibroma/papilloma 
Papilloma 
Papilloma 
Papilloma 
Papilloma 
Papilloma 
Hematopoietic neoplasm 
Renal adenocarcinoma 
Fibroma 
Lymphosarcoma 
Papilloma/carcinoma 
Papilloma 
Fibroma 
Lymphoma 
Southcentral USA 
Northeast USA 
California, USA 
Europe 
Western USA 
Australia 
Eastern USA 
Northeast/Northcentral USA 
Hawaii/Caribbean 
Europe/North America 
USA 
Japan/Korea 
USA 
North America 
SUBMITTING SPECIMENS 
We invite you to help in building this collection by submitting 
examples of induced or naturally occurring neoplasms, pre-neoplastic 
conditions, or indeterminate lesions of a presumptive neoplastic nature 
that require confirmation. As there is an indistinct boundary between 
