“…However, natural history collections through their specimens and associated documentation, are important source of information allowing, for example, for collecting medical data from both domestic and wild animals. In fact, several species were already assessed for dental abnormalities using museum collection, as the case of gray wolf ( Canis lupus ) ( Barber-Meyer, 2012 ; Döring, Arzi, Winer, Kass, and Verstraete, 2018 ; Janssens, Verhaert, Berkowic, and Adriaens, 2016 ; Pavlović, Gomerčić, Gužvica, Kusak, and Huber, 2007 ; Valkenburgh, 1988 ; Vilà, Urios, and Castroviejo, 2008 ), red fox ( Vulpes vulpes ) ( Szuma, 2014 ), African lion ( Panthera leo ), leopard ( P. pardus ), jaguar ( P. onca ), cheetah ( Acinonyx jubatus ), puma ( Puma concolor ), spotted hyena ( Crocuta crocuta ), striped hyena ( Hyaena hyaena ), and the African wild dog ( Lycaon pictus ) ( Valkenburgh, 1988 ), Southern sea otter ( Enhydra lutris nereis ) ( Winer, Liong, and Verstraete, 2013 ), Iberian lynx ( Lynx pardinus ) ( Collados, Garcia, and Rice, 2018 ), domestic dog ( Canis lupus familiaris ) ( MacKinnon, 2010 ), domestic cat ( Felis silvestris catus ) and free-living Soay sheep ( Ovis aries ) ( Arthur et al., 2015 ).…”