It's probably the difference between a JavaScript Object and a JavaScript Array. Objects are more like hash tables, where the keys aren't sorted in any particular order, whereas Arrays are linear collections of values.
In your back end, make sure you're encoding an array, rather than an object. Check the final encoded JSON, and if your collection of objects is surrounded by {} instead of [], it's being encoded as an object instead of an array.
You may run into a problem since it looks like you're trying to access the objects by an ID number, and that's the index you want those objects to occupy in the final array, which presents another problem, because you probably don't want an array with 40,000 entries when you're only storing a small amount of values.
If you just want to iterate through the objects, you should make sure you're encoding an array instead of an object. If you want to access the objects by specific ID, you'll probably have to sort the objects client-side (i.e. have the object from the JSON response, and then create another array and sort those objects into it, so you can have the sorted objects and still be able to access them by id).
You can find efficient sorting algorithms (or use the one below from ELCas) easily via Google.