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For Insects, Spiders & Their Kin
For the United States & Canada
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Genus Rysepyris

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Guides to the Genera and species of Eastern North American Bees
A set of online interactive guides to the eastern bees. Currently there is a guide to the genera and about 20+ guides to the species of some of those genera. We hope to have all the genera up on the web by the end of 2005 and then begin working our way west to include all the bees on the continent. Guides are designed for the advanced amateur to the professional. If possible we use common names rather than jargon, but at times it is necessary to get technical to separate out closely related species. We also plan to add more pictures and illustrations (including links to Bugnet photographs

The Bees of Florida
Extensive set of on-line keys by Dr. John Pascarella at Valdosta State University, Georgia. It uses photos of specimens, and, I believe, goes down to species level.

Has some interesting photos of other taxa, for example, wasps, but no keys or species identifications.

(Thanks to Tony DiTerlizzi for finding this!)

Link updated 25 February 2012--thanks for comments.

Discover Life--SUPERFAMILY: Ichneumonoidea
Links to summary pages on Braconids and Ichneumons. Concise summaries, with references and a few images.

The Sphecid Wasps of Michigan (Hymenoptera: Sphecidae: Sphecinae), by M.F. O'Brien
Some photos, life histories.
Title updated, link corrected, 9/5/20.

Insects Unlocked
[cite:1638831

We are the Insects Unlocked project at the University of Texas at Austin.

Based in the UT Insect Collection (UTIC) at Brackenridge Field Laboratory (BFL), part of the Department of Integrative Biology, we produce insect imagery for the public domain.

American Insects
Image galleries and some data, covering insects that are found in North, Central, and South American, including the Caribbean.

Tropicos
[cite:1286620 ]

Link

All of the nomenclatural, bibliographic, and specimen data accumulated in Missouri Botanical Garden's (MBG) electronic databases during the past 30 years are publicly available here. This system has nearly 1.3 million scientific names and over 4.4 million specimen records.

Great resource for plant distribution beyond US & Canada.

C.A. Triplehorn Insect Collection (OSUC)
[cite:1185947

The collection holds more than 3.5 million insect specimens and is one of the largest university insect collections in the world. All groups of insects are represented in the collection, and we are recognized for our holdings of leafhoppers (Cicadellidae), beetles (Coleoptera), and true flies (Diptera).

The Triplehorn Insect Collection is housed within the Museum of Biological Diversity, located on the West Campus of the Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio.

On 29 April, 2005, the Ohio State Insect Collection was renamed in honor of Dr. Charles A. Triplehorn, Professor of Entomology and Curator at OSU between 1962 and 1992.

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