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Species Graminella nigrifrons - Black-faced Leafhopper
Miscellaneous insects: the cottony cushion-scale (Icerya purchasi Maskell), order Hemiptera; family Coccidae. By Charles Valentine Riley Report of the Commissioner of Agriculture; report of the entomologist, 1886: 466-492, 1886
Riley C.V., 1886. Miscellaneous insects: the cottony cushion-scale ( Icerya purchasi Maskell), order Hemiptera; family Coccidae. Report of the Commissioner of Agriculture: report of the entomologist, 1886: 466-492
Contributed by Randy Hardy on 20 November, 2017 - 12:59pm |
Catalogue of the Specimens of Neuropterous Insects in the Collection of the British Museum By Walker, Francis British Museum (Natural History). Department of Zoology, 1: 1-658, 1852
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Forest and shade tree entomology By Anderson R.F. Wiley. 428 pp., 1960
Contributed by v belov on 27 February, 2017 - 1:07pm |
Nomina Insecta Nearctica By Poole, Robert W. Nearctica.com, Inc.
Nomina Insecta Nearctica was originally published in a series of 4 rather large volumes. Each of the volumes have now been broken down into separate volumes, making downloading easier and faster and also allows you to take only those particular segments of the checklist of interest to you. Additionally, superfluous pages (blanks and title pages) have been eliminated.
Volume 1 - Coleoptera, Strepsiptera
Volume 2 - Hymenoptera, Mecoptera, Megaloptera, Neuroptera, Raphidioptera, Trichoptera
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Insects on Dried Fruits - Agriculture Handbook 464 By Perez Simmons and Howard D. Nelson United States Department of Agriculture , 1975
Publication covers beetles, moths, flies, wasps & bees, ants, barklice, mites and black widow.
Download PDF here
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Center for Invasive Species & Ecosystem Health University of Georgia
Descriptions and images of invasive and exotic insects
Browse list here
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Insect Migration. By Williams, C.B. Collins, London. xiii + 237 pp., 1958
Williams, C.B. 1958. Insect migration. Collins, London. xiii + 237 pp.
Contributed by Mike Quinn on 13 November, 2015 - 10:42am |
IMp: The customizable LEGO® Pinned Insect Manipulator By Dupont S., Price B., and Blagoderov V. ZooKeys, 2015
Full text
Thought this might be useful for those trying to photograph their collections and it's fairly ingenious. The authors are based at the Natural History Museum London
Abstract
We present a pinned insect manipulator (IMp) constructed of LEGO® building bricks with two axes of movement and two axes of rotation. In addition we present three variants of the IMp to emphasise the modular design, which facilitates resizing to meet the full range of pinned insect specimens, is fully customizable, collapsible, affordable and does not require specialist tools or knowledge to assemble.
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