Friday, April 6, 2012

Insect Wall Charts

The images here are from the 
Historic Entomology Online site 
at Wageningen UR





"Araneina epeira"
Araneus^ is a genus of common orb-weaving spiders. 
Araneus was formerly called epeira and it remains a pseudonym.



Pseudophyllus neriifolius^ (bush cricket)
Valanga nigricornis (yellow or shorthorned grasshopper^)



Vespula vulgaris^
(common wasp)




Forficula auricularia^ 
(European earwig)




Locusta migratoria^ 
(African migratory locust)




Erysiphe graminis (deprecated)
Ascomycetes ersyphales^
{powdery mildews .. not quite insects}




Die Mehlmotte
Ephestia kuehniella^
(Mediterranean flour moth)



Mucor mucedo^
(soil fungus distinguished by the formation of sporangia: also not quite an insect.)




Pediculus vestimenti aka Pediculus humanus aka Pediculus corporis
(body lice)^



Heliothrips rubrocinctus^
(Red-banded thrips : tiny, cigar-shaped, flightless, 
feather-winged, tropical fruit-loving insects)



Melolontha vulgaris
(may-bug or cockchafer^ or sprang-beetle)



Myriopoda lithobus
(Myriopoda - or Myriapoda - is a sub-phylum of Arthropoda^ 
containing the segmented critters: centipedes and millipedes)



Labrum, maxille, mandible, mandibula
(schematic of insect mouth parts^)



Periplaneta americana
The American cockroach^ (native to Africa)





Apis mellifica^
(Honey bee from the insect order, Hymenoptera^)



Schematic diagram of Lumbricus (earthworm^) species



A cicada^ species



Calandra granaria
(a type of grain weevil [genus now called Sitophilus^])



The selection of wall chart images was taken from the *Wall charts Entomology and Phytopathology* collection out of the Special Collections Digital Library at Wageningen University and Research Centre (Holland). [Special Collections]

The linked caret ^ characters nestled in the insect image captions above lead to a wide range of entomological sites for anyone wanting to delve deeper into the world of creepy crawlies, or for those seeking extra credit points.

Previously:



Many site visitors know that all BibliOdyssey posts are summarised and tagged at the Delicious bookmarks site. This will continue unchanged.

But I've also recently started a PINBOARD bookmarks account - the intention here is to save the same BibliOdyssey blog posts (but with more detailed tags) PLUS add links to significant exhibition & research database sites (you know: the usual art/book etc fare of this place).

So it will hopefully end up being something approximating a permanent edited collection of the BibliOdyssey twitter feed. Does this all the sense be making? It's to help me keep track of everything essentially, but others may find it helpful in warding off boredom, ignorance and vampires.

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