USNM Entomology Collections
The U.S. National Entomological Collection ranks
as the second
largest insect collection in the world
with approximately 35 million
specimens including over 100,000
holotypes plus hundreds of thousands of additional paratypes and other secondary types. The collection includes over 300,000 species representing approximately 60% of known insect families. With specimens from locations worldwide, the collections are second to none in coverage for the Nearctic and Neotropical regions. Specimens from the Old World are also well represented, especially from Sri Lanka, the Philippines, and Papua New Guinea. Particular strengths include mosquitoes, wasps, beetles, butterflies and moths, and flies. Although the bulk of the collection is kept dry, various groups—such as spiders—are stored in alcohol. The collections are typically arranged by taxon; lower categories (genus, species) are arranged alphabetically, and for select taxa, they are further organized by country of origin within each species. While the majority of the collection is housed at the National Museum of Natural History in Washington DC, some groups are held at other research facilities in nearby Maryland, including the USDA's Agricutural Research Center in Beltsville, Maryland and the Smithsonian Institution's Museum Support Center in Suitland, Maryland. |
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Collections Profiles & Contact Information: |
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The collections at the Agricultural Research Center include the mites, the Sternorrhyncha (aphids, whiteflies, scale insects and jumping plant lice), most of the Orthopteroid insects and one of the largest Isoptera (termites) collections in the world. |
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