INHS-Insects - INHS Insect Collection
INHS - Illinois Natural History Survey1816 South Oak Street, MC 652;
217-333-6880
Champaign - IL - United States
http://wwx.inhs.illinois.edu/collections/insect
cms@inhs.illinois.edu
The Illinois Natural History Survey’s Biological Collections include more than 9.5 million specimens housed in eleven separate collections. All collections except the birds collection and the mammals collection rank within the 15th largest in North America. These collections, some of which date back over 150 years, represent the most complete record of Illinois biota anywhere. Most collections are also global in geographic coverage for many groups. Because these specimens document the presence of species through time, our collections are an invaluable resource for tracking changes in species distributions as habitats have been modified. The collections are regularly used in scientific research to recognize threatened and endangered species, determine the arrival and spread of exotic and invasive species, provide baseline data for ecological restoration projects, evaluate habitat quality over time and space, assess the effects of climate change, locate populations of medical or economic importance, resolve evolutionary relationships, discover new species, and facilitate species identification through comparative morphology and DNA barcoding. Many specimen records are available online through web-based searchable databases accessible to scientists, resource managers, policy makers, and the public. Data shared with the speciesLink network refers to samples collected in South America.
Online since: 25/11/2015Last update: 17/08/2024
Number of records
Conditions for using the data
No license, assume Public Domain
How to cite
INHS Insect Collection, INHS-Insects
Contacts
Director or head of department:Chris Grinter
cgrinter@illinois.edu
Curator:
Christopher H Dietrich
dietrich@inhs.illinois.edu
Curator:
Edward DeWalt
dewalt@illinois.edu
Curator:
Kevin P Johnson
kjohnson@inhs.illinois.edu
Curator:
Matthew J Yoder
diapriid@gmail.com
Curator:
Sam W Heads
swheads@illinois.edu