The oldest specimens I know of at University of Colorado date back to 1877. Ironically, we have no specimens of the Rocky Mountain Locust, Melanoplus spretus, that plagued the front range of Colorado in the 1870’s before being wiped out.
Va
Virginia Scott
Entomology – Collections Manager
University of Colorado Museum of Natural History
265 UCB – MCOL
Boulder, CO 80309-0265
Work: 303-492-6270
From: Entomological Collections Network Listserve [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Robert Anderson
Sent: Tuesday, April 29, 2014 8:37 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: oldest specimen in a US collection?
For me, the single thing that has emerged in this discussion is the very short time that we have been sampling/collecting insects in North America. What we are hearing is that most collections have specimens from no more than 150 years ago. Does anyone else find this a soberingly very short (and inadequate) time for us to truly ‘know’ our fauna? I worry that the pace of basic taxonomic progress is being rapidly outpaced (and left behind) by technological advances in methodology, analytical tools, and information technology resulting in less of a focus on the basic questions of what the species are, how do we recognize them, where do they live and what do they do.
Bob
Robert Anderson
Research and Collections Division
Canadian Museum of Nature
PO Box 3443, Station D
Ottawa, ON. K1P 6P4 CANADA
613-364-4060 (tel)
613-364-4027 (fax)
https://sites.google.com/site/longinollama/