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01.03.2009 20:12, Egorus

for DavBaz
Laminated fiberboard. In the next few days
, I will explain the details in the topic-entomological box.

This post was edited by Egorus-01.03.2009 20: 14
Likes: 3

02.03.2009 10:15, Sergey Didenko

Less than a few decades later, the dream came true-to have
many identical entomological boxes.
I set myself the task of "moving" from adapted, different
boxes to new, specialized boxes before
the end of winter. I have completed the task
, and I congratulate myself and everyone on the arrival of SPRING!!!



Congratulations!, and I only managed to put 5 new boxes in order over the winter, I'm waiting for another 12 from the master and 4 new boxes are packed with last year's material, plus 10 old large obscene ones, I don't understand how to sort everything out and I sincerely envy you.

04.03.2009 5:03, Yakovlev

I have long ordered from the master 250 boxes with glass 55/40 cm and three collectible cabinets, where the drawers are like books and one cabinet for mattresses. And now I've been living happily ever after for 10 years. There are also 20 empty glass-enclosed boxes, which is a large volume. It's too bad that about 20 boxes are filled with unrepresented material - it should be scattered in boxes while there is not enough time. A lab assistant would...
True, my wonderful student helps me a lot - I think he will make a great noctuidologist. I even took kossid to cook. Thank you to him.

04.03.2009 13:06, Sergey Didenko

I have long ordered from the master 250 boxes with glass 55/40 cm and three collectible cabinets, where the drawers are like books and one cabinet for mattresses. And now I've been living happily ever after for 10 years. There are also 20 empty glass-enclosed boxes, which is a large volume. It's too bad that about 20 boxes are filled with unrepresented material - it should be scattered in boxes while there is not enough time. A lab assistant would...
True, my wonderful student helps me a lot - I think he will make a great noctuidologist. I even took kossid to cook. Thank you to him.

Grandiose!!! We are of the same age, and you managed to arrange 230 boxes of butterflies. This figure does not fit in my head.

04.03.2009 13:22, Yakovlev

Thank you, however, after working with Western collections, you understand that this is a small thing. There people have collections of 100 thousand butterflies and this is considered an average collection.
Rich devils, buy a lot.
Likes: 1

04.03.2009 13:36, barko

I've filled 150 boxes in the last three years. If it weren't for innate laziness, there would be more.
László M. Gyula, born in 1970, from Budapest, has a private collection of moths with about 60,000 examples.
A friend of mine from Austria has a private collection of moths (European species only) of 21,000 examples.
Peter Gyulai's Miskolc scoop collection is simply the largest in the world.
Any collection of scoops of my Hungarian friends exceeds 100,000 copies.
Likes: 2

04.03.2009 14:05, Yakovlev

When I started working on cossids, I became a fool to buy and exchange these creatures, and in a year I put 4000 exmeplyarov. Of course, the straightener helped me. I myself spread 10 butterflies a day, this is the rule, otherwise it does not go.
Yesterday I found a female avtokrator on the mattress, but for some reason I forgot that it was there. It lies and waits for 5 years to be unfolded.
Here are the kossuses going forward. I have about 30 thousand straightened butterflies, I think this is the largest collection outside the Urals, but if I had more time and money, by increasing the straightened series, it would be easy to finish the number of copies to 50-60 thousand in a couple of years.

04.03.2009 15:43, RippeR

stop scaring the young smile.gifpeople Or we'll get discouraged smile.gif
If everyone had the means and the time, then many would set up huge collections for themselves.. But everyone copes as best they can and as far as they have enough funds )
I would also spread out butterflies and beetles at least 10 pieces, but then I would run out of pins approximately... The next daylol.gif, A boxes.. Same for the next lol.gif

05.03.2009 6:18, Guest

For beginners ' information! Don't bother with quantitative indicators.Drawing up an entomological collection is not a contest like "Are you weak?..." It is much more important that the collection be interesting, and for this its colossal size is not at all necessary. One unique copy can give odds to a huge collection of monotonous and ordinary, reflecting nothing, series.Modern technical means allow the catcher to catch at least millions (!) of specimens in one season. Another question is how to process all this and, most importantly, why? After all, only 2-3 copies can be really interesting (in scientific and collectible terms).
Likes: 9

05.03.2009 7:22, Yakovlev

Yes, no one scares young
people to be afraid of something. And of course we are not talking about a contest...
The point is, what is the collector's goal
? I try to put 1-2 copies each, at least from a point in the Altai, Sayan, Mongolia, Kazakhstan.
Cossid in large series is a scientific interest.

05.03.2009 7:53, Cerega

Again the boys p-mi measured.
Likes: 4

05.03.2009 11:37, barko

Again the boys p-mi measured.
Not at all. We are talking about landmarks, what is normal and what is not. Large collections are common.

05.03.2009 11:46, Guest

All large collections, once were small.

05.03.2009 12:54, Proctos

A wealthy collector from South Africa left a collection of more than a million butterflies to a museum in Pretoria, along with rows of cabinets stretching out over the horizon... wall.gif

06.03.2009 14:16, barko

A few photos from the Zoological Museum in Vienna. The museum is beautiful.

Pictures:
DSC00778.JPG
DSC00778.JPG — (677.54к)

DSC00785.JPG
DSC00785.JPG — (896.46к)

DSC00790.JPG
DSC00790.JPG — (834.97к)

DSC00809.JPG
DSC00809.JPG — (885.34к)

DSC00824.JPG
DSC00824.JPG — (859.96к)

DSC00855.JPG
DSC00855.JPG — (739.42к)

DSC00885.JPG
DSC00885.JPG — (917.58к)

DSC00906.JPG
DSC00906.JPG — (858.6к)

DSC00909.JPG
DSC00909.JPG — (845.2к)

DSC00911.JPG
DSC00911.JPG — (799.9к)

Likes: 25

06.03.2009 15:56, Zhuk

the exhibition with butterflies on the shore is generally pleased! there is no such thing anywhere!

06.03.2009 16:21, Cerega

And the piranha died very naturally.

06.03.2009 16:42, taler

And the piranha died very naturally.

there would be more flies on it....
Likes: 2

06.03.2009 19:48, Liparus

How interesno dried caterpillars of bears, just like alive...
Why on a black background?so that they don't burn out?
And the collection of cows is also super smile.gif

06.03.2009 20:02, Liparus

there'd be more flies on her....


There's also a couple of steeds

06.03.2009 20:11, lepidopterolog

  
Why on a black background?so that they don't burn out?

It is unlikely that the black background is somehow related to burnout, just some believe that this is a special aestheticmsmile.gif

06.03.2009 21:51, Zhuk

How interesno dried caterpillars of bears, just like alive...

nothing special, inflated in the usual way...

07.03.2009 22:06, Sergey Didenko

I will dilute the museum exposition a little with my butterflies. I almost finished two more boxes of whiteflies and crested flowers. Labels are still temporary, but this is a short-lived matter.
If I'm more or less missing a couple of species with the crested MO, then I'll have to deal with the white whites next year...

Pictures:
DSC01891_1.JPG
DSC01891_1.JPG — (356.84к)

DSC01888_1.JPG
DSC01888_1.JPG — (330.58к)

Likes: 19

07.03.2009 23:08, lepidopterolog

Good crested birds! And among the Leptidea sinapis may well be reali, by the way.

07.03.2009 23:11, RippeR

very nice collection!

07.03.2009 23:34, Guest

Is Furcula a single species? Leucodonta bicoloria, apparently, and a single-colored form, how often do you have it compared to the usual?

07.03.2009 23:49, Sergey Didenko

Is Furcula a single species? Leucodonta bicoloria, apparently, and a single-colored form, how often do you have it compared to the usual?

Furcula furcula and bifida. Bicuspis is just one of the missing species.
My usual uniform is just plain.

08.03.2009 13:40, chebur

Colias palaeno is also near Moscow?

08.03.2009 17:57, Sergey Didenko

No, it was burned by Mikhail, from under Gus-Zhelezny.
Likes: 1

08.03.2009 23:43, Victor Titov

By the way, it seems that either in Yaroslavl, or in Rostov the Great in the museum I caught the eye of a hawk moth clearly exotic, but included in the collection of local fauna.

Dear A. Y. Elez, are you sure that we are talking about the Yaroslavl region? I was born in Rostov Veliky and still live today. The local museum has no exhibition dedicated to nature for more than 30 years, and the collection of insects was absent even when something similar (in the 60s of the last century) was. As for Yaroslavl, I know the museum exhibition dedicated to insects ("Six - legged masters of the Planet") well, it is curated by our respected forum member-Elizar, and it is not built on the principle of lighting up the local fauna. Exotic butterflies are displayed there, but no one can include them in the collection of local fauna either by mistake or for any other reason, since it is not displayed. Maybe you got something mixed up?

This post was edited by Dmitrich-09.03.2009 14: 06

09.03.2009 11:31, Liparus

One of my boxes of weevils...Many thanks to Buzman for the material.
Likes: 15

09.03.2009 12:25, RippeR

well-placed collection, bravo!
Likes: 1

09.03.2009 13:18, Liparus

well-placed collection, bravo!


But this is still the beginning of my training camp...
I plan to catch in the summer and even by subfamilies, genera will need to be placed in new korobki

09.03.2009 21:15, RippeR

Yes, it is necessary to mow and score.. boxes smile.gif

10.03.2009 6:04, Konung

And among the Leptidea sinapis may well be reali, by the way.

imho, 4th from the top - reali smile.gif
Likes: 1

10.03.2009 6:19, Sergey Didenko

And what, is it possible with a sufficient degree of probability to distinguish real from synapis by appearance?

10.03.2009 9:20, Konung

it is not possible with a sufficient degree, but there is a possibility. Here only cooking will help.
Likes: 1

10.03.2009 11:23, lepidopterolog

That's right, I also have exactly the 4th one from above that caused doubts smile.gif
Likes: 1

10.03.2009 18:32, Yakovlev

Oh, my God, what does it have to do with measuring p-kami?
I first saw large collections in Kiev in 1996 and realized that this is where we should strive and what a scientific collection is.
Reali only cook. Difficult in appearance. In honor of me, Mazel described reali Yakovlev from Western Siberia, but I myself differ without cooking horseradish

11.03.2009 1:26, Jarik

Good night, dear entomologists!
It's been a while since I've been on the forum, but I'll try to catch up with you!
Here, while there is time, is my example of maintaining a collection...

Saturniidae.gif
Papilionidae.gif

Later, as the material comes in, you get these boxes::

Sphingidae.gif
P.machaon.gif

And this photo, I hope, will help to avoid misunderstandings and doubts about the scientific value of the collection. smile.gif

Z.polyxena.gif

For reference, 95% derived specimens from preimaginal specimens collected in nature at different stages of development umnik.gif
Likes: 22

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