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HINTS ON COLLECTING COLEOPTERA DURING THE WINTER

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 May 2012

A. Ford
Affiliation:
St. Leonards-On-Sea, Sussex, England

Extract

During the winter the coleopterist in Britain finds a great deal to do in the way of collecting, as many species are to be met with at this season, which will probably not be found at any other period of the year. One of the principal methods of collecting during the winter is “tuft-cutting”, and it is astonishing the number of beetles which pass through the winter in tufts of grass. Those growing in damp places in woods and on the borders of ponds and streams are generally the most productive. They should be cut off close to the roots, then shaken and pulled to pieces over a sheet fo paper, which shold be very carefully examined, otherwise many ot the more minute species will be passed over.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Entomological Society of Canada 1893

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