« Kidney stones: an inconvenient truth | Main | NASA turns firefighter »

Bookmark in Connotea

Museum finds new insect close to home - July 15, 2008

nhm bug.jpgIt must be slightly embarrassing for an entomologist when he or she can’t identify the most common insect found outside their office. But what about a whole museum full of biology experts?

London’s Natural History Museum has encountered exactly this problem. In March last year a tiny red and black bug appeared in its grounds. By August it was the most common insect found in the museum’s Wildlife Garden.

Checking the bug against the museum’s insect collection produced no match. Although there was a resemblance to a rare species called Arocatus roeselii, this insect is found in alder trees, not the plane trees where the new bug was discovered, says the museum (press release).

“It’s a bit unsatisfactory that in the garden of the biggest museum in the world there was an insect that we couldn’t identify,” says NHM bug expert Max Barclay (Daily Telegraph, Times).

It must be even more galling given the museum’s website currently has this event listed (unless this is a fiendishly good publicity stunt):
nhm name caption.bmp

In a further twist the national Museum in Prague discovered an exact match for the bug, an insect from Nice classified as Arocatus roeselii.

“There are two possible explanations,” says Barclay. “That the bug is roeselii and by switching to feed on the plane trees it could suddenly become more abundant, successful and invasive. The other possibility is that the insect in our grounds may not be roeselii at all.”

Headline watch
Mystery Insect Bugs Experts – Sky news
Scientists bugged by mystery of invader in back yard – Times
Mystery insect bugging experts at London museum – AP

Image: Natural History Museum

Post a comment

Comments will be reviewed by the blog editors before being published, mainly to ensure that spam and irrelevant material (such as product advertisements) are not published . Please keep your comment brief. Excessively long or offensively phrased entries will be edited.

We strongly encourage you to use your real, full name. E-mail addresses are required in case we need to discuss your comment with you directly. We won't publish your e-mail address unless you request it.

Please enter the numbers you see below - this helps us to cut down on spam. Note that attempting to post within 30 seconds of hitting ‘preview’ or ‘post’ can cause the system to think you are spamming the site. If you are having trouble with this system, you can instead e-mail a comment to 'thegreatbeyond at nature.com'.

please enter code

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://blogs.nature.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-tb.cgi/5610