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WN@TL - Meet the UW Insect Research Collection (WIRC). Dan Young. 2018.08.08

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This week (August 8) our speaker is Dan Young of Entomology. He’ll be describing for us the Wisconsin Insect Research Collection which over the course of its nearly 170 years has grown to just shy of 3,000,000 specimens collected, cataloged & curated. He’ll tune us in to how the work of the WIRC speeds entomology research at UW-Madison and raises our understanding of insects across Wisconsin and around the world.

Because Russell Labs, the main location of the WIRC, is undergoing a major renovation, Dan is unable to offer us tour in the gloaming after his talk. But when the upgrades are done in a few months, you can check back with him to see about arranging a tour.

The insects await, courtesy of collectors & curators reaching back through the years.

About the Speaker

Dan Young is a professor of entomology at UW-Madison.

"My personal research is directed toward the systematics, taxonomy, phylogeny, biodiversity, and natural history of insects, with a focus primarily on Coleoptera. I focus primarily on the beetle families Pyrochroidae (world level; larvae and adults) and Ischaliidae (world level). I have also contributed significantly on the taxonomy of the anthicid genus Lemodes, having described 14 new species from New Guinea and biogeographically related Pacific island archipelagos.

"In 1997, I was invited to deliver a symposium paper entitled: “Wisconsin’s Species Diversity: The State of Scientific Knowledge.” In doing so, I entered into a new direction for personal research and undergraduate-graduate training. Although it might seem rather odd for an upper Midwestern state, most of Wisconsin’s terrestrial insect fauna is very poorly known compared to those of neighboring states and the region. The absence of a Wisconsin insect inventory has contributed to a critical lack of consideration of insects from biodiversity or conservation biology standpoints and the equally perilous scenario of habitat management recommendations being imposed in these arenas based upon but a few insect species. My presentation identified three research priorities: 1) basic taxonomically and habitat/site based sampling and inventory work, 2), training the future generation of taxonomic experts that will be increasingly called upon to form research partnerships with ecologists and conservation biologists, and 3) supporting the state’s natural history collections as the repositories of our natural heritage, to insure their necessary growth, and to support data management that is inherently a part of their use.

"As a nominal 5% of my research appointment, for the past 20 years, I have served as Director of the UW Insect Research Collection (WIRC), overseeing activities of the Academic Curator, student hourly employees, and volunteers, setting and administering WIRC policies and long range plans, developing and approving budget expenditures, and preparing proposals for outside funding. I also serve as Chair of the UW Natural History Museums Council and oversee the distribution of the “Block Grants” program that helps serve the collections across the UW-Madison campus."

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