2 MISC. PUBLICATION 318, U. S. DEPT. OF AGRICULTURE 



them. The collector should not be misled by advertisements of cer- 

 tain companies to the effect that they will purchase insects, espe- 

 cially when he is obligated to buy a book of instructions before these 

 companies will buy the insects. 



Insect collecting should be started as a hobby, just as the collect- 

 ing of stamps and other objects, and not as a means of making money. 

 The value of insect collections to scientific institutions depends on the 

 number of authentically identified species the collections contain and 

 the preciseness with which the specimens are mounted and labeled. 



The public in general is becoming more conscious of the damage 

 caused by insects and the need for more information on insect con- 

 trol. Members of 4-H clubs who participate in the activities out- 

 lined in this manual will learn many things of permanent value to 

 them. 



To get. the most out of the insect study, one should follow the 3-year 

 program outlined^ This will allow time not only for the acquirement 

 of experience, which is the best teacher, but for a review of litera- 

 ture on insects. 



All persons cannot become entomologists, but they may acquire 

 knowledge for practical use. 



WHY STUDY INSECTS? 



Many persons go through life finding little enjoyment in the beau- 

 ties of Mature and knowing very little about them. If we learn to 

 know more of our natural surroundings, we shall be building toward 

 a fuller life. The human race makes up only a very small part of 

 the living creatures here on earth. Man feels that he has about 

 reached the top of the social ladder, but in reality he still has a long 

 way to go. 



HISTOEY OF INSECTS 



People could profit much by turning to some of Nature's other 

 children who have been struggling along life's pathways for millions 

 of years, possibly long before man camfe into existence. The lowly 

 insects, as we think of them, were living on the earth more than 40 

 million years ago. In fossils and in amber, we find preserved insects 

 almost identical with those we can find in our own back yard today. 

 Scientists have found no trace of man that dates back to anywhere 

 near those geological ages. 



What is it about the insect that has permitted it to withstand all 

 these centuries while many other forms of animal life have appeared 

 on the earth and after a relatively few years passed out of existence ? 

 We see pictures of large prehistoric animals and wonder why, with 

 all the strength they must have possessed, they did not dominate the 

 earth. This process of elimination is still going on, and every few 

 years some form of animal life passes out of existence. Our natural- 

 ists today are working hard to perpetuate certain kinds of birds and 

 animals that are almost extinct. 



IMPORTANCE OF INSECTS 



Insects, however, live on, and today they are man's greatest com- 

 petitors in his struggle for existence. Insects destroy our crops, they 

 kill our animals, they crumple our buildings, and they actually feed 

 on man himself. In addition, they spread disease germs that 



