Scientists
are embarking on a mission to capture a 3D image of every ant species known to
science. The US team is visiting museums around the world to photograph
all of the ant specimens in their collections. They are using a technique that,
for the first time, allows microscopic anatomical detail of the insects' bodies
to be photographed. The aim is to make an online catalogue called Antweb,
providing a unique tool for scientists who study the insects. It will also
allow anyone with access to the internet a detailed glimpse of the diverse
world of ants.
Brian Fisher from the California Academy of Sciences is leading
the study. He and his colleagues have started their "world ant tour"
at the Natural History Museum (NHM) in London. The team has already used the
imaging technique on ant collections in the US, capturing snapshots of 8,000
ant species so far. But there are approximately 15,000 species that have been
"formally described" in science, and about 30,000 species in total. Each
named and described species has a specimen - an ant that provides the reference
for what this species looks like - housed in a museum collection. Dr Fisher and
his team plan to capture a snapshot of every single one of these specimens. "Our
goal is to image 10,000 a year," he told BBC Nature. And for the the
database to be complete, the team is taking several images of each species,
including examples of all the different ant castes - queens, soldiers, minor
workers - and the different sexes.
To
achieve this, they need to find the museums with the most complete ant
collections, and the NHM is the first one outside of the US that the team has
targeted. Dr Fisher says it has "one of the best ant collections in the
world", with more than 6,000 species pinned into display cases in the
museum's carefully curated store rooms. The team will systematically work its
way through every one of these boxes of long-dead and preserved ants, and use a
special technique that takes dozens of highly magnified pictures all on a
different plane of focus.
Combining all of these images into one final picture
reveals each insect in unprecedented detail. "You can zoom in and see fine
hairs, the eyes, all of this detail," Dr Fisher explains. "And all of
this, under a microscope, is not in focus. "So this is actually the first
time, as a scientist, I get to see this ant in 3D. It's very useful for
scientists." The researcher and his team hope to bring the ant world out
of museum cupboards, not just for researchers studying the insects, but also to
reveal the diversity of ants to the public. "Many people don't know the
amazing creatures that live in their back yards,". "This project will
mean that anybody, anywhere at any time will have access to these specimens
that we hide in museums."
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