posted on 2023-02-06, 17:22authored byScience Gossip
‘Science Gossip’ is born from a collaboration between an Arts and Humanities Research Council project in the UK, called ‘Constructing Scientific Communities: Citizen Science in the 19th and 21st Centuries’ (ConSciCom) and the Missouri Botanical Garden who are providing content from the Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL).
Funding
Constructing Scientific Communities: Citizen Science in the 19th and 21st Centuries
Coordinates: [621, 831, 0, 0, 0, 0], Details: "common"=>["Spider parasite", "Spider", "Parasite", "Ichneumon wasp parasite pimpia (?)", "spider", "ichneumon wasp", "parasite", "Spider with parasite", "ichneumon wasp grub", "Tubercle", "tubercle", "ichneumon wasp grub tubercle"], "scientific"=>["unidentified", ""]
Inscription
Coordinates: [523, 933, 0, 0, 0, 0], Details: "text"=>["Fig.68.-Spider, with parasite in situ, magnified.Fig.69.-Spider, natural size.Fig.70.-Parasite, further magnified, showing eight retractile tubercles upon the back, each of which is crowned with numerous minute fleshy hooks.Fig.71.-A single tubercle, highly magnified.", "Fig. 71. - A single tubercle, highlight magnified", "Fig. 70. - Parasite, further magnified, showing eight retractile tubercles upon the back, each of which is crowned with numerous minute fleshy hooks.", "Fig. 60. - Spider, natural size.", "Fig. 68. - Spider, with parasite in situ, magnified.", "Fig. 68.", "Fig. 68 - Spider, with parasite in situ, magnified.Fig. 69 - Spider, natural size.Fig. 70 - Parasite further magnified, showing eight retractile tubercles upon the back, each of which is crowned with numerous minute fleshy hooks.Fig. 71 - A single tubercle, highly magnified.", "Fig.68 Spider, with parasite in situ, magnified", "Fig.69 Spider natural size", "Fig.70 Parasite further magnified, showing eight retractile tubercles upon the back, each of which is crowned with numerous minute fleshy hooks", "Fig.71 A single tubercle, highly magnified", "Spider with parasite in situ, magnified.", "Fig. 69", "Fig. 70", "Parasite, further magni8fied, showing eight retractile turbecles upon the back, each of which is crowned with numerous minute fleshy books.", "Fig. 71", "A single tubercle, highly magnified."]