The Original Not every specimen in a museum’s collection is intended for public display. In natural history collections, specimens are curated, cataloged, identified, and stored for research. The most critically important research specimens in a museum’s collection are those known as Type Specimens. That specimen is the original, the progenitor of the name, the exact specimen from which others of its kind were measured in order to be given the appropriate genus and species. This cicada specimen, which was found during field work in Venezuela and deposited in the collection of the Buffalo Museum of Science, is a Type Specimen. It belongs to the genus Zammara, which are large cicadas characterized by segmented tarsi (“feet”). There are about 16 species in this genus; Z. medialinea, was named for the marks on the head, which appear to form a stripe along the midline of the dorsal surface of the head and prothorax.
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