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         xml:lang="eng">

<dataset>
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  <title xml:lang="eng">University of California Riverside, Entomology Research Museum</title>
      <creator>
    <individualName>
        <givenName>Doug</givenName>
      <surName>Yanega</surName>
    </individualName>
    <organizationName>University of California, Riverside</organizationName>
    <positionName>Senior Museum Scientist</positionName>
    <electronicMailAddress>dyanega@ucr.edu</electronicMailAddress>
      </creator>
      <metadataProvider>
    <individualName>
        <givenName>Doug</givenName>
      <surName>Yanega</surName>
    </individualName>
    <organizationName>University of California, Riverside</organizationName>
    <positionName>Senior Museum Scientist</positionName>
    <electronicMailAddress>dyanega@ucr.edu</electronicMailAddress>
      </metadataProvider>
      <associatedParty>
    <individualName>
        <givenName>Kevin</givenName>
      <surName>Love</surName>
    </individualName>
    <electronicMailAddress>klove@flmnh.ufl.edu</electronicMailAddress>
    <role>user</role>
      </associatedParty>
  <pubDate>
      2019-05-22
  </pubDate>
  <language>eng</language>
  <abstract>
    <para>Among the many strengths of UCR&apos;s collection are its holdings of native bees and parasitic Hymenoptera, as well as the families Asilidae, Bombyliidae, and Sciomyzidae (Diptera), Coccinellidae, Staphylinidae, and Meloidae (Coleoptera), Aphididae and Miridae (Hemiptera), and the order Thysanoptera. Of particular interest is its large collection of immature insects (the work of the late L.D. Anderson), and an enormous voucher collection from a 10-year faunistic survey of the Boyd Deep Canyon Research Center, a substantial portion of which is now databased. Our holdings, of roughly 4 million specimens (placing it among the 20 largest insect collections in North America), include primarily terrestrial insects from Southern California and Arizona, with strong representations of Mexican insects (primarily Baja California and Sonora), and various other parts of the world including Thailand, Brazil, Honduras, Russia, India, and Australia.</para>
  </abstract>
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  <intellectualRights>
    <para>To the extent possible under law, the publisher has waived all rights to these data and has dedicated them to the <ulink url="http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode"><citetitle>Public Domain (CC0 1.0)</citetitle></ulink>. Users may copy, modify, distribute and use the work, including for commercial purposes, without restriction.</para>
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  <maintenance>
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      <para></para>
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    <maintenanceUpdateFrequency>unkown</maintenanceUpdateFrequency>
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    <individualName>
        <givenName>Doug</givenName>
      <surName>Yanega</surName>
    </individualName>
    <organizationName>University of California, Riverside</organizationName>
    <positionName>Senior Museum Scientist</positionName>
    <electronicMailAddress>dyanega@ucr.edu</electronicMailAddress>
      </contact>
</dataset>
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          <dateStamp>2019-05-22T05:46:51.225-04:00</dateStamp>
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