Difference between revisions of "Beetle elytra"

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== Description ==
 
== Description ==
  
The hard exoskeleton composed of [http://cameo.mfa.org/materials/fullrecord.asp?name=chitin chitin] that covers the wings of a beetle (''Coleopter''). Elytra provide protection from heat, wind, and moisture evaporation allowing beetles to live in adverse conditions, such as a desert environment. Beetles typically have two wings folded under a pair of elytra that meet in the center of the back and usually extend to the tip of the abdomen.  Beetle elytra are often have bright jewel-tone colors.  Many also have an iridescence due to the interference of light between the multiple layers of chitin.
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The hard exoskeleton composed of [[chitin]] that covers the wings of a beetle (''Coleopter''). Elytra provide protection from heat, wind, and moisture evaporation allowing beetles to live in adverse conditions, such as a desert environment. Beetles typically have two wings folded under a pair of elytra that meet in the center of the back and usually extend to the tip of the abdomen.  Beetle elytra are often have bright jewel-tone colors.  Many also have an iridescence due to the interference of light between the multiple layers of chitin.
  
 
== Synonyms and Related Terms ==
 
== Synonyms and Related Terms ==

Revision as of 13:19, 8 January 2014

MFA Acc. #: 1986.602

Description

The hard exoskeleton composed of Chitin that covers the wings of a beetle (Coleopter). Elytra provide protection from heat, wind, and moisture evaporation allowing beetles to live in adverse conditions, such as a desert environment. Beetles typically have two wings folded under a pair of elytra that meet in the center of the back and usually extend to the tip of the abdomen. Beetle elytra are often have bright jewel-tone colors. Many also have an iridescence due to the interference of light between the multiple layers of chitin.

Synonyms and Related Terms

beetle wing; elytron (singular)

MFA Acc. #: 52.1339

Additional Information

Victoria Rivers, 'Beetles in Textiles" BugBios, Issue 2, February 1994 (LINK)

Additional Images


Authority

  • The American Heritage Dictionary or Encarta, via Microsoft Bookshelf 98, Microsoft Corp., 1998
  • Encyclopedia Britannica, http://www.britannica.com Comment: Dermestid beetle. Retrieved May 29, 2003, from Encyclopædia Britannica Premium Service.
  • Lynda A. Zycherman, J.Richard Schrock, A Guide to Museum Pest Control, FAIC and Association of Systematics Collections, Washington DC, 1988
  • Hermann Kuhn, Conservation and Restoration of Works of Art and Antiquities, Butterworths, London, 1986

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