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Itsy-Bitsy Made Big

Our Insect Expert Trains Her Lens on the Tiny

Lisa Gonzalez at her microscope

“I’m obsessed with these little tiny ones. They look like little fairies,” says Lisa Gonzalez, NHM’s Entomology Assistant Collections Manager, looking at a macroscopic image of a pixie-like wasp with outstretched wings and a dazzling metallic sheen. “This one is, I’m going to say, two millimeters in length and might literally looks like a speck to the naked eye.”

Close up of Green Wasp

Gonzalez, a sort-of bug librarian, helps to oversee NHM’s collection, the largest in Southern California, consisting of more than six million specimens of insects, spiders, and other terrestrial arthropods from around the world. The collection’s strength lies in its holdings of specimens of phorid flies, ants, scarab beetles, and moths from North and Central America. But she (along with Entomology Curator Dr. Brian Brown) have plucked 14 to spotlight. Her portraits are taken using a Keyence Digital microscope with a built-in camera. The specimens were collected as part of BioSCAN (Biodiversity Science: City and Nature), a first-of-its-kind scientific investigation launched by NHM in 2012 to discover and explore the biodiversity of insects in L.A.

BUGS HAVE BENEFITS

These ultra-close-ups took many weeks to create. For each specimen, Gonzalez first cleans off dust particles with a single-hair brush. Then she positions the individual, sets the lighting, and adjusts the magnifications, which can zoom a max of 1,000 times. The crisp, focused images capture fine details of the animal's anatomy, such as a praying mantis turning its head or a flowerfly with delicate wings unfurled.

“I want to find something that looks almost as if it’s still in flight, or it’s looking at you and has some kind of expression to it, because I think someone having an emotional response is a good way to open up the conversation about what this insect does, where it lives, what its purpose is, and why we should value it. Insects provide essential ecological and environmental benefits. They are pollinators, (putting food on our tables), decomposers, and provide natural pest control as predators and parasites.

SUBURBAN SAFARI

Well before she even knew about the professional field of entomology, Gonzalez was obsessed with crawling, buzzing creatures. “As a small child, I would watch National Geographic and people going on a jungle safari, and then I’d go in the backyard and I would emulate that the best way I could. That meant looking through the grass and under leaf litter. And what was I mostly finding? Insects!”

Eventually, her childhood hobby became her profession, and NHM her second home. Gonzalez started as a volunteer in 2001 in the museum’s Insect Zoo. Later she received a B.S. in entomology from U.C. Riverside and joined the BioSCAN project in 2012. When she's not cataloguing specimens, or training a lens on the infinitesimal, Gonzalez loves to share her knowledge about these delicate invertebrates that we humans often overlook, dismiss as pests, or fear. “A lot of the aliens in science fiction are inspired by insects, but insects are really one of the dominant life forms on Earth,” she says, smiling. “So, it’s really us, the vertebrates, that are the weirdos."


Interested in more insects? See more stunning, spiky, hairy, shiny photographs featured in this month's issue of National Geographic taken by NHMLAC's very own Dr. Brian Brown, Curator of Entomology and Co-director of the Urban Nature Research Center. 

Read the article with a National Geographic three month trial