Unidentified: Difference between revisions
From Sams Bugs
No edit summary |
|||
| Line 20: | Line 20: | ||
== Hah, I know that one! == | == Hah, I know that one! == | ||
You see an animal on here that you 100% recognize? [mailto: | You see an animal on here that you 100% recognize? [mailto:bugs@weirdmustard.de?subject=Unidentified Let me know!] | ||
== Why is that important? == | == Why is that important? == | ||
There are so many species that look very similar but one is very common and the other one would be a spectacular find. A wrong identification can actually become a problem for scientists accidentally adding a find to their data set. Even though most specialists know very well what to look out for in the species they are working with, poor quality in photos or tagging a wrong location can still make for a mistake. So I'd rather put these animals in the "unidentified" category than mess up anything. | There are so many species that look very similar but one is very common and the other one would be a spectacular find. A wrong identification can actually become a problem for scientists accidentally adding a find to their data set. Even though most specialists know very well what to look out for in the species they are working with, poor quality in photos or tagging a wrong location can still make for a mistake. So I'd rather put these animals in the "unidentified" category than mess up anything. | ||
Latest revision as of 13:58, 17 November 2025
Unidentified
These animals have yet to be identified with the exact species.
Unidentified gallery
Unidentified birds
-
A small cockatoo of some sorts
Unidentified bugs
-
Rove beetle 1 picture 1
-
Rove beetle 1 picture 2
Hah, I know that one!
You see an animal on here that you 100% recognize? Let me know!
Why is that important?
There are so many species that look very similar but one is very common and the other one would be a spectacular find. A wrong identification can actually become a problem for scientists accidentally adding a find to their data set. Even though most specialists know very well what to look out for in the species they are working with, poor quality in photos or tagging a wrong location can still make for a mistake. So I'd rather put these animals in the "unidentified" category than mess up anything.
