
Update: I have a very nice Wild M5 microscope -- the kind with the cool bullet travel case. And I use 20x Wild eyepieces. So it's a nice microscope but it isn't really good enough to see details on the smaller ants. For instance, I am looking at Octostruma and Eurhopalothrix right now and I'm a little iffy on the number of antennal segments, which is apparently key.
Photo: Charles Darwin's microscope, made by James Smith in 1846. Image © the Whipple Museum (Wh.3788).
What microscope are you using, and not satisfied with?
ReplyDeleteUpdate: I have a very nice Wild M5 microscope -- the kind with the cool bullet travel case. And I use 20x Wild eyepieces. So it's a nice microscope but it isn't really good enough to see details on the smaller ants. For instance, I am looking at Octostruma and Eurhopalothrix right now and I'm a little iffy on the number of antennal segments, which is apparently key.
ReplyDelete