Chrysochroa

Shades of Nature

For nearly 400 million years, evolution has shaped the amazing diversity of color in insects. Whether flashy, iridescent, subtle or cryptic, their colors are more than just beautiful. Some insects have bright colors to attract mates or to warn predators

Entomology Club photo

Entomology Club at UC Berkeley

Entomology club is fun nature-focused group of insect-loving individuals who come together to explore California’s insect biodiversity, talk about fun topics in entomology, conduct field research, educate the public on the diversity and importance of insects and participate in collecting

California Oak Moth

California Oak Moth

Watch the KQED Deep Look video on California oak moths. We are tracking outbreaks. Let us know if you notice a swarm of these moths or their caterpillars ([email protected]). UPDATE: It looks like the oak moth population on the UC

IDENTIFICATION

IDENTIFICATION

Need help identifying an insect, spider, or other arthropod? Here are a few resources that might help. When asking for help identifying any organism, please note the geographic location, habitat, behavior, or any other information about the specimen. Many species

Essig Brunch

Essig Brunch

We will be hybrid this semester – Fridays 10:00-11:00am. We will meet in-person in 2063 VLSB and on Zoom.  Essig Brunch is a weekly seminar series, run by Graduate Students in Arthropod Science, featuring local and visiting researchers presenting a

Adopt A Drawer

Adopt A Drawer

  Leave your mark! Or honor family, friends, or a mentor, by adopting a specimen drawer at the Essig Museum. Alumni, add your year of graduation. Choose your favorite insect group and make a donation through our Give To Cal

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Our Mission

The Essig Museum of Entomology on the campus of the University of California at Berkeley houses an active research collection of over 5,000,000 terrestrial arthropods. From humble beginnings as a teaching collection over a hundred years ago, through exponential growth as the California Insect Survey beginning in 1939, and ongoing research projects, the Essig Museum is now one of the largest and most important university-based research collections of insects in North America. Primarily a collection of specimens from the Western Hemisphere, regional emphasis is on the eastern Pacific Rim, in particular California, Mexico, and Central America, and the islands of the central Pacific. The mission of the museum is utilization of the collection to facilitate research, teaching, and outreach in arthropod biology, evolution, and systematics, and document changes in insect populations in response to climate, land use, and other environmental changes. We are committed to making the information contained in our collection accessible to researchers, students, and the broader community, through loans, specimen digitization, outreach events, and museum research projects, and foster interactions within the Berkeley Natural History Museums consortium, as well as with national and global collaborators.

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Limited opportunities to visit the Essig Museum

The Essig Museum is a research collection and generally not open to the public except for special events including Charles Darwin's Birthday (February 12) and Homecoming Weekend (fall semester). Click the Visit tab for more information about visiting the collection.

Homecoming - 20 October 2024