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I am a scientific illustrator on staff with the Systematic Entomology Lab, in the Plant Sciences Institute, ARS, located in the Smithsonian Institution’s Museum of Natural History. Last week, I had the pleasure of meeting Secretary Vilsack, who was interested in several of my paintings of newly described species of insects that I entered in the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) 2012 Employee Art Exhibit. As I answered his questions, it occurred to me that people may not associate USDA with artistry or illustration and that my job as “Scientific Illustrator” may in fact seem unusual to many.
New species of insects are introduced into the US with alarming regularity. Some have become devastatingly serious agricultural and forest problems. As modern travel and commerce moves species around the globe, it is more important than ever that we know what species occur outside the United States. Three newly named species of bark beetles from the Dominican Republic could be our next destructive invasive species, and we know so little about their biology.
When I was studying art and biology at university, I had no idea that I would turn my fascination with the natural world and my passion for drawing into a career. I began working as a full-time scientific illustrator in 1983 for the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research (Department of Defense), working with specimens, microscopes, pen and ink, paints and brushes. The specimens keep coming, the microscopes have gotten better, and now all of my finished work is inked and painted digitally.
Currently, I provide illustration services for 15 research scientists; taxonomic specialists in numerous groups of insects and mites. I support their work describing new species and reclassifying complex groups with my drawings, paintings and photographs, which they publish in peer-reviewed journals, books, and on the web. When a scientist describes a new species he or she also names it. I have the honor of having two species named after me. Being part of the human effort to investigate and document the incredible diversity of life is very satisfying work.