<div dir="ltr"><div><div><div><div>Friends,<br><br></div>Periodically, I annoy you in order to gather more examples of species with long shelf lives for my book, now under contract with University of Chicago Press. I'm sorry if some of you have seen this before. I'm always hopeful that others haven't yet, and that it makes it to the right person. So, if you've responded before, no need to now (and thank you!). The criteria: species with specimens that were collected in the field decades ago -- like 70 years, 100 years, longer -- and then sat in collections until their recent description, say post-2005. Yes, some species are cryptic, others were oversplit, etc. There's all sorts of reasons for this happening. But I want more examples still. I have about 20 or so, and I'm aiming for 30 or more.<br><br></div>Let me know if you think of any more!!!<br><br></div>Best,<br><br></div>--ck<br clear="all"><div><div><div><div><div><br>-- <br><div class="gmail_signature"><div dir="ltr">"I am getting so far out, one day I won't come back at all." <br><br>-- William S. <span>Burroughs</span></div></div>
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