DIVERSITY OF ANIMAL LIFE
to classify living organisms, and he accumulated,
and in 1758 named, several hundred beetle
species. This led to a flowering of interest, as the
new naming system was applied ever wider, and
sailors and explorers brought back natural objects
from far away. Captain James Cook (1728–79)
included a naturalist, Joseph Banks (1743–1820),
on his famous Endeavour voyage, ultimately to
New South Wales, Australia. Most of Banks’s
collections survive, as one of the oldest modern-
style scientific collections in the Natural History
Museum in London, UK.
Specimens collected by Pierre Dejean
(1780–1845), an important entomologist
and officer in Napoleon’s army, still exist. He
supposedly got off his horse during the Peninsular
War Battle of Alcañiz to collect a Cebrioninae
(Elateridae), which he pinned into his helmet.
After his defeat, he was pleased to observe the
beetle was still in good condition, and it is now
in a museum in Torino, Italy.
By the nineteenth century, the study of beetles
had become widespread and popular both as a
formal discipline and as a scientific pastime, where
affluent private collectors assembled important
collections. Countries made collections too,
building natural history museums to house the
accumulated specimens, generate knowledge,
and educate and inspire the population. This
environment produced Charles Darwin and
Alfred Russel Wallace, two young men who shared
a burning interest in collecting beetles and went
on to change the world. Darwin said in his
autobiography, about his teenage beetle-collecting
days, “It seems therefore that a taste for collecting
beetles is some indication of future success in life!”
He and Wallace are good examples of such
success, starting out as beetle collectors and raised
to greater heights than anyone could imagine
from a platform of dead beetles.
The study of Coleoptera goes on, and museum
beetle collections provide vast archives of the
beetle knowledge accumulated across the world
and down the centuries, ready to answer more
questions, some of which society has not yet even
thought to ask.
Other invertebrates 69,000 species
Corals 2,175 species
Crustaceans 47,000 species
Mollusks 85,000 species
Spiders and scorpions
112,201 species
Beetles (Coleoptera)
387,100 species
Mammals 5,490 species
Birds 10,000 species
Reptiles 9,100 species
Fishes 31,300 species
Insects 1,000,000 species
Amphibians 6,450 species
left | Diagram showing the relative
diversity of different animal groups (total
1,377,716 species). Beetles represent
more than a quarter of known animals,
outnumbering all non-insects combined.