Published online by Cambridge University Press: 31 May 2012
At the time when the Entomological Society of Canada was founded, 88 years ago, the science of entomology was almost synonymous with systematics. I say almost synonymous, because important advances in the study of insect development and behaviour had already occurred and even economic entomology, which now absorbs nine-tenths of our professional effort, was already showing signs of growth. Nevertheless, the great names in entomology were still those of the systematists. The work of description and classification was still the most absorbing interest in the entomological field.
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2 De Partibus Animalium, Bk. 1, Ch. 5, 644b, 645a.
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20 l.c., Pt. XII, Sect. XXVIII, 1942.
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22 In spite of the wonderful advances that have been made in this field, I doubt that the systematist can thus define the necessary entity he is attempting to delimit.
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