| Literature DB >> 22859887 |
Stefan Schmidt1, Michael Balke, Stefan Lafogler.
Abstract
Here we describe a high-performance imaging system for creating high-resolution images of whole insect drawers. All components of the system are industrial standard and can be adapted to meet the specific needs of entomological collections. A controlling unit allows the setting of imaging area (drawer size), step distance between individual images, number of images, image resolution, and shooting sequence order through a set of parameters. The system is highly configurable and can be used with a wide range of different optical hardware and image processing software.Entities:
Keywords: Entomology; CNC technology; insect collection; insect drawer
Year: 2012 PMID: 22859887 PMCID: PMC3406475 DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.209.3115
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Zookeys ISSN: 1313-2970 Impact factor: 1.546
Figure 1.Schematic drawing of the DScan system. Flashes (not shown) are placed inside the scanner.
Figure 2.Partial drawer images taken at the same position using three different file formats: captured as JPEG (a), captured as TIFF (b), and TIFF converted from RAW (c). A high resolution version of the image is available under media.zsm-entomology.de/suppl/zookeys_mass_digitisation_volume/Fig_2.png
Figure 3.Enlargements of drawer images from Fig. 1 to show quality differences between image file formats. Each of the three specimens was captured in JPEG (a, d, g), TIFF (b, e, h), and RAW (c, f, i). A high resolution version of the image is available under media.zsm-entomology.de/suppl/zookeys_mass_digitisation_volume/Fig_3.png
Figure 4.Automatic numbering of specimens using ImageJ. For details see text.