May 202012
 

Another week, another batch of entomophilic blogs, inspirational photographs, and spare-time diversions.

General Entomology

Are you an entomologist looking for a rustic home perfect for insect collecting? Then the Onion has a deal just for you!

Entomologists aren’t always invited into ecosystem monitoring projects, but Chris Buddle shares his experiences with the Arctic Terrestrial Biodiversity Monitoring Plan.

Diptera

The spring edition of Fly Times, the biannual newsletter for the North American Dipterists Society, is out and absolutely full of interesting information. Everything from cheap ideas for high-quality specimen photography to research updates, and even a technique for reconstituting eye colour patterns in dead & dried flies! I look forward to this newsletter every spring and fall, and my only disappointment with this edition is I have to wait another 6 months until the next!

Like CSI: Crime Scene Investigators and imagine a glorious life fighting crime in high fashion? Think again. The BBC has an excellent interview with leading UK forensic entomologist Dr. Martin Hall about his work and thinking like a maggot.

The entomologists I know, including me of course, aren’t exactly the most fashion-conscious people out there (seriously, it can be pretty bad). But even I think these insect-repellent high fashions are attractive, especially as a great way to raise awareness about malaria!

What’s upside down and fuzzy all over? This great photo of a bee fly by Ted MacRae! Also cool, the photo was identified by bee fly aficionado and recent University of Guelph PhD graduate Joel Kits. I <3 the internet for cool connections like this!

Apparently this week was the week to feed deer flies, as Brian Cutting also sacrificed his body for a chance to photograph a pangonine!

Coleoptera

Emerald Ash Borer (Agrilus planipennis) was discovered in Guelph last summer, and this year, the University of Guelph will be taking proactive steps to help protect the ash trees on campus and in the arboretum.

There’s something soothing about watching fireflies in the summer, and photographer Kevin Adams has a nice piece detailing the behaviour, biology and biochemistry behind these little beasts. Now that you know a little more about them, he’s got some excellent tips for photographing their dazzling shows this summer!

Hymenoptera

Bug Girl has been handed the keys to the Scientopia Guest Blogge this week, and she’s taken the opportunity to explain why bees have it rough, what is and isn’t CCD, and of course, bees & STDs.

Of course, bees can’t have it too rough if they have time to interrupt a baseball game with some of the best seats in the house…

Other Insect Orders

Speaking of baseball (or softball in this case), find out how a youth spent hitting home runs helped the Dragonfly Woman prepare for a career as an entomologist.

Pollination biology has been attracting a lot of research attention in the past few years. Of course thrips were into it way before any of us (105 million years ago actually), making them total thripsters.

I told myself I wouldn’t link to any of the photos Alex Wild posted from Brazil, because he was in Brazil and I wasn’t (nope, I’m not jealous at all), but he’s too damn good and these tree hoppers are just too damn cool. You win this round Myrmecos…

Arachnida

Chuck Norris is on to ticks and the diseases they spread. In response, the IUCN listed the Ixodida as extinct and the WHO celebrated the eradication of Lyme Disease.

Since Chuck Norris has taken care of them, I suppose I shouldn’t be afraid of ticks and their ability to induce meat allergies in unknowing victims, but my worst nightmare is a life without bacon. Here’s the original study if you need further proof that ticks are devil spawn.

This spider photo by Jason Hogle of Xenogere blew. My. Mind.

Everyone knows about the red hourglass identifying female black widow spiders, but the males are pretty spectacular in their own right! Check out the pedipalp photo by Alex Webb.

Pop quiz hot shot: How many mites can you fit on a size 12, Times Roman typed period? Macromite has the answer with an awesome poster (and the answer might surprise you).

Taxonomy/Phylogenetics

Finally, someone has explained how the Linnean Classification system works. Sort of. Well, at least it’s fun.

This discussion of the “controversy” surrounding Triceratops by io9 is actually a pretty good primer on the science of taxonomy, with the only important missing piece being the principle of priority (which actually takes most of the controversy out of the story). Good thing Brian Switek was on it.

Sure he was known for Lolita, but this photo of Vladimir Nabokov hunting for butterflies with his wife belies his true love: Lepidoptera taxonomy.

Know why I love social media? Because how else would you get this discussion about the differences between phylogenetics and phenetics from such a diversity of researchers!

Science Communication

Science Blogs and social media made it into peer-review twice this week. First, a scientific paper about science blogs which discuss and report on scientific papers. Meta.

Then, Christie Wilcox had a great editorial published on the obligation scientists should have for communicating their research to the public, with an emphasis on social media.

If you’re unsure of Twitter (or know someone who is), I highly recommend you check out this great post by Ruth Dawkins explaining what makes Twitter such a valuable resource for pretty well anyone!

Photography

Ch-ch-ch-Chia! Growing your own photographs.

You’ve probably seen photos of star trails before, but I doubt you’ve seen a photo of star trails AND Earth trails. An amazing photograph by Don Pettit, an astronaut stationed on the International Space Station.

Want to see beautiful people turn into over-exaggerated caricatures right before your eyes? Then check out this crazy optical illusion spotted by Why Evolution is True.

 

Further Reading & Link Collections

Your Wild Life Blog’s Biodiversity Roundup

Bora Zovkovic’s Scienceblogging Weekly

Ed Yong’s Missing Links

David Winter @ The Atavism Sunday Spinelessness New Zealand Link List

May 122012
 

I come across a large number of interesting blog posts, news articles, scientific papers and various other types of media every week, which I try and share through Twitter on a regular basis. Since I know not everyone has been bitten by the Twitter bug yet1, I figured I’d start a weekly round up of links to some of the stories I find interesting, important or just plain entertaining.

True to form, most of these links will be insect related, but I have broad interests, so some other topics are sure to turn up from time to time2. The internet is full of talented people, and I hope you enjoy their work as much as I have.

 

The Flies (Diptera)

The 8th International Congress of Dipterology is coming up in a few years, so be sure to start saving your pennies for the trip to Potsdam, Germany!

I prefer studying flies (dead or alive), but if that’s not your thing, check out these creative photos of dead house flies and blow flies having the times of their (already finished) lives. Here’s the full collection by photographer Nicholas Hendrickx.

The BugBlog has a nice series of photos of Helophilus pendulus, commonly called the Footballer Hoverfly in the UK. Why call it that, you might ask? Apparently the striped patterns on the thorax reminded someone of a soccer jersey.

The Dragonfly Lady shows off a nice hilltopping site in Arizona. Plenty of fly talk in the comments.

The Beetles (Coleoptera)

The Edmonton Journal has a great biography of Dr. George Ball, a beetle taxonomist at the University of Alberta who has impacted the careers of dozens of top entomologists across North America.

This short film is both beautiful and bizarre all at once. A stop-motion portrayal of the life of a beetle taxonomist who makes the discovery of a lifetime.

Emerald Ash Borer (Agrilus planipennis) has now been found in most major urban centres across Ontario, and has recently turned up in Quebec. Chris Buddle discusses the affect that EAB will have on Montreal.

While not EAB, Chrysobothris vivida looks quite similar on first glance. The Field Museum shows off the holotype and label data, helping to explain the role that natural history collections play in day to day science.

Speaking of natural history collections, a volunteer at the Natural History Museum in London, England shares why she loves helping out with the beetle collection in her spare time.

Check out this awesome longhorn beetle (Cerambycidae) Ted McRae of Beetles in the Bush came across while working in Argentina recently. While you’re there, share your ideas on the purpose of the strange tufts of hair!

The Ants, Bees, and Wasps (Hymenoptera)

The School of Ants is gearing up for another summer of discovery by sampling the ants around our houses and picnic areas.

Ants are to ________ as clown fish are to anemones. Think you know the answer? Better check Not Exactly Rocket Science (NERS) by Ed Yong for an excellent tale of commensalism.

It may not be 1984, but Big Brother is watching what Orchid Bees are up to (but don’t worry, it’s for a good reason).

Scientific American ran an interesting story about native bee populations in eastern North America, and included an excellent slideshow of some beautiful bees with it.

Some of photos in that slideshow came out of the Packer Bee Lab at York University, as did a newly published review and key to the Dufourea bees (Halictidae) of Canada in the Canadian Journal of Arthropod Identification.

Other Arthropods

Marine water striders (Gerridae) are making the news this week with the release of a new study finding that a massive raft of plastic pollution in the Pacific is harboring a growing population of these bugs. Ed Yong is excellent again on his NERS blog, and the paper is Open Access if you’d like to take a look yourself.

These plastic-loving water striders aren’t the only insects that have taken to the open ocean, and the North Carolina State University Insect Collection has a few more examples to share.

Caterpillars come in a wide variety of colours, shapes and forms, but these translucent, jelly Jewel Caterpillars are some of the most beautiful!

I saw Avengers this week, and it was really, really good. Prior to the movie, there was a trailer for the upcoming Spiderman reboot, promising plenty of web-slinging action. Before the movie comes out this summer, meet the backyard spider that may have served as inspiration for Peter Parker’s gadgets.

Taxonomy, Biodiversity, Academia, Science Communication/Photography

Although written by a marine ecologist and discussing a paper about plant taxonomists, this post on the Sea Monster Blog is one of the most best stories about the role of taxonomy and the decrease in taxonomists being hired and funded. A must read for anyone who depends on biology in their day-to-day lives (that means you).

The NCSU group shares an entertaining story and asks you to decide whether it’s fact or fiction. What do you think?

The Tepuis of Brazil are way up on the list of places I want to explore and collect one day. This excellent New York Times article by Carl Zimmer makes me want to go even more.

A new project was launched this week which hopes to provide interactive range maps for all the worlds flora & fauna! Nature has a nice feature explaining some of the goals and obstacles the project faces in the early phases. Right now they only have terrestrial vertebrates and North American freshwater fish mapped, but the interface is excellent and has a lot of potential! Now to get some insects into the project…

Most research papers only discuss results and experiments that worked. The Canadian Field Naturalists Blog discusses the importance of publishing projects which didn’t work as expected.

Just because it’s summer vacation for undergraduate university students, doesn’t mean their professors get a break too. Chris Buddle outlines some of his labs plans for the summer.

To get a job in academia, your peers (and more importantly, your hiring committees) need to know you and your work. But is all self-promotion viewed equally? Excellent discussion on the evolving role of social media and blogging to the world of academia by Scicurious.

Photography & Other Fun Stuff

Have you ever wondered what it’d be like to be a press photographer tasked with covering President Obama? This account by a Reuters photographer shows just how stressful the assignment can be.

I don’t know who started it, but the #InsectSongs suggested by Twitter users this week was an afternoon of hilarity. Check out some of my favourites, and then see which ones Bug Girl selected.

Finally, enjoy this fun stop-motion video detailing the everyday lives of insects.

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1- If you need more convincing why you should sign up for Twitter, here’s another excellent piece on the benefits of Twitter for academics

2- Ed Yong, and Bora Zivkovic do extensive weekly link round-ups covering a very broad spectrum of science writing if you need something else to read this weekend!