
Tuesday, November 27, 2007
Your very own Dragonfly Robot
Sharper Image has now brought technology to the task of giving us what we all have wanted: flying insect companions!:

Sunday, November 25, 2007
Termite Guts to the Biofuel Rescue!

What if we could instead use material that is already considered waste - lie used paper of scrap wood? The article below shows have termites and their lovely symbionts may point towards a solution of this kind:
ScienceDaily (Nov. 25, 2007) — Termites -- notorious for their voracious appetite for wood, rendering houses to dust and causing billions of dollars in damage per year -- may provide the biochemical means to a greener biofuel future. The bellies of these tiny beasts actually harbor a gold mine of microbes that have now been tapped as a rich source of enzymes for improving the conversion of wood or waste biomass to valuable biofuels.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/11/071121145002.htm
Wednesday, November 21, 2007
British Scientists Find Ancient Fossil of What Once Was the World's Biggest Bug

The term "bug" is being used liberally here, but what were are talking about are:
"Eurypterids, or ancient sea scorpions, are believed to be the extinct aquatic ancestors of today's scorpions and possibly all arachnids, a class of joint-legged, invertebrate animals, including spiders, scorpions, mites and ticks."
This fossil find is truly remarkable. Giant Carboniferous dragonflies have some competition in town!
The full article is here:
http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/wireStory?id=3895047
Thursday, November 15, 2007
Robot 'pied piper' leads roaches

On the heels on me mentioning th robot bee used to test the Waggle Dane Hypothesis in class, here is another interesting robo-insect interactions! An excerpt:
"A robotic cockroach can act as a 'pied piper' to its flesh-and-blood counterparts, persuading the real insects to hide in unusual places.
European scientists introduced tiny autonomous robots into an "arena" where cockroaches were allowed to run free.
They wanted to see whether the robots would be accepted by the insects and whether they could influence their collective decision-making process.
The results were reported in the academic journal Science.
The robots - built by Jose Halloy, from the Free University in Brussels, Belgium, and colleagues - do not look at all like cockroaches.
But by covering the robots in filter paper infused with cockroach pheromones, the researchers were able to fool the
animals into thinking the automatons were genuine members of their group."
The rest of the article can found here:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/7097267.stm
Monday, November 12, 2007
Swarms

By CARL ZIMMER
Published: November 13, 2007
An interesting article in the New York Times about studying swarms. The two parts I found most interesting were the parts where they got computer models to correctly mimic insect swarms, and when they were able to do the same thing with humans.
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/13/science/13traff.html?pagewanted=1
Here is an excerpt:
"In the case of army ants, Dr. Couzin was intrigued by their highways. Army ants returning to their nest with food travel in a dense column. This incoming lane is flanked by two lanes of outgoing traffic. A three-lane highway of army ants can stretch for as far as 150 yards from the ant nest, comprising hundreds of thousands of insects.
What Dr. Couzin wanted to know was why army ants do not move to and from their colony in a mad, disorganized scramble. To find out, he built a computer model based on some basic ant biology. Each simulated ant laid down a chemical marker that attracted other ants while the marker was still fresh. Each ant could also sweep the air with its antennas; if it made contact with another ant, it turned away and slowed down to avoid a collision.

It turned out that these optimal ants also spontaneously formed highways. If the ants going in one direction happened to become dense, their chemical trails attracted more ants headed the same way. This feedback caused the ants to form a single packed column. The ants going the other direction turned away from the oncoming traffic and formed flanking lanes."
-Daniel
Sunday, November 11, 2007
Bites Recruit Wasp Workers
March 27, 2006
By Joel Schwarz, University of Washington
If you think you’ve got a bad boss, one who loves to chew people out, or if you work with backstabbing co-workers, be thankful you are not a wasp.
If you were, chances are your nestmates might bite you to communicate that it is time to leave the nest and forage for the colony, according to research by a University of Washington animal behaviorist. Biting is a way that workers in a colony of the social wasp Polybia occidentalis recruit new foragers to gather water, food and building material in a time of need, said Sean O’Donnell, a UW associate professor of psychology.
O’Donnell previously found that biting appears to be an important way of regulating the division of labor among these insects. Now, in the March 2006 issue of the journal Animal Behaviour, he describes an experiment in which he artificially removed active foragers from four wasp colonies to see how new foragers are recruited.
He found that biting was directed at certain individuals, who previously hadn’t left the nest, to induce them to begin foraging. The rate of being bitten increased by an average of 600 percent for these recruited foragers, while biting rates did not increase for other workers.
“The fact that biting was specifically directed at recruited foragers shows that biting is the mechanism that the colonies used to activate new foragers,” said O’Donnell. “With no water, food and building material coming in to the nest, the colonies needed to ramp up their foraging workforce. This study shows that these biting interactions play a central role in recruiting foragers and that biting has a role in communication that affects task performance in a colony.”
To study the wasps, O’Donnell first collected and anesthetized an average of about 300 workers from each of the colonies. He then marked each wasp’s thorax with a color-coded system that made it possible to identify individuals and returned the insects to their nests. A day later, all foragers returning to a nest were removed for at least two hours and until none arrived for at least one hour of continuous monitoring.
“The rate of foraging slowed down and stopped completely, placing stress on the colony because materials the colony needs, primarily food, are not coming in. So the colony needs to recruit new workers to make up for the loss,” O’Donnell explained.
On the final day observers watched each colony, noted the behavior of the marked individuals to see which insects were foragers, and recorded all biting interactions.
O’Donnell said the biting did not always provoke an individual to begin foraging immediately, noting the biting seems to have a cumulative effect. Some insects were bitten multiple times for hours before leaving the nest to forage.
“Going off the nest to forage, where they are exposed to all kinds of stresses and dangers, is probably the biggest change these animals face in their lives,” he said.
O’Donnell plans future studies to learn what determines which members of a colony are doing the biting and which are being bitten. He suspects that biting recipients are recognized based on something chemical on their body surface, as well as by an age component.
O’Donnell and other scientists study social insects looking for clues about how social behavior evolved and how it is maintained since there are elements that are shared among all social animals. Social aggression is one such characteristic that is almost universal among animal groups ranging from insects to primates including humans.
The National Science Foundation funded the research, which was conducted in Costa Rica.
Press Release © 2005, Joel Schwarz, University of Washington
“Polybia wasp biting interactions recruit foragers
following experimental worker removals,” Sean O’Donnell, Animal Behaviour, Volume 71, Issue 3, Pages 709-715 (March 2006) (published online February 7, 2006)
Sean O’Donnell, University of Washington
Video of Polybia nest
Back to Research 2006
Polybia occidentalis recruits new forager (marked with pink) with a bite.
Photo © 2006 University of Washington
Polybia occidentalis workers
Photo © 2006 University of Washington
Tuesday, October 30, 2007
Fossilized Spider, 50 Million Years Old, Clear As Life


No, it isn't an insect, but who is counting legs anyway?
Actually, the folks who just found this fossil are - and a whole lot more. Found in some French amber, this fossil spider could be seen with the eye, but details through the golden blurry sap were more than a little hard to make out. Now through the use of some fancy 3D X-ray technologies, they were able to virtually dissect it, letting all its details shine through!
The article:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/10/071029083230.htm
Wednesday, October 24, 2007
Tuesday, October 23, 2007
Ladybird beetles to the rescue!

Click on the image of the article on the left to see the readably larger version.
-andy

Wednesday, October 10, 2007
Dragonfly or Insect Spy? Scientists at Work on Robobugs
Sunday, October 7, 2007
MANTIS MOMMY
Saturday, October 6, 2007
But were they "hemipterans?"
Friday, October 5, 2007
Yeah, I Meant to Get Stung (VIDEO)
Sorry... I'm having issues with uploading the video.
Here's the URL:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=p245IE6_qf8
-Jenny
Here's the URL:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=p245IE6_qf8
-Jenny
Yeah, I Meant to Get Stung.
I had mentioned briefly in class about “Bee Sting Therapy” being used to treat arthritis, as well as a few other ailments… so, here is that National Geographic Podcast about it. I recommend subscribing highly. It not only contains a slew of podcasts on insects (as you may have noticed from Erin’s post), but some excellent zoological, anthropological, ritual, and food-related videos!
WOOT!
Here’s a link to National Geographic's podcast page on YouTube... However, I simply download them from iTunes, under National Geographic video shorts.
http://youtube.com/user/NationalGeographic
-Jenny
Insect Candy, Maggot Medicine and Hornets From Hell
I kind of went youtube crazy...
Insect Candy:
Maggot Medicine: (viewer discretion advised!)
Hornets From Hell:
-Erin
Insect Candy:
Maggot Medicine: (viewer discretion advised!)
Hornets From Hell:
-Erin
Wednesday, September 26, 2007
Oh Honey! Heal me!

This may be quite old news to some of you (as this article was created in 2000), but studies have shown that honey has excellent healing properties. I bring this up because I (being horrifically clumsy) gave myself some SWEET oil burns a few days ago, from my armpit to my mid-forearm (trying to pan sear some tuna steaks in sesame oil), and I’m unhappy with almost all of the burn products on the market so far. Thus, as an exceedingly paranoid individual and medical info junkie, I decided to sift around the inter-slice for something better…
Lo’ and behold! Here I find article, upon article about honey as one of the foremost healing agents. Woo!
http://archives.cnn.com/2000/HEALTH/alternative/03/08/honey.healing.wmd/index.html
So, now I am going to replace my commercial healing products with honey, and we will see how it goes. Let’s see if the bees can do for me what Johnson & Johnson can’t… or my arm may fall off.
-sidenote- As the Aussies, and UK dwellers are far more open to homeopathic medicine than we Americans, a new(ish, circa 2000, to 2005) product called “Medihoney” has been created to cure a variety of ailments…
However, it seems that using store bought honey is fine, too.
http://www.medihoney.com/
-Jenny
ps: I drew that dippy drawing.
Tuesday, September 25, 2007
Chevalier Woods - Mantis Heaven~

For as close to being to one of the world's busiest airports as it is, Chevelier Woods Forest Preserve did not disappoint. We collected at least 10 different orders of insects, no problem.
This included two different species of praying mantis (as Jenny and Gracen as catching above), as well as large carpenter bees and amazing click beetles!
The weather was fine and the abundant flowers (unfortunately "weedy" and not hypo-allergenic) meant plenty of things to collect!
-andy

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