Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Bee Keeping Classes

Chicago Honey Co-op has beekeeping classes begining in January!! The classes will be held at Jane Addams Hull House Museum (UIC) from 10AM to 3PM. Class costs $75.

http://chicagohoneycoop.squarespace.com/classes/

I am working on binding books at North Branch Projects with Insect themes...















Thanks for a great semester everyone!

moki

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Media Project "The Waggle Dance Of the Honey Bee"

beefinal from Emma on Vimeo.





Here is my media project! It is a hand drawn animation about the waggle dance. It's narrated so make sure the volume is on - or click here 

Emma



Life, in some form


A new exhibition featuring two artists, Marissa Lee Benedict (image of work, left) and Brittany Ransom(image of work, right), who are interested in objects of transformation, technology, science, nature, etc!
It also features a Twitter-Remote-Controlled-Cockroach! Where participants are asked to tweet at the program connected to the cockroach and effects its movement. Also, Ransom will exhibit steel sculptures inhabited by various stages of metamorphosis for moths.  More here!


Opening Reception: December 7, 6-9


-Joanne~

Monday, December 3, 2012

Bees Swarming

I was looking to see if there were any long videos of bees. No commentary or editing or anything. Just a nice long video of bees living out their lives.

Hard to find any. But I found one that shows bees swarming while searching for a new home.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vkMoRoiKmdM

It got really exciting at the end when they were all preparing to fly off.

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Cephalopod Eyes

I was looking stuff up about octopus eyes and noticed an article titled "What animal has a more sophisticated eye, Octopus or Insect."

http://www.ebiomedia.com/what-animal-has-a-more-sophisticated-eye-octopus-or-insect.html

I remembered talking about the convergent evolution of eyes and how the octopus eye differed in that the nerves are attached at the back. Apparently that's because the eye evolved as an invagination of the skin, meaning that the eye evolved from the skin going inwards rather than an outward extension of the brain.

The article says that all invertebrate eyes develop as an invagination while vertebrate eyes are all extensions of the brain. I wonder if invertebrate invagination includes insects?

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

SpaceX Grasshopper

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n-VjaBSSnqs&feature=plcp

 

My brother works at SpaceX and sent me this link along with this message:

"I . . . called the test engineering manager for Dragon and said, 'I'm bored.  Is there anything I can help out with out there this evening?' and he replied, 'Get over here ASAP!  Grasshopper is about to hop!'"



This is just more proof that by studying insects, engineers and scientists can get a whole lot of inspiration for their designs. (Even if it looks nothing like a grasshopper.) And it's a huge leap for reusable spacecraft.


-Connie

Disappearing Bees

http://blogs.reuters.com/great-debate/2012/04/09/mystery-of-the-disappearing-bees-solved/



This is so weird. Until today, I'd thought the whole bees disappearing thing was just a joke in Doctor Who. Then this morning, I was listening to a podcast (not even a scientific one) where they mentioned findings in this article and I had to look it up. It was only later in the night that I saw the subject of the Insect World readings and videos for this week. It was crazy.

-Connie

Saturday, November 10, 2012

The Cobweb Hotel

This short video is a documentary showing the interactions of flies and what seems to be a rare 6-legged talking spider. Examples of mimicry, predation, and sociality between flies are included.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gT4M2UrDFUs

-Rex

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Spooky Bugs

Nothing better than when your students come to entomology class dressed up in insect themes for Halloween!

Thanks to Justin for taking and posting these photos, of me, Rex, and Melissa

-AY









The Eagleman Stag Animation

www.youtube.com/watch?v=w5K2HUg11sQ

Monday, October 22, 2012

9,000 butterflies killed




http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2012/apr/18/damien-hirst-butterflies-weirdly-uplifting


-danielle

hexapod fashions


AY

bug ink


I came across this specimen on a Tumblr site. Quite beautiful, no? Can you name the Order of this critter - or perhaps this demands the creation of a new on?   Insect tattoos are popular among the inked folk, and as you might expect, Lepidoptera and Odonata abound... Some other examples:

http://pinterest.com/griffinpest/insect-tattoos/
http://www.tumblr.com/tagged/insect-tattoo

AY

Sunday, October 21, 2012

human DNA from maggots ~


A report just came out on grubs doing that much more in helping identify the circumstances and details of death. Sure, different flies' life cycles might help with the timing and location of death, but what about those really tough cases when you might not be able to even ID a body, or the body is gone but the grubs remain?  

Turns outs since maggots ingest the human cells, they also obviously ingest the human DNA as well, and scientists have just been able to isolate such DNA for the purposes of identifying a mystery body!

Read the press blurb here


AY



Monday, October 15, 2012

Urban bugs ~


For all you guys still trying to round out your collection, don't neglect the already dead bugs around and about the city - photographer Xavier Nuez certainly doesn't in his photo series glam-bugs.



Dead bugs can sometimes be "re-hydrated" to be pined out and  go into a collection so why not catch a few?

AY

Thursday, October 11, 2012

Video of Lord Howe Stick Insect Nymph Hatching

So after reading the article about the stick insects found on Balls Pyramid, I did a little research, just to get a bit of context and I stumbled upon this video of one of the nymphs in the zoo hatching!

When it first emerges, it seems like just a strange green glob, and even after the majority of it's body is out, the rest of it is all legs, and (well, to me) it got a little frustrating watching it struggle to pull them out. 


Lord Howe Island Stick Insect hatching from Zoos Victoria on Vimeo.

Originally seen in an npr article.


Also, in case you were wondering what Balls Pyramid looks like, it really is all cliff:
-Kelsey

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

The Litter Bug

By artist Mark Oliver, who creates and names his own bugs made out of everyday objects.



For more: Here

-Tim L

Monday, October 8, 2012

The Ant Colony Revealed.



 Over the course of three days, scientists pumped 10 tons of concrete into an ant hill.  After letting it set, the colony was excavated, revealing a structure of staggering complexity covering 50 square meters and running 8 meters deep. The ants who built this particular colony moved out 40 tons of earth in the process of construction, with each worker carrying three times his own weight in soil on each trip. According to the video, it is the ant equivalent of building the Great Wall.
A vast complex city-state with tubular roads and air vents and bulbous extensions, it looks space age in the contained environment manner of Charles De Gaul International airport with its connected travel tubes and pods.  It calls to mind Frank Herbert’s Dune with its underground drug mining society and giant worms.  These are the Invisible Cities that Italo Calvino didn’t write about. 


- Alexandra

Thursday, October 4, 2012

Songs of Swoon


We've been talking a lot about insect calls, mating, and sexual selection the last couple of weeks. Indeed, interest in chirping crickets and katy-diding katydids is literally in the air. Here is a brief reflection by Diane Ackerman last week in the NY Times.

(illustration by Celyn Brazier)

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Praying Mantis Eggs

I got a female praying mantis a few weeks back and it was pretty pregnant with a large abdomen, so I decided to keep it alive. Well, she laid her eggs on the inside of a shoebox and plastic wrap. I'm going to put the eggs somewhere hopefully safe outside.




-Tim L.