Lemon tree borer, Oemona hirta
Knobbled orbweaver, Socca pustulosa
Torpedo bug, Siphanta acuta
Common garden katydid, Caedicia simplex, with spermatophore attached
I'd rather not leave David Seymour at the top of my feed, so here are some far more delightful creatures that I've seen in our lovely little city of Εtautahi this year.
20.12.2024 10:16 β π 8 π 1 π¬ 0 π 0
I'm taking a few week's break from social media. Happy holidays to those of you who take them at this time of year. See you in January!
20.12.2024 09:32 β π 5 π 1 π¬ 0 π 0
A slide mounted cunaxid mite, Cunaxa capreolus, collected from leaf litter in northern California recently. Only 0.5 mm long, but sure to strike fear into the hearts of the litter springtails it might have encountered.
29.11.2024 17:35 β π 17 π 3 π¬ 1 π 0
20 years ago we were suing teenagers for millions of dollars because they were torrenting a single Metallica album and now billionaires are demanding the free right to every work in history, so that they can re-sell it.
The law only ever serves capital.
08.01.2024 16:34 β π 27352 π 13763 π¬ 189 π 239
βWooden carving of a crab with protruding eyes and eight bent legs. Each leg is composed of two pieces of wood, nailed together, and the legs are immovable. The body and legs are painted red, and the face is painted in red, black, and white.β
βThese articulated characters are known as dΕugΜ±weβ treasures (as are the theatrical dances in which they appear). The Kwakwakaβwakw have a history of puppetry related to their ceremonial feasts. The winter potlatches are known for their spectacular performances, suffused with cultural teachings and supernatural content, such as the coming of Winalagalis, the supernatural warrior. Dances and songs associated with Winalagalis include the tuxwβid, which is performed by women, who have the power and rights to make the dΕugΜ±weβ treasures (puppets) come to life. For instance, a tuxwβid dancer could summon a crustacean to life, on invisible cords, in the flickering firelight.β
front-facing view of the crab puppet showing face
For #Crustmas on #Woodensday:
gamisida dΕugwe' ( #Crab Puppet)
Kwakwaka'wakw, BC, Canada, before 1952
Painted wood 11.4x22.9x67.9cm
UBC MOA
collection-online.moa.ubc.ca/search/item?...
#FirstNationsArt #NativeAmericanArt
The Kwakwakaβwakw have a history of puppetry related to ceremonial feasts.
18.12.2024 18:28 β π 234 π 77 π¬ 4 π 3
Even the street lamps in Lyme Regis are ammonite themed.
17.12.2024 11:30 β π 11 π 1 π¬ 1 π 0
Pink on black sign showing a naked woman riding on the back of a beetle.
This sign, marking the side entrance to the 58th Street jazz bar speakeasy in Peckham, raises more questions than it answers.
15.12.2024 14:27 β π 44 π 12 π¬ 4 π 4
A photograph of a round, hard-bodied mite covered in very long, barbed spines.
Today I found this impressive mite in some leaf litter.
Oribatids are masters of self-protection: they've evolved protective armour flaps, some wear their old moults on their back like shields, and this Neotrichozetes spinulosa has instead opted to become a sentient pincushion!
π§ͺ #Invertebrates
18.12.2024 08:56 β π 350 π 70 π¬ 8 π 2
Question for British people: Have you ever heard or used the word 'pottle', and if so what do you think it means?
18.12.2024 04:47 β π 3 π 0 π¬ 5 π 0
Supporting trans and nonbinary ornithologists: WOS2022 DEIJ recap β The McLaughlin Lab
This blog post is a little different than my previous ones. I recently was invited to facilitate a discussion for the 2022 Wilson Ornithological Society meeting on trans and nonbinary inclusion in o...
okay since apparently this is turning into my Stuff I've Written (or helped write) about Trans Inclusion in STEM, a few more things. here's a recap of a presentation I did for @wilsonornithsoc.bsky.social back at the 2022 conference.
yes, conference organizers, you too can organize a similar one!
04.12.2024 17:30 β π 18 π 6 π¬ 0 π 0
Trans inclusion in the biology classroom β The McLaughlin Lab
One of my favorite parts of working at a university is getting to teach. I find biology utterly fascinating and magical, and getting to impart that to students is an incredible joy. Although I donβt c...
looking over the arguments also is a good (by which i mean viscerally horrifying) example of why there's a *specific* need for those of us who teach biology to be explicit in how we talk about sex and gender. so much transphobic rhetoric gains a foothold bc of misconceptions of biology + genetics
04.12.2024 17:24 β π 24 π 13 π¬ 1 π 2
Thanks Chris!
12.12.2024 09:48 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0
Thanks Jitte!
12.12.2024 09:48 β π 1 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0
Thanks John. That looks very useful. Much appreciated!
12.12.2024 04:57 β π 1 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0
Irish Butterfly Monitoring Scheme β National Biodiversity Data Centre
The Irish National Biodiversity Data Centre runs a citizen scientist project monitoring butterfly populations, so you should find some useful information here: biodiversityireland.ie/surveys/butt...
11.12.2024 11:36 β π 3 π 1 π¬ 1 π 0
"Sugaring" would be an excellent iNaturalist project but I just checked for such and couldn't find anything.
11.12.2024 11:09 β π 4 π 1 π¬ 0 π 0
Thanks Steve!
11.12.2024 10:20 β π 1 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0
I generally get ground cover, soil type, digital location coords etc. when looking for ants π§ͺ
Iβm going improve my metadata for next year to include:
Temperature
Humidity
Wind speed (tiny anemometer from eBay)
Cloud cover
Soil moisture
Going to revisit Darwin Core & look for relevant fields
11.12.2024 10:10 β π 1 π 1 π¬ 1 π 0
Making a case for compassionate entomology
Here, I make a case for something that I call compassionate entomology, which is a way of studying insects and other arthropods that upholds the intrinsic value and welfare interests of the individβ¦
π¦ Is it time for entomology to embrace compassion? This compelling read challenges traditional practices, urging us to study arthropods with care for their welfare and intrinsic value. πͺ²
#entomology #compassion #ecocentrism #conservation
blog.ecologicalcitizen.net/2024/12/10/m...
11.12.2024 09:03 β π 8 π 3 π¬ 0 π 0
Sorry, I should have been clearer that I was referring to *terrestrial* invertebrate monitoring, but I'd happy to hear about wetter places too.
11.12.2024 09:58 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0
I'd be interested to hear from anyone doing regular repeated invertebrate #monitoring about what other #metadata you record when you visit your sites.
11.12.2024 09:32 β π 5 π 2 π¬ 2 π 0
A photograph of a collection of elongated lollipop-shaped brown fruiting bodies of slime mold on a dead log surface.
A photograph of a pair of balloon/lollipop-shaped white fruiting bodies of slime mold on a dead log surface.
A photograph of a collection of balloon/lollipop-shaped black fruiting bodies of slime mold on a dead log surface.
A photograph of a single balloon/lollipop-shaped orange fruiting body of slime mold on a dead log surface.
Slime molds may resemble fungi, but are in fact a distinct group of unrelated organisms.
Although they're single-celled organisms, they'll also perform an astonishing feat of cooperation - gathering together as a collective βorganismβ to form amazing fruiting bodies.
Which is your favourite? π§ͺπ
11.12.2024 08:47 β π 272 π 58 π¬ 11 π 6
Around 9,000 species have already gone extinct in Australia and weβll likely lose another this week β new study
β¬οΈhttps://theconversation.com/
10.12.2024 20:00 β π 54 π 26 π¬ 6 π 2
Can anyone point me in the direction of a standardised repeatable method for surveying #butterflies? If it makes a difference, it should be easy for non-experts to follow and be suitable for urban / suburban conditions. Thank you so much!
11.12.2024 09:05 β π 2 π 0 π¬ 3 π 0
Thank you so much everyone. I will report back when I've tried some of these methods in New Zealand conditions. I'm looking forward to trying this out.
11.12.2024 09:03 β π 1 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0
I look forward to hearing more about it.
11.12.2024 08:55 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0
I'm interested in beetles too, all insects in fact. What else is sugaring good for?
11.12.2024 08:53 β π 1 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0
Here's something you don't see every day. An entire school classroom on the back of a truck, waiting to be moved to a new location. The ultimate in recycling!
11.12.2024 08:48 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0
Thanks Pieter
Much appreciated!
10.12.2024 08:49 β π 2 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0
plant-insect-microbe interactions, ecological immunology
ππ¦π±π¬π§ͺπ§«π¦ π§¬
https://scholar.google.co.uk/citations?user=dhgQArwAAAAJ&hl=en
Assistant Prof at Dalhousie University β Faculty of Agriculture. Researching the importance of insect biodiversity for ecosystem health. Here - mostly science, art, running, and the occasional book.
Researcher at NIMR Tanzania, GLP Coordinator
Medical entomology and Parasitology, Field Veterinarian.
Vector ecology and control, Blackflies and Mosquitoes. Insecticide resistance and Evaluation on the effectiveness and efficacy of ITNs and IRS products.
PhD Student: Understanding and reversing the decline of moorland moths in the UK | Scotland's Rural College (SRUC) | Aberdeen
https://www.linkedin.com/in/laura-sharp-7636a6108?utm_source=share&utm_campaign=share_via&utm_content=profile&utm_medium=andr
Ken Schneider; pathologist and California-based naturalist and microscopist on a mission to document the diversity of tiny and/or obscure invertebrates and cryptogams (lichens, mosses) living in western North America.
Teaches, studies spiders, practices yoga, drinks coffee, eats chocolate, faculty member at Piedmont University
she/her/hers
behavioural ecologist studying burying beetles for my PhD at the University of Edinburgh. Always looking for insects. (he / him).
Entomologist | Rove beetle taxonomy & systematics | Museum collections & biodiversity | PhD exploring beetle-termite relationships πͺ²
https://jordanraineyento.wordpress.com
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Jordan-Rainey
Associate Professor in Ecology at Northumbria University, UK
Pollinators ππ¦πΈ
Conservation
Urban ecology
Ecological networks
#wiasn
Personal account | She/her
Ecological Horticulture. Public servant. Pollination ecology. Harvard Loeb Fellow. American Horticultural Society. X-Brooklyn Bridge Park. TED talker.
I have a newsletter! www.rebeccamcmackin.com/newsletter
Entomologist, Assoc. Prof. @WUR Biosystematics Group | Evolution of species interactions | #plant-insect egg interactions, egg #parasitoid host interactions, #plant receptor #insect ligand arms races, #symbionts #macrophotography
www.ninafatouros.nl
Scientist at the John Innes Centre. Molecular Plant-Microbe-Insect Interactions. Loves travelling, reading and hiking. Location : Norwich, UK. Website: https://www.jic.ac.uk/people/saskia-hogenhout/
Plant Pathologist and Entomologist.
Researcher at Cinvestav interested in #Drosophila and #Mosquito immunity, pathogen microbiome interactions, metabolism | Pew Latin American Fellow | Postdoc at Johns Hopkins University | Mexican
Insect virology | Host-pathogen interactions | mosquitoes | RNA biology
Our focus is to understand the mechanisms that allow zoonotic, sylvatic arthropod-borne viruses to jump species boundaries and cause disease. Shared lab account
Professor and Chairperson
Department of Entomology, Michigan State University
Opinions are mine.
I π€ entomology (I rear beetles; especially stag and flower beetles), Border Morris dancing, hiking, sewing, crafting, folklore and horror.
I have a PhD in Molecular Biology that focussed on plant and insect semiochemicals. She/her.
Goth, innit
Data & dev by day, general nerd by night. Interests range from astronomy to astacology and entomology to etymology, but especially botany, dipterology, and ichthyology.
Ph.D. student - Linksvayer lab | Arizona State University | Social Insects, Development, Evolution | he/him
ππ