Cheshire

29 posts · 43,587 views

Cheshire
29 posts

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  • April 6, 2010
  • 02:00 PM
  • 933 views

Building Robots to Infiltrate Societies

by Cheshire in Cheshire


A bunch of scientists build robots which blend in with a society by learning their languages and customs. The intention of these robots is to subvert the societies by changing the how the locals think and act.
Sounds like something from a bad sci-fi movie, right? A Tea Party speech, perhaps?

Welcome to the world of pest [...]... Read more »

Halloy, J., Sempo, G., Caprari, G., Rivault, C., Asadpour, M., Tache, F., Said, I., Durier, V., Canonge, S., Ame, J.... (2007) Social Integration of Robots into Groups of Cockroaches to Control Self-Organized Choices. Science, 318(5853), 1155-1158. DOI: 10.1126/science.1144259  

  • March 22, 2010
  • 10:39 AM
  • 1,170 views

Aphids have mutualistic viruses!

by Cheshire in Cheshire


Aphids can be a pain in the ass to gardeners and farmers. Although they look pretty harmless, they’re to plants what mosquitoes are to people and more. They transmit some pretty serious diseases which cause millions of dollars in damage per year. They’re also famous for their fecundity-they’re parthenogenic and their daughters are actually born [...]... Read more »

  • March 1, 2010
  • 09:33 AM
  • 1,089 views

Small Hive Beetle Biocontrol

by Cheshire in Cheshire


Insect control in Apiaries is really difficult. Your product is an insect which pollinates crops, and it’s very valuable. Strawberries, blueberries, peppers, broccoli…you name a food and it’s probably pollinated by honeybees. They’re valuable. Really valuable. Like you and I would be dead without them valuable. Using pesticides around your bee colonies is a really [...]... Read more »

J. D. Ellis, S. Spiewok, K. S. Delaplane, S. Buchholz, P. Neumann, and W. L. Tedders. (2010) Susceptibility of Aethina tumida (Coleoptera: Nitidulidae) Larvae and Pupae to Entomopathogenic Nematodes. The Journal of Economic Entomology. info:/

  • February 11, 2010
  • 04:09 AM
  • 926 views

Washing Methods to Kill Bed Bugs

by Cheshire in Cheshire


Bed bug infestations are on the rise. I live in a college town, and you hear about them every once and awhile. They’re not super-common here in Iowa, but you hear about them from time to time. I’ve helped friends spray their houses for them before, so I know they’re around.
One of the things which [...]... Read more »

Naylor, R. A.; Boase, C. J. (2010) Practical Solutions for Treating Laundry Infested With Cimex lectularius (Hemiptera: Cimicidae) . The Journal of Economic Entomology. info:/

  • December 30, 2009
  • 12:59 PM
  • 939 views

Using Mosquitoes to ‘Smartbomb’ Breeding Grounds

by Cheshire in Cheshire


So let’s continue the theme of the AWESOME papers I ran across this semester and didn’t get to blog about. I find every aspect of this paper to be simply cool. There’s also something which kind of ground my gears a bit, but I’ll get to that later if I have time this week.
Controlling mosquitoes [...]... Read more »

Devine, G., Perea, E., Killeen, G., Stancil, J., Clark, S., & Morrison, A. (2009) Using adult mosquitoes to transfer insecticides to Aedes aegypti larval habitats. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 106(28), 11530-11534. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0901369106  

  • December 28, 2009
  • 11:00 AM
  • 1,750 views

Do bats REALLY eat mosquitoes?

by Cheshire in Cheshire


One of the debates a lot of entomologists have is whether bats actually have an impact on mosquito populations. Sure, we hear all the time that bats eat mosquitoes, but there are good reasons to doubt this. I’ve had this discussion with instructors before and there’s really no consensus.

We know bats occasionally eat mosquitoes. They [...]... Read more »

  • December 18, 2009
  • 11:56 AM
  • 1,080 views

Preventing release of alarm pheromones increases homosexual pairing in bed bugs.

by Cheshire in Cheshire


I really don’t think it’s possible to write a boring post on bed bugs. The way in which they reproduce is simply one of the most bizzarre…and brutal…methods of insemination in the animal kingdom. One of my favorite webcomics, Dinosaur Comics described their reproduction quite well:

I also like writing about the biological basis behind sexual [...]... Read more »

  • December 15, 2009
  • 09:20 PM
  • 1,356 views

Insects use tools, but do they self-medicate?

by Cheshire in Cheshire

There’s a variety of things insects do that could rightly be considered tool use. Some ants will drop liquid in sand and carry the sand to the nest. Others will use their larvae to construct their leaf-houses…they essentially use their children as oversized glue-guns. If you live in Iowa, those big black wasps which you see flitting around on flowers (Sphecid wasps of the genus Sphex, which are understandably confused with Pompillids) will actually close their nests by pounding them........ Read more »

  • July 3, 2009
  • 02:56 PM
  • 1,307 views

More fun with bees and fruit…guess what keeps them from stinging you?

by Cheshire in Cheshire


Awhile ago, I wrote a post about honeybee attack pheromones. It’s a strange coincidence that the chemical that makes things taste like bananas cues bees into attack. Well, in this issue of Medical Entomology (which has some other cool articles that I might blag about), some scientists looked a chemical that keeps bees from attacking.
I’m [...]... Read more »

  • May 30, 2009
  • 11:19 AM
  • 1,492 views

Plasmodium gets caught in the fight betwen mosquitoes and their gutflora.

by Cheshire in Cheshire

I haven’t been blogging that much lately, and to be honest with you it’s a 50/50 combination between blogger’s block and a heavy workload…I’ve been working 60 hours a week while studying for the GRE, looking for graduate school positions and having something resembling a social life.

Still, though…I’ve been keeping up on my reading. I’ve [...]... Read more »

  • May 12, 2009
  • 10:51 AM
  • 1,737 views

Native aquatic insects may save lives.

by Cheshire in Cheshire

Conservation is very important, even something as seemingly insignificant as insects. Most people don’t realize exactly how important bees are to our everyday activities, and most people certainly don’t think twice about those strange black and white bugs they find in their pool. However, a study that came out in the most recent issue of [...]... Read more »

Carlson, John C., Dyer, Lee A., Omlin, Franscois X., & Beier, John C. (2009) Diversity Cascades and Malaria Vectors. Journal of Medical Entomology, 46(3), 460-464.

  • May 5, 2009
  • 12:00 AM
  • 1,334 views

Native bees...good for the economy

by Cheshire in Cheshire

Most folks associate bees with honey production because that’s the bee product they’re most familiar with. Believe it or not, most of the stuff you have in your fridge is just as much the product of apiculture. Most of the money brought in by beekeepers doesn’t actually come from honey-that’s a very common misconception. Instead, most of the money brought in from apiculture comes from a service that’s far more important-crop pollination.

It’s something we take for granted, really......... Read more »

J. M. Kasina1, J. Mburu, M. Kraemer and K. Holm-Mueller. (2009) Economic Benefit of Crop Pollination by Bees: A Case of Kakamega Small-Holder Farming in Western Kenya. Journal of Economic Entomology, 102(2), 467-473.

  • April 20, 2009
  • 10:52 AM
  • 1,745 views

Tom Short, Fruitless and homosexuality

by Cheshire in Cheshire

Aaaah, springtime at Iowa State. You know what that means…the flowers are out, birds are singing, bugs are just starting to emerge from hibernation…and Tom Short comes to Campus.

I’ve no respect for this man…if you look around the interwebs, you can find articles that claim he said things like ‘Hitler didn’t go far enough’. I [...]... Read more »

  • March 2, 2009
  • 09:47 AM
  • 2,062 views

Traumatic insemination and sexual conflict.

by Cheshire in Cheshire

PZ Myers over at Pharyngula has a great picture of a spiny beetle phallus. It’s a wicked, mace-like thing that is used to hold onto the female during mating. It’s also a great example of how we as humans tend to be biased by our own experiences.

You see, sex for us is incredibly fun and [...]... Read more »

  • February 26, 2009
  • 11:00 AM
  • 1,830 views

Perhaps I should start asking Acacia trees for relationship advice?

by Cheshire in Cheshire

Acacia trees and ants have an interesting mutualistic relationship which is frequently used as a textbook example of a mutualism. The trees offer the ants hollow thorns in which to live and food to eat, and the ants protect the tree from herbivores, both insects and large mammals as well as vines which would overcrowd [...]... Read more »

  • February 12, 2009
  • 04:15 PM
  • 1,965 views

Some more details about Philornis downsi, a parasitic fly attacking Darwin’s finches

by Cheshire in Cheshire

Today is a great day in the science blogosphere. It’s Feburary 12, Charles Darwin’s 200th birthday. There are going to be a lot of evolution-related posts around everywhere…and that’s certainly great. I write about evolution quite a bit and I have another arthropod evolution related post rearing and ready to go later in the week. [...]... Read more »

  • February 10, 2009
  • 12:00 AM
  • 1,909 views

I missed last Friday’s bug pic so here are some critters from the Cambrian Lobopod-Arthropod transition.

by Cheshire in Cheshire

I haven’t posted any in-depth science articles for about a week for various reasons and it seems that I completely missed last Friday’s bug picture. Well…Charles Darwin’s 200th birthday is this week. So why don’t I show you some of the lobopod-arthropod transitional sequence?
... Read more »

  • January 22, 2009
  • 07:05 PM
  • 2,019 views

Don’t try to drown ticks. It just doesn’t work.

by Cheshire in Cheshire

Water is important to disease vector arthropods in many different ways. For some, this is obvious. Mosquitoes and blackflies need water to breed. A large amount of the effort that goes into controlling mosquitoes in malaria-ridden areas goes into researching where they breed after floods.

For others, it’s more subtle but still very important. Usually, most [...]... Read more »

  • January 16, 2009
  • 09:58 AM
  • 2,066 views

Bug Photo of The Week: Tachinid Growth Inside Bombyx Mori

by Cheshire in Cheshire

I always write about these cool parasitoids which eat the host from the inside out…but I rarely, if ever show pictures of the process. Let’s change that, shall we?

If you’re a regular reader of this weblog, you’ve seen me mention Compsilura concinnata before. It’s this neat little parasitoid fly which, unlike many parasitoids, can live [...]... Read more »

  • January 15, 2009
  • 01:33 PM
  • 1,913 views

Evolution of Tympanic Hearing Structures in Parasitoid Diptera

by Cheshire in Cheshire

Google books is a wonderful thing. You can find pretty much anything on there, at least in part. Quite a bit of the stuff you’ll find is missing some pages, but it’s definitely enough to learn from…or at least find a title of something you’re looking for or interested in. Today’s example: Insect Hearing

. Seriously…give [...]... Read more »

R. Lakes-Harlan, H. St lting, A. Stump. (1999) Convergent evolution of insect hearing organs from a preadaptive structure. Proceedings: Biological Sciences, 266(1424), 1161-1161. DOI: 10.1098/rspb.1999.0758  

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