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Channel: Entomology – Harvard Gazette
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Beetle mania

Grain weevils alone cost the global economy about $35 billion, or a third of the world’s grain crop, every year. Various other beetle species damage dozens of crops including bamboo, palm trees,...

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E.O. Wilson, “Ant Man”

E. O. Wilson reflects on insect societies, human society, and the importance of biodiversity.

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How ant (and human) societies might grow

Pellegrino University Professor Emeritus Edward O. Wilson remains fascinated with the highly organized societies of ants, bees, wasps, termites, and humans. He and Bert Holldobler, with whom he shared...

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Dominican insects make natural art

It’s the brilliant colors and otherworldly shapes of the Dominican insects that catch the eye and draw a viewer in. It’s the alien forms magnified for all to see clearly that keeps one standing before...

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Dominican insects, digitized

It’s the brilliant colors and otherworldly shapes of the Dominican insects that catch the eye and draw a viewer in. It’s the alien forms magnified for all to see clearly that keeps one standing before...

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Ants are surprisingly ancient, arising 140-168 million years ago

Ants are considerably older than previously believed, having originated 140 million to 168 million years ago, according to new Harvard University research published in the journal Science. But these...

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Beetles’ past tells volumes about tropical evolution

Experts seeking to explain the amazing diversity of the tropical rain forest have typically done so in two ways, viewing forests as either “evolutionary cradles” that encourage the rapid development...

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Sweeping for Thompson Island Hoppers

Education meets hands-on science as roughly 100 Harvard undergraduates fan out from beach to beach collecting insects for a new database of Harbor Island insect life.

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Fruit fly bouts show gender-specific styles

Fighting like a girl or fighting like a boy is hardwired into fruit fly neurons, according to a study in the Nov. 19 Nature Neuroscience advance online publication by a research team from Harvard...

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The pine beetle’s tale

Researchers at Harvard Medical School and the University of Wisconsin, Madison, have discovered how beetles and bacteria form a symbiotic and mutualistic relationship — one that ultimately results in...

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E.O. Wilson And Will Wright: Ant Lovers Unite!

Ants make some people cringe — but for E. O. Wilson and Will Wright, they provide never-ending fascination. Biologist E. O. Wilson, professor emeritus at Harvard University, is a two-time...

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Orphan army ants join nearby colonies

Colonies of army ants, whose long columns and marauding habits are the stuff of natural-history legend, are usually antagonistic to each other, attacking soldiers from rival colonies in border...

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Tracking insects for work and play

Gary Alpert spends a lot of time bringing ants to Harvard. He travels the world to exotic locations, collecting specimens in efforts that draw praise from eminent ant biologist Edward O. Wilson. On...

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‘Search until you find a passion and go all out to excel in its expression’

Experience is a series of interviews with Harvard faculty covering the reasons they became teachers and scholars, and the personal journeys, missteps included, behind their professional success. First...

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Baltic amber specimens to be returned to Königsberg collection

Ricardo Pérez-de la Fuente held up a piece of ancient amber, peering at the 40-million-year-old insect inside. Preserved whole after being trapped in sap that hardened over millennia, the...

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Genetics decide just how social the halictid bee can be

If you ask most people what they know about bees, you’re likely to get answers ranging from their favorite type of honey to stories about their worst stinging experiences. As it turns out, not all bees...

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A passion for nature, in a massive beetle collection

For those bitten by the beetle bug, Harvard’s Museum of Comparative Zoology (MCZ) just got a bit more interesting. Already one of North America’s premier natural history collections, with 25 million...

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E.O. Wilson urges a melding of humanities, sciences

Like Raymond Carver’s blind man in “Cathedral,” the entomologist Edward O. Wilson inspires readers to regard the world through an entirely uncommon lens, never more so than in his latest book, “The...

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