Ar ais go Blagadóireacht!

Mar tá mé cinnte go atá tú faoi deara rudaí a bheith millteanach ciúin thart anseo don dá mhí anuas. An chuid is mó d'Eanáir bhí mé gnóthach le bogadh, ó San Francisco go Chicago. Ar an drochuair, bhí roinnt glaonna airgeadais diana a dhéanamh ar an bunús a bhí ag tacú le mo chuid oibre ag an Acadamh Eolaíochtaí na California agus bhí deireadh mo phost. Layoffs breise ag an CAS i gceist ach ní raibh aon bhealach dom chun fanacht ag an músaem – den sórt sin ar fud an domhain ephemeral de mhaoiniú taighde. Feicfidh mé chailleann an cairde iontach a rinne mé agus an tírdhreach California álainn, ceithre bliana cuileoga cinnte ag i flash. Gan amhras beidh mé rud éigin sa todhchaí nach bhfuil ró-i bhfad i gcéin a aimsiú (má tá a fhios agat rud ar bith in iúl dom!). Idir an dá linn is féidir liom díriú ar turgnamh le mo bhfearas grianghraf agus ag fáil leis na lámhscríbhinní a rinneadh a bhí ag crochadh thart ar feadh i bhfad ró-fhada.

Tá séasúr an earraigh / tornado ach timpeall an chúinne anseo i Chicagoland agus Sílim go bhfuil sé sábháilte a rá go bhfuil radhairc mar seo rud ar an am atá caite. Fan tiúnta le haghaidh nuashonruithe rialta, grianghraif nua, agus nuair a d'fhéadfadh liom a bheith ag bogadh go dtí seo chugainn!

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Seachtain Náisiúnta Leamhan 2012

The first annual Seachtain Náisiúnta Leamhan will be this summer, July 23-29, 2012! Is é seo an chéad imeacht dá leithéid i SAM (it has been popular in the UK for quite some time) agus is iarracht é seo chun daoine a spreagadh chun dul taobh amuigh agus iniúchadh a dhéanamh ar a gcuid fána leamhan nach mbreathnaítear orthu go minic. The US has an impressive moth diversity with over 11,000 described species, most of which people can’t name two of. As a citizen science project there will be teams of people submitting their records (photographs or lists) of moths found in yards across the country. If you read this blog you probably have enough interest to participate! This map lists events that are currently registeredhave one in your area? Contact that person and join in! There is also go leor of room to set up your own event. I’ll register in a few months when I figure out where I’ll be, but you can count on it being BYOB (beer a critical field supply).

Coincidentally the Moth Week corresponds with the Lepidopterists’ Society National Meeting being held this year in Denver, Colorado. Ar ndóigh, everyone will be headed out at night to look for moths. If you’re in Denver and want to see what it is we do, please get a hold of me, I will probably be attending the meeting this year.

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Vóta do Chaomhnú Siorcanna!

Fellow network blogger David Shiffman is in the final laps of a $10,000 dúshlán scoláireacht. Ní bheidh an t-airgead tacaíocht ach blogging David ag Eolaíocht Deiscirt Fried, ach taighde caomhnaithe Siorc (lena n-áirítear comórtas a ainm ar an siorc a bheidh sé chlib leis na cistí). Take a moment and vote for him, uair amháin gach 24 uair an chloig! He is currently in the lead with a decent %3 margin, let’s keep it that way.

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A Copper Butterfly in Disguise

For all intents and purposes this looks like a blue butterfly (as in subfamily Polyommatinae)… it’s very, very blue after all. But assumptions based on color would lead you down the incorrect road; as it turns out this butterfly is actually a species copper. There are subtle difference in wing shape and probably venation, but when I first saw these butterflies I assumed they were a sub-species of Plebejus icarioides (a were freisin flying at this location on the Kaibab Plateau). But then I began seeing female butterflies (thíos) interacting with these blues and then it dawned on meblue copperLycaena heteronea austin (Lycaenidae: Lycaeninae)!

This subspecies was originally described in 1998 by the late, iontach George T. Austin as An. heteronea rutila. Given however that rutila more or less = rutilus, it was later determined rutila was actually unavailable and the subspecies name was changed to austin in honor of George.

Grinter Lycaena heteroena austin

male Lycaena heteroena austin (Lycaenidae)

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female Lycaena heteroena austin

 

Bugs i Reno: ESA 2011

I’ve just returned from the annual Entomological Society of America conference in Reno, Nevada! Tá sé an gcruinniú is mó dá leithéid ar domhan, le níos mó ná 4,000 lucht freastail ó gach tráth den saol taighde feithidí. Tá mo leasanna i Systematics, cainteanna éabhlóid agus bithéagsúlacht – and I’ll try to recap a few of the fascinating presentations I attended over the next few weeks.

Of particular note was a wonderful talk given by the acclaimed bug blogger, Cailín Bug! It was wonderful to meet her in person and hear about her own experiences as a blogger. I encourage you to watch the draft of her talk yourself, if you haven’t already!

 

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Breithlá shona, Carl Sagan.

Ba chóir dúinn a cheiliúradh ar fad an lá seo le gníomh na heolaíochta nó amhras. Plandaí an síol fiosrúcháin agus smaointeoireacht chriticiúil, nó a chur i láthair a leathnú do dhearcadh féin. Bhí mé suas roimh breacadh an lae ar maidin agus faire na réaltaí maidin céimnithe taobh thiar de na solas na gréine ag ardú. It brought to mind my elementary school science classroom and the scratchy VHS recordings of Cosmos we frequently watched. I have since been rapt by the wonder of our universe and our place amongst the stars.

 

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Éagsúlú Leamhain le fiacla

TaighdeBlogging.orgTá gach duine ar an eolas is dócha leis an múnla caighdeánach do moth nó féileacán – tuí-mhaith proboscis a bhaint neachtar bhfolach laistigh bláthanna. An chuid is mó de na Lepidoptera tar éis éagsúlú taobh leis an radaíocht de phlandaí angiosperm, bheith ar cheann de na horduithe is éagsúil agus flúirseach na beatha ar domhan. This paradigm however does not apply to the Micropterigidae, which represent not only the most basal lineage of the Lepidoptera, but are one of three families that have retained mandibles for grinding pollen or spores and rely on bryophytes, decaying organic matter or fungi as a larval host. Prior assumptions as to the diversity of this group were based on the vast age of the lineage (110 million years) and a buildup of ancient genera. A recent paper on the Japanese species of Micropterigidae by Yume Imada and her colleagues at Kyoto University provides evidence to the contrary and applies molecular techniques to test the hypothesis of allopatric speciation without niche shift.

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The authors traveled to 46 localities across the Japanese archipelago and collected all 16 known endemic species, a few new species, and quite possibly a new genus. Finding these moths in the wild is not all that difficult if you know how to find the habitat and how not to fall off slippery rocks; but once you do find the spot the moths can be abundant. Micropterigidae are unsurprisingly associated with their bryophytes, which occur in moist habitats along streams and rivers. The very nature of a minute and slow moving animal in isolated pockets lends itself to allopatric speciation. Many microlepidoptera barely fly off of their host plant and even when they do they are not known for long distance dispersal. While the majority of genera and species are completely isolated across Japan there are a few instances where the genus Paramartyria occurs within populations of Issikiomartyria. While it is unknown precisely how these species might partition their host resources it is very likely to be a temporal difference in life-cycles. Here in California there is a vastly confusing complex of Apodemia butterflies that comprise a handful of species and (of course) subspecies that are partitioned on the same plant by spring and fall breeding seasons.

Impressively, every micropterigid collected as larvae were found only on the Conocephalum conicum species of liverwort, in spite of there being up to fourteen other bryophyte species available in the same habitat. It had been long understood that the Asian Micropterigidae fed on liverworts, but the extent of their host specificity had never been quantified. Feeding behavior appears to be the same across all of the surveyed species, with caterpillars grazing along the top of the bryophytes consuming the upper tissue layers.

Phylogenetic analysis of the COI, 18S and EF-1α genes generated highly congruent trees using multiple analytical methods. It appears that the endemic Japanese genera and the Conocephalum feeding strategy form a well supported monophyletic clade (in green). I mbeagán focal, the radiation of the host-specific Micropterigidae coincide with the separation, uplift, and isolation of the Japanese landmass roughly 20 milliún bliain ó shin. It could not have been difficult to propose the hypothesis that the diversity of the Japanese Micropterigidae could only be as old as the island itself; and it’s also an accepted fact today that allopatric speciation happens more commonly than once thought. But quantifying these theories and explaining how and why this happens is exactly what science is about.

Literature Cited

Imada Y, Kawakita A, & Kato M (2011). Allopatric distribution and diversification without niche shift in a bryophyte-feeding basal moth lineage (Lepidoptera: Micropterigidae). Proceedings. Biological sciences / The Royal Society, 278 (1721), 3026-33 PMID: 21367790

Scoble, MJ. (1992). An Lepidoptera: foirm, function, and diversity. Oxford Univ. Press.

 

Busy as a Moth

That’s how the saying goes, ceart? Two weeks ago I participated in the 5th annual National Geographic BioBlitz over in Saguaro National Park in Tucson, Arizona. It was a great excuse to get back into the field and it was the first time I collected Arizona in the fall. Temps were still pushing the mid 90’s but things had been dry and the impressive abundance of the monsoon season was long gone. In total my moth colleagues and I collected around 140 species of Lepidoptera, 56 of which were microleps! Sadly though it seems that either other insects were far and few inbetween, or other entomology teams didn’t carefully tally everything they saw. Amháin 190 arthropods were counted in totalwe lost to vascular plants (325 speicis) and even fungi (205)!

 

Seo chugaibh a short interview with me in a i ndáiríre hot tent with lots of kids (who must have given me this cold I now have). Perhaps my wild estimate of a possible 15,000 species in the US is on the high side, but it’s not dodhéanta.

 

 

Dé Luain Leamhan

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Maroga setiotricha (Xyloryctidae)

 

HAstráile ollmhór Eile “microlep”, (is dócha) Maroga setiotricha: Xylorictidae – a thomhas i ag 60mm. Le sciatháin mar seo ní mór dóibh a dhéanamh fliers formidable. According to the Xyloryctinae Moths of Australia blog the larvae are stem borers into Acacia sp. (Mimosaceae). Bailíodh an t-eiseamal i mí na Samhna na 1962 by Ed Ross in Canoona, Queensland.

Stink Bug stink

CNN Tá léim anois ar an bandwagon de bashing FOX-esque maoinithe eolaíochta. Tuairisceoir Erin Burnett “Tuarascálacha” ar mhaoiniú cónaidhme de $5.7 milliún dollar chun cabhrú le troid leis an ionrach Donn Marmorated stink Bug (Halys Halyomorpha). Tá searbhas Burnett ar beagnach tiubh go leor chun a bhriseadh i leibhéil SNL na ridiculousness, but she seems genuine in her distain for this story. It’s clear that in her mind the $5.7mil has been wasted on methods to keep these bugs away from overly sensitive suburbanites and out of your hair. A quick Google search for this insect yields a very informative page from PennState as result #1, and it even has great images of the damage these bugs can cause to crops. Back in reality, it is not surprising that the government would fund research on a potentially critical new invasive species, one that has already proven to be highly destructive to some of our nations most important (and lucrative) crops.