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Entomology

A drone bee rests on the finger of Sheldon Brummel, Master Beekeeping Project Coordinator for the Bee Lab. Judy Wu-Smart, Associate Professor in Entomology, has USDA-NIFA funding for bee keeping and educational training kits. July 1, 2022. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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Judy Wu-Smart, Associate Professor in Entomology, has USDA-NIFA funding for bee keeping and educational training kits. July 1, 2022. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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Judy Wu-Smart, Associate Professor in Entomology, has USDA-NIFA funding for bee keeping and educational training kits. July 1, 2022. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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A frame from a beehive is covered in bees. The holes are made as new bees emerge after being born. Judy Wu-Smart, Associate Professor in Entomology, has USDA-NIFA funding for bee keeping and educational training kits. July 1, 2022. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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Judy Wu-Smart, Associate Professor in Entomology, has USDA-NIFA funding for bee keeping and educational training kits. July 1, 2022. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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Georgina Bingham, research associate professor of entomology at Nebraska, holds an airtight, insect-resistant storage bag known as a ZeroFly® Hermetic bag with insecticide incorporated to prevent damaging pest infestations. She led the development of the bags while working for the Swiss company Vestergaard. It reduces the loss of seeds or grains that can be consumed, stored for security, or sold for optimized prices. It is said to be free of the hazards associated with fumigation or the potential for pesticide residues that come from inaccurate insecticide spraying. The insecticide is incorporated into individual fibers of the bags, which provides a killing action before insects can infest the grain or seed packed in the bag a bag. May 26, 2022. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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A Monarch butterfly rests on Miyauna Incarnato’s hand. Incarnato is a graduate student in Entomology studying Monarch butterflies. March 8, 2022. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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A Monarch butterfly rests on Miyauna Incarnato’s hand. Incarnato is a graduate student in Entomology studying Monarch butterflies. March 8, 2022. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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A Monarch butterfly rests on the flower of a tropical milkweed in an East Campus greenhouse. Miyauna Incarnato is a graduate student in Entomology studying Monarch butterflies. March 8, 2022. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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A Monarch butterfly rests on Miyauna Incarnato’s hand. Incarnato is a graduate student in Entomology studying Monarch butterflies. March 8, 2022. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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A Monarch butterfly flies out of Miyauna Incarnato’s hand in an East Campus greenhouse full of tropical milkweed. Incarnato is a graduate student in Entomology studying Monarch butterflies. March 8, 2022. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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Blessing Ademokoya, a doctoral candidate in entomology, poses with the state museum’s collection of stink bugs. Ademokoya collected more than 3,000 of the various varieties of the bug that inhabit Nebraska. December 7, 2021. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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A tray of tiger beetles among the sample drawers in Entomology Hall. Steve Spomer, a research technician with the University of Nebraska–Lincoln’s Department of Entomology, will retire in December after 40 years with the university. November 5, 2020. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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A tray of tiger beetles among the sample drawers in Entomology Hall. Steve Spomer, a research technician with the University of Nebraska–Lincoln’s Department of Entomology, will retire in December after 40 years with the university. November 5, 2020. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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Steve Spomer, a research technician with the University of Nebraska–Lincoln’s Department of Entomology, will retire in December after 40 years with the university. He holds a tray of tiger beetles, his specialty, among the sample drawers in Entomology Hall. November 5, 2020. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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Butterfly art by Mia Luong, a graduate student in entomology, creates intricate 3D insect art in her free time. She plans to use the art to raise funds for the Bruner Club. July 8, 2020. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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Mia Luong, a graduate student in entomology, creates intricate 3D insect art in her free time. She plans to use the art to raise funds for the Bruner Club. July 8, 2020. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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Scorpion art by Mia Luong, a graduate student in entomology, creates intricate 3D insect art in her free time. She plans to use the art to raise funds for the Bruner Club. July 8, 2020. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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Butterfly and dragonfly art by Mia Luong, a graduate student in entomology, creates intricate 3D insect art in her free time. She plans to use the art to raise funds for the Bruner Club. July 8, 2020. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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Dragonfly art by Mia Luong, a graduate student in entomology, creates intricate 3D insect art in her free time. She plans to use the art to raise funds for the Bruner Club. July 8, 2020. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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Joe Louis, Harold and Esther Edgerton assistant professor of entomology at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln, has earned a five-year, $1.5 million Faculty Early Career Development Program award from the National Science Foundation to continue his research into helping sorghum naturally resist sugarcane aphids. Photo by Jeff Wilkerson / Research and Economic Development.
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Nebraska’s Joe Louis, assistant professor of Entomology, is testing the resistance of aphids to various varieties of sorghum and corn. A wire is adhered to an aphid's back with conductive paint. A plant is given an electric charge. As the aphid sucks the sugars in the plant, the electric flow increases and is measured. On aphid-resistant plants, the current barely registers. Louis holds a dish of leaves infested by corn-leaf aphids. Louis and his colleagues have found that spraying a corn plant with one of its own defensive compounds might reduce aphid colonization by as much as 30 percent. The lab setup is at left. February 22, 2019. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication
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Joe Louis, assistant professor of Entomology, is testing the resistance of aphids to various varieties of sorghum and corn. A wire is adhered to an aphid's back with conductive paint. The plant is given an electric charge. As the aphid sucks the sugars in the plant, the electric flow increases and is measured.  On aphid-resistant plants, the current barely registers. Louis holds up a collection of leaves infested by corn-leaf aphids. Louis and his colleagues have found that spraying a corn plant with one of its own defensive compounds might reduce aphid colonization by as much as 30 percent. The lab setup is at left. February 22, 2019. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication.
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Nebraska’s Joe Louis, assistant professor of Entomology, is testing the resistance of aphids to various varieties of sorghum and corn. A wire is adhered to an aphid's back with conductive paint. A plant is given an electric charge. As the aphid sucks the sugars in the plant, the electric flow increases and is measured. On aphid-resistant plants, the current barely registers. Louis holds a dish of leaves infested by corn-leaf aphids. Louis and his colleagues have found that spraying a corn plant with one of its own defensive compounds might reduce aphid colonization by as much as 30 percent. The lab setup is at left. February 22, 2019. Photo by Craig Chandler / University Communication
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cchandler2@unl.edu
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