Cambridge Entomological Club, 1874


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Ent Club Meetings

We meet on the second Tuesday of each month at 7:30 pm in room 101 of Harvard University's Museum of Comparative Zoology, 26 Oxford Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 02138. Meetings are free and open to the public. Each meeting features a speaker. Occasionally a meeting entails other club business as well.

Please join us for dinner prior to the meeting. See the meeting announcement on this site's home page for location and further information.

Meetings are announced by email. Please contact us to be added to the distribution list for these announcements.

Sadly, due to price increases, the club cannot afford a Harvard parking permit any longer. (Harvard was asking $100 per meeting, and that was beyond our means.) Beginning in October 2006 we suggest using metered parking on Oxford Street or on Mass. Ave. Meters are in effect only through 6:00pm.

Suggestions for speakers and topics are welcome; send them to entclub@entclub.org.

Speakers are encouraged to submit material related to their talks to this web site: papers, slides, images, and data sets.

2007-2008

  • #1104 Tuesday, October 9th, 2007
    Rod Eastwood, Harvard University
    Unusual ant associations in the Australian Lycaenidae
  • #1105 Tuesday, November 13th, 2007
    The impact of disturbances on ant species richness
    Amy Mertle, Boston University
  • #1106 Tuesday, December 11th, 2007
    Interactions between invasive species: woolly adelgid, elongate scale, and the fate of New England's hemlock forests
    Evan Preisser, University of Rhode Island
  • #1107 Tuesday, January 8th, 2008
    Grouping behavior in whirligig beetles (Gyrinidae)
    William L. Romey
  • #1108 Tuesday, February 12th, 2008
    Soft-bodied insects and the robots that emulate them
    Barry Trimmer, Tufts University
  • #1109 Tuesday, March 11th, 2008
    Why Bees Die: Forensic Insights into Honeybee Losses
    Jay Evans, USDA
  • #1110 Tuesday, April 8th, 2008
    You eat what you are: Toward a global nutritional ecology
    Mike Kaspari, University of Oklahoma
  • #1111 Tuesday, May xxth, 2008
    Title
    Speaker

    2006-2007

    • #1097 Tuesday, October 10th, 2006
      Caddisflies of the St. Lawrence River: Fall and Rise of the Great Swarms
      D. Bruce Conn, Berry College
    • #1098 Tuesday, November 14th, 2006
      Ecology and evolution of endemic Galapagos birds and their ectoparasites: A model for studying parasite diversification
      Dr. Noah K. Whiteman, Harvard University
    • #1099 Tuesday, December 12th, 2006
      Natal Habitat Use by Dragonflies Along an Urbanization Gradient in Rhode Island
      Maria Aliberti, University of Rhode Island
    • #1100 Tuesday, February 13th, 2007
      The intertwined populaton biology of symbiotic ants and plants in the Amazon
      Megan Frederickson, Harvard University
    • #1101 Tuesday, March 13th, 2007
      Astonishing Army Ants: The Most Important Predators in Neotropical Forests (DVD showing)
      Carl Rettenmeyer, University of Connecticut
    • #1102 Tuesday, April 10th, 2007
      Managing vector-borne diseases so as to minimize effects on nontarget insects
      Dr. Howie Ginsberg, USGS Patuxent Wildlife Research Center and URI Dept. of Plant Science and Entomology
    • #1103 Tuesday, May 8th, 2007
      The Behavior of Leaf-Eating Caterpillars
      Bernd Heinrich

    2005-2006

    • #1090 Tuesday, October 11th, 2005
      Boston Harbor Islands All Taxa Biotic Inventory
      Jessica Rykken, Harvard University
    • #1091 Tuesday, November 8th, 2005
      The Smaller Majority
      Piotr Naskrecki, Conservation International
    • #1092 Tuesday, December 13th, 2005
      Giant Lacewings of the Eocene
      Bruce Archibald, Harvard University
    • #1093 Tuesday, February 14th, 2006
      Patterns of Herbivory in a Seasonal Old World Tropical Forest
      David Lohman, Harvard University
    • #1094 Tuesday, March 14th, 2006
      Recognition systems: kin and communication, mates and mobile homes
      Philip T. B. Starks, Tufts Univerity
    • #1095 Tuesday, April 11th, 2006
      Dino Martins, Harvard University
    • #1096 Tuesday, May 9th, 2006
      Sebastián Vélez, Harvard University

    2004-2005

    • #1082, 12 October 2004
      Electronic Field Guides: Tools for Conservation
      Robert Stevenson and Fred SaintOurs, U. Mass. Boston
    • #1083, 9 November 2004
      Evolutionary Ecology of the Crematogaster - Macaranga - Coccid Symbiosis and an Ant's-Eye View to Southeast Asian Rain Forest History
      Swee Peck Quek , Harvard University
    • #1084, 14 December 2004
      Phelypera distigma: Adventures studying sociality in the world's oddest weevil
      Jim DaCosta
    • #1085, 11 January 2005
      Landscape Ecology of Lyme Disease
      John Brownstein, Yale University
    • #1086, 8 February 2005
      Cognitive dissonance at the species boundary: A reductionist's view of hybridization and differentiation in butterflies
      Adam Porter, U. Mass. Amherst
    • #1087, 8 March 2005
      Why are there so many insects in the Caribbean?
      Sebastián Vélez, Harvard University
    • #1088, 12 April 2005
      Infection Control in Group-living Animals: Insects as Model Systems in Socioecoimmunology
      James Traniello, Boston University
    • #1089, 10 May 2005
      Scramble competition and sexual selection in the crab spider, Misumena vatia
      Douglass Morse, Brown University

    2003-2004

    • #1075, 14 October 2003
      Dracula Ant Relations and Implications for Systematics
      Corrie Saux
    • #1076, 11 November 2003
      The Evolutionary Effects of Specialization: Does specialization reduce effective population sizes in Crossidius species (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae)?
      Chris Elzinga
    • #1077, 9 December 2003
      Little Known Fauna of West African Orthoptera
      Piotr Naskrecki
    • #1078, 13 January 2004
      Ant Taxonomy in the 21st Century
      Stefan P. Cover
    • #1079, 9 March 2004
      Whale Lice: Looking at the phylogenetic and population-genetic relationships of right-whale cyamids to learn about the histories and behaviors of right whales
      Zofia Ada Kaliszewska
    • #1080, 13 April 2004
      Does karyotype diversification drive speciation in the genus Agrodiaetus (Lepidoptera: Lycaenidae)?
      Nikolai Kandul
    • #1081, 11 May 2004
      The Ant Genus Acropyga and the Evolution of Trophophoresy
      John LaPolla

    2002-2003

    • #1074, 13 May 2003
      The Songs of the Lacewings: Their Role in Species Origins
      Dr. Marta Wells, University of Connecticut and Yale University
      Also: Election of officers for 2003-2004
    • #1073, 8 April 2003
      The Contribution of Biological Assessment (especially of insects) to Biodiversity Conservation
      Leeanne E. Alonso, Ph.D.
      Director, Rapid Assessment Program, Conservation International
    • #1072, 11 March 2003
      Insects from 50 million years ago in western North America: strange . . .yet . . .oddly familiar . . .
      Bruce Archibald, Harvard University
    • #1071, 11 February 2003
      The Role of Cuticular Pheromones in Mediating Ant-Butterfly Symbioses: A Comparison of Herbivorous Australian Theclinae and Carnivorous Thai Miletinae
      David Lohman, Harvard University
    • #1070, 14 January 2003
      Can Insects Save Chimpanzees?
      A Biotic Rapid Assessment Survey in Guinea
      Piotr Naskrecki, Harvard University
    • #1069, 10 November 2002
      ON VHS: The 987th Cambridge Entomological Club Meeting:
      A 90th Birthday Salute to Frank M. Carpenter, with guest lecture by Edward O. Wilson
    • #1068, 8 October 2002
      Ant-termite Interactions in Madagascar
      Dr. Gary Alpert, Harvard University

    2001-2002

    • #1067, 14 May 2002
      From simple to complex and back again: The evolution of cricket songs
      Dr. Daniel Otte, Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia
    • #1066, 9 April 2002
      Insects, Taxonomy, and the All Species Initiative
      E. O. Wilson, Harvard University
    • #1065, 12 March 2002
      Tripping the Light Fantastic - different approaches to insect photography
      Joe Warfel and Piotr Naskrecki
    • #1064, 12 February 2002
      Has Pleistocene Climate Change Driven the Differentiation of the Flightless Longhorn Cactus Beetle Moneilema appressum (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae)?
      Christopher Smith, Harvard University
    • #1063, 15 January 2002
      Conserving Tropical Insect Communities at the Landscape Scale: The Promise of Vegetation Classifications and Remote Sensing Technology for Predicting the distribution of Insect Communities
      Dr. Sacha Spector, American Museum of Natural History, New York
    • #1062, 11 December 2001
      The Mating Behavior of Dwarf Spiders (Family Linyphiidae)
      Dr. Robert Edwards, Ph.D.
    • #1061, 13 November 2001
      Biogeography and Molecular Characters Used to Distinguish between Ancient and Recent Associations of Bark Beetles (Coleoptera: Curculionidae: Scolytinae) with Their Host Plants
      Andrea Sequeira, Harvard University
    • #1060, 9 October 2001
      Phylogeny and Convergent Evolution in Crickets and other Ensifera
      Manda Clair Jost, Harvard University

    2000-2001

    • #1059, 8 May 2001
      Burying Beetle Natural History, Conservation, and Evolution (Coleoptera: Silphidae: Nicrophorus)
      Derek Sikes, University of Connecticut
    • #1058, 10 April 2001
      Vector-Borne Disease in a Changing New England Landscape
      Prof. Andrew Spielman, Harvard University School of Public Health
    • #1057, 13 March 2001
      The Australian Butterfly Fauna: Its Characteristics, Origin, Evolution and Larval Food Plant Associations
      Michael Braby, visiting scholar at the Pierce Laboratory
    • #1056, 13 February 2001
      A Plethora of Insect Eggs (plus assorted other entomological images)
      Dan Perlman
    • #1055, 9 January 2001
      The Evolution of Silence - Multiple Origins and Losses of Stridulation in Katydids
      Piotr Naskrecki, Ph.D., Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University
    • #1054, 12 December 2000
      Entomological Fun - Without a Ph.D.
      Mike Huben
    • #1053, 14 November 2000
      Life History Evolution in the Lycaenidae: Cradle-robbing, Meat-eating, Ant-loving Butterflies
      Professor Naomi E. Pierce, Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University
    • #1052, 10 October 2001
      Allochronic Speciation and Reproductive Character Displacement in Periodical Cicadas (Magicicada spp.)
      Dr. John Cooley, University of Connecticut, Storrs

    1999-2000

    • #1051, 9 May 2000
      Developing a long-term inventory of the insects of Haystack Mountain by the Cambridge Entomological Club
      Geoff Morse
    • #1050, 11 April 2000
      Polygyny in Paradise: The Invasion of Argentine Ants in Hawaii
      Krista Ingram, Harvard University
    • #1049, 14 March 2000
      The Endemic Cave Crickets Of Madagascar
      Manda Jost, Harvard University
    • etc

    1998-1999

    See file

    1997-1998

    • No minutes for October-March on file. Secretary: Jennifer Mills
    • #1034, 14 April 1998
      Vignettes of Australia
      Jay Shetterly and Andre Mignault
    • #1035, 12 May 1998
      Why, How, and Where Insects Eat What They Eat
      Geoff Morse

    1996-1997

    No minutes on file. Secretary: Gary Alpert

    1995-1996

    Minutes provided by Mike Huben -- thank you!

    • #1018, 12 March 1996
      Evolution and ecology of host affiliation in hummingbird flower mites
      Dr. Robert Colwell, University of Connecticut
    • #1017, 13 February 1996
      Diversification at the insect-plant interface
      Dr. Brian Farrell, Harvard University
    • #1016, 12 December 1995
      Industrial Melanism In Moths: Reassessing The Evidence
      Dr. Theodore Sargent, University of Massachussetts
    • #1015, November 1995
      Evolution and community structure in damselflies
      Mark McPeek, Dartmouth University
    • #1014, 10 October 1995
      Insect Macrophotography workshop
      Dave Wagner, Mark Moffett, Carl Rettenmeyer, and Mike Thomas

    1994-1995

    Minutes provided by Mike Huben -- thank you!

    • #1013, 9 May 1995
      Stories From Afield: Rambles of a Tropical Entomologist
      Mark Moffett, Harvard University
    • #1012, 11 April 1995
      What's New at the Insect Zoo
      Nathan Erwin, Smithsonian Institution
    • #1011, 14 March 1995
      Invertebrate Conservation and Faunal Change on a New England Island: The Moths of Martha's Vineyard
      Paul Goldstein, University of Connecticut
    • #1010, 14 February 1995
      Dialogues On The Phylogeny Of The Insect Orders
      Jim Carpenter and Ward Wheeler, American Museum of Natural History
    • #1009, 10 January 1995
      A Tent Caterpillar Primer: Ecology, Evolution, and Social Biology of Malacosoma Species.
      Jim Costa, MCZ, Harvard University
    • #1008, 13 December 1994
      Conflict and Cooperation among Burying Beetles
      Michelle Scott, University of New Hampshire
    • #1007, November 1994
      The Natural History and Phylogeny of Fungus-Growing Ants and their Fungi
      Ted Schultz, Cornell University
    • #1006, 11 October 1994
      Survival Tips For The Very Hungry Caterpillar: Natural History, Predation, and Evolution
      Dr. David Wagner, University of Connecticut

    1993-1994

    [Information transcribed from Psyche 101(1-2)]

    #998: James Liebherr
    #999: Rob DeSalle
    #1000: Bert Holldobler
    #1001: Phil DeVries
    #1002: Rob Stevenson
    #1003: Linda Rayor
    #1004: Wendy Mechaber
    #1005, 10 May 1994: Gabriela Chiavarria

    1992-1993

    [Information transcribed from Psyche 100(1-2)]

    Gary Alpert
    Carl Rettenmeyer
    Ring Carde
    Quentin Wheeler
    Rich Pollack
    Lou Roth
    William L. Krinsky
    James LLoyd

    1991-1992

    [Information transcribed from Psyche 99(4)]

    Charles Remington
    Thomas Eisner
    Edward Wilson
    Charles Henry
    Floyd Werner
    William Brown
    Guy Bush
    Stewart Peck

    1874-1991

    Sorry, no information on line yet

    Last modified: 17 July 2006