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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2005
March
Bugs, even the 'bad' ones,
can be educationally beneficial, new book says
Molly McElroy,
News Bureau
217-333-5802; mmcelroy@uiuc.edu
3/1/05
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by Kwame Ross |
| We
have much to learn from bad bugs, according to Gilbert
Waldbauer, whose latest book is “Insights From
Insects: What Bad Bugs Can Teach Us.” |
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CHAMPAIGN,
Ill. — We have much to learn from bad bugs, according to Gilbert
Waldbauer, whose book “Insights From Insects: What Bad Bugs Can
Teach Us” was published today (Prometheus Books).
“We know a lot about pests, because so much money is spent on
their research,” said Waldbauer, professor emeritus of entomology
at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Of the 900,000 known
species of insects, a mere 2 percent are considered pests. Just as some
plants growing where they are not wanted are considered weeds, insects
are considered pests only when they adversely affect people, Waldbauer
writes.
For example, homeowners typically think of termites as pests, but in
forests termites are important for recycling dead wood.
Waldbauer spent 15 years studying the cecropia moth (Hyalophora cecropia),
which he collected by driving along streets in Urbana, Ill., and retrieving
cocoons from trees. With its colorful 5- to 6-inch wingspan, the nocturnal
cecropia moth is the largest North American moth.
In “Insights From Insects,” Waldbauer describes 20 different
types of pests. He includes how each pest is destructive to humans,
how it sustains itself through feeding, reproduction and avoiding predators,
and the various methods that people use to get rid of pests. The book
is written for a general audience.
“Many basic biological concepts such as evolution and genetics
can be learned through pests,” Waldbauer said. For example, he
described recent evidence of how a new species of fruit fly is evolving
based on how its diet differentiates it from other fruit flies.
Waldbauer uses examples from history, his career and conversations with
his entomologist colleagues to illustrate what we can learn from bad
bugs.
Many of the pests he describes are found in Illinois, including the
corn rootworm. Other regional insects also are mentioned, such as the
evergreen bagworm that spans the east coast of the United States and
stretches westward to Nebraska and Louisiana. Other pests with wider
ranges, such as disease-toting mosquitoes, produce-feasting fruit flies
and sap-sucking aphids, also are featured.
The history of how many insects were spread to the United States also
is discussed. For example, in 1869, the gypsy moth (Lymantria dispar)
arrived in Medford, Mass., from Europe when the French naturalist Leopold
Trouvelot brought them to use in silk culture experiments. A few escaped
as caterpillars and their descendants thrived, leading to rampant defoliation
20 years later.
Such destruction has led people to devise various methods to exterminate
bad bugs.
“The least creative way to get rid of bad bugs is by using insecticides,”
Waldbauer said. Biological control, a practice in which natural predators
are introduced, is a more creative and effective way to control pests,
he said. In the book, Waldbauer explains many historic and recent examples
of how people control pests without insecticides.
For example, in 1886, the cottony cushion scale (Icerya purchasi), accidentally
imported from Australia, threatened California’s early citrus
industry. At times these pests, whose sucking beaks are permanently
attached to and suck juice out of leaves, infested trees so densely
that the trees appeared to be covered with snow.
Introduction of 129 Australian ladybird beetles (Rodolia cardinalis),
a natural predator of the scale, to a Los Angeles orange grove destroyed
almost all of the pests within six months. “By the end of 1889,
the scale was no longer a threat anywhere in California,” Waldbauer
wrote.
Waldbauer also recounted a more recent study in which tsetse flies were
feasting on and causing infections in cows in Zimbabwe. Entomologists
led by Steve Torr of the University of Greenwich in the United Kingdom
placed 60,000 fake cows made of cloth and steeped in insecticide on
cattle ranches. Instances of infections dropped from 10,000 to 50 per
year. These findings were reported in the journal Science in 2001.
Not only do insects interact with people, some insect species share
characteristics with humans, Waldbauer said. For example, the tsetse
fly has an analogue of a mammalian uterus. “Milk-secreting glands
that empty into the ‘uterus’ feed the developing larva.
Tsetse milk is white and chemically similar to human or cow’s
milk,” Waldbauer wrote in a chapter titled “Guaranteeing
descendants: The role of parental care.”
Waldbauer emphasizes that insects can be useful to humans. For example,
he said, maggot therapy has been used to remove gangrenous tissue while
leaving healthy tissue intact. Because of the increasing prevalence
of bacterial resistance, the therapy has been used recently to replace
antibiotics.
Since retiring in 1995, Waldbauer has written several books, including
“The Handy Bug Answer Book,” “What Good are Bugs”
and “Insects Through the Seasons.” He is now completing
work on his next book, “Aquatic Insects: Bugs In and Over the
Water.”
Meredith Waterstraat illustrated “Insights From Insects.”
Waterstraat, a former Illinois graduate student in mathematics education,
also illustrated “What Good are Bugs.” Waldbauer and Waterstraat
began working together after he saw and was intrigued by her paintings
of beetles at the Anita Purves Nature Center in Busey Woods in Urbana.
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