The Arilab had a great time teaching children about ants. It was a lot of fun to hear all their interesting questions.
Biodiversity & Biocomplexity Unit, Okinawa Institute of Science & Technology Graduate University
The Arilab had a great time teaching children about ants. It was a lot of fun to hear all their interesting questions.
The Arilab had a great time preparing for Open Campus. We loved meeting the community and teaching everyone about the wonderful world of ants.
Thank you to all the volunteers, and especially Masako-san, for everything they did. Our booth wouldn’t have been a success without them!
Benoit, Cong, and Benjamin made a great discovery on their trip to China, the first workers of one of the rarest ant genera in the world, Bannapone! The genus had previously only been known from a queen collected about 15 years ago. Our paper describes the worker of a different species of the genus.
See the paper here: http://biotaxa.org/Zootaxa/article/view/zootaxa.3734.3.6
and news article here:
I am proud to announce a new species from Fiji, Pristomyrmex tsujii. Eli and I named it after our friend, Prof. Kazuki Tsuji, at the U. of the Ryukyus here in Okinawa, to recognize his work on Pristomyrmex punctatus, and for his efforts to foster connectivity with Japanese and foreign scientists. This genus is really cool, and this species is one of two species of Pristo in Fiji, both endemic to the archipelago. It’s got some weird intercaste wingless reproductives, with probably some interesting reproductive biology behind it, someone should study it!
Tsuji and tsujii
Last week, from August 12th to the 16th, the children of Onna-son and surroundings had the chance to have an army of scientists from OIST teaching them about SCIENCE! This annual event, called the School of Science, became in spite of its young age an expected tradition for the local kids.
Therefore the Biodiversity and Biocomplexity unit had to be present! On Monday and Tuesday, 27 kids aged from 7 to 9 years old had the opportunity to learn more about arthropods living in Okinawa. During these two days, kids learned about the incredible diversity and importance of insects in terrestrial ecosystems. A brief lecture was proposed to them, quickly followed by field work! There, the young entomologists collected several species of spiders, ants, grasshoppers (quite diverse around the classroom), butterflies, ladybeetle, Hemipterans, and even a praying mantis!
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