Special
thanks to:
click on a box below to learn about:
| ENTOBLITZ Philosophy | Godwin Woods | Mecoptera |
| Objectives | Little Sandy NWR | Miridae |
| The Experts | Sparta Sand Outcrop | Culicidae |
| Techniques | TAMUIC Collection | Coleoptera |
Or
click here to see images of ENTOBLITZ
(link to our photo collection)
ENTOBLITZ is designed as a remedy. It will partially fill the deficiencies arising from over-specialization. It will help fill gaps in our knowledge of Texas' entofauna because it will be directed at areas of the state and habitats that are under represented in our research collections. It will provide specimens to replace worn teaching collection material. It will funnel specimens into the departmental outreach program. It will foster community within the wide empire of the Department of Entomology. It will do all this in the form of a three day blitz style assault on the entofauna of specifically targeted regions/habitats.

1). Graduate students will organize field seminars
as collecting trips to various regions.
2). Students will collect, curate and organize
specimens that will go into the teaching collection,
outreach collection
and research collections of the department.
3). Field seminars will be presented by experts
so that students may learn diverse field
techniques.
4). ENTOBLITZ participants will discuss various
aspects of climate, topography, vegetation
and how these affect arthropod
communities.
ENTOBLITZ was
held first in Wood County, Texas
Collectively graduate students in the Department of Entomology are extremely diverse in their research interests and backgrounds. Through the course of a typical graduate program most students become highly focused experts on a small group of insects in a targeted habitat type or on some detailed aspect of an organism's biology through laboratory studies. It is necessary to purposefully broaden the experience of students with increased opportunities to expand their experience. Field trips provide a form of didactic education that surpasses the classroom lecture. Field seminars will provide students with direct access to experts in the department on the level of peers in a fun, hands-on and informative way.
Faculty/Staff:
Dr. Jimmy Olson, mosquito sampling
Dr. John Oswald, Neuroptera; collecting
insect at night with lights
Dr. Joseph Schaffner, sweeping and beating
for mirids
Dr. Robert Wharton, parasitic Hymenoptera
(Braconidae) and Diptera
Edward G. Riley, leaf litter collecting and
pitfall traping
Graduate Students:
Matt Yoder, yellow pan traps
Will Godwin, flight intercept trap variations
and habitat variation based on soil type
Matt Buffington, techniques for sweeping micro-Hymenoptera
Ron Weeks, ant collecting
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