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Song, Reed, and Rhinesmith-Carranza receive Vice Chancellor’s Awards in Excellence

January 14, 2022 by Rob Williams

Congratulations to Hojun Song, Ph.D., Mary Reed and Jennifer Rhinesmith-Carranza who received Vice Chancellor Awards in Excellence this year. These awards recognize the commitment and outstanding contributions displayed by faculty, students and staff members across Texas A&M AgriLife.

Teaching Awards

The Teaching Award was presented to Hojun Song, Ph.D., associate professor, Department of Entomology. Song is a dedicated and creative instructor who integrates his research expertise in insect systematics and locust biology into his classes. Recognizing the need for an undergraduate field entomology course, Song began a hands-on study-abroad course in tropical field entomology in Costa Rica. On this study abroad, a group of his students discovered a new species of king cricket. Song guided them through describing this species, leading to a published paper with the students as authors. When an online teaching format was necessary during the COVID-19 pandemic, a graduate student said Song offered clear and interesting lectures with practical exercises and activities that made the course fun and dynamic. The student continued, “The teaching strategies Dr. Song used improved my learning and made this class my favorite graduate-level course.”

The Graduate Student Teaching Award was presented to Jennifer Rhinesmith-Carranza, academic advisor and assistant lecturer and doctoral candidate, Department of Entomology. Although employed full-time as an advisor with the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, she also serves as a teaching assistant and assistant lecturer for a wide range of forensic science and entomology courses. In 2019, she was recognized by the department as the Forensic Science Teaching Assistant of the Year. An outstanding mentor, she helps students apply for internships with the FBI, reviews resumes and cover letters for graduates and helps students prepare for national certification exams. In addition, she is one of six certified technicians on the American Board of Forensic Entomology and organizes workshops to teach law enforcement how to process entomological samples associated with crime scenes.

A full list of awards was announced in AgriLife Today.

Entomology and Forensics Students Receive Senior Merit Awards

April 22, 2021 by Rob Williams

The Texas A&M University College of Agriculture and Life Sciences congratulates the outstanding students receiving 2021 Senior Merit Awards. Presented by the College for over 50 years, these awards recognize the best of the best graduating seniors.

The following students are this year’s recipients:

Angelica Rodriguez

Angelica Rodriguez is the second oldest out of 5 children and a first-generation college student. She enjoys being active whether it’s dancing around her apartment, going to the student rec, or simply going for a walk. She will be graduating in spring 2021 with a Bachelor’s of Science in Entomology and a minor in Wildlife & Fisheries. She enjoys nature and would like to use her degree to work with wildlife and/or exotic animals.

Courtney Reid

Michelle Shannon

Congratulations to all of our students for your hard work and dedication!

Blue light assists a night hunt for bugs

July 15, 2020 by Rob Williams

Hojun Song holds one of the insects studied with blue light fluorescence, in Costa Rica. Photo courtesy of Song
Hojun Song holds one of the insects studied with blue light fluorescence, in Costa Rica. Photo courtesy of Song

by Olga Kuchment, Texas A&M AgriLife Marketing and Communications

A blue flashlight that makes corals shine in the sea can help spot insects in nighttime forests, according to a recent Texas A&M AgriLife study. The peer-reviewed study suggests that blue light could help with pest control, natural history research and night insect collecting.

A lightbulb goes on at a conference

The study grew out of a chance meeting at a conference between a vendor and a former student of Hojun Song, Ph.D., associate professor in the Department of Entomology at Texas A&M College of Agriculture and Life Sciences.

The conference vendor was marine biologist Charles Mazel, Ph.D., co-founder of NIGHTSEA in Massachusetts. Mazel showed Song’s former graduate student Derek Woller, Ph.D., some blue-light fluorescence photographs he had taken for fun of various caterpillars and grasshoppers.

Fast-forward about a year, and Woller convinced Song to purchase one of Mazel’s leading-edge blue lights to test in various lab projects. With the light, they embarked on a quest that led to the published study.

A little about fluorescence

Under blue light fluorescence, a camouflaged grasshopper stands out in green on red tree bark. Photo by Charles Mazel / NIGHTSEA
Under blue light fluorescence, a camouflaged grasshopper stands out in green on red tree bark. Photo by Charles Mazel / NIGHTSEA

The reason the light piqued Woller’s curiosity is that some objects and animals can glow like beacons under intense blue light, a phenomenon called fluorescence. When the right wavelength of light hits certain materials, they emit light of a lower energy, or longer wavelength. The color and intensity of fluorescence depends on the material and the wavelength of light.

According to Mazel, most marine life, for example, tends to fluoresce less brightly under ultraviolet light than under blue light. When using blue light, though, yellow goggles must be worn to filter out reflected blue light and see the fluorescence.

But which insects would fluoresce intensely under blue light was relatively unknown at the time, so Woller and Song decided to check, because of the types of insects they studied.

“Those of us who work on grasshoppers, mantids, katydids and walking sticks, we actually have to go and catch them by hand,” Song said. “We also do a lot of night collecting because a lot of these animals are nocturnal. We have a regular headlamp, and we just walk about and spot things or listen to their songs and try to find where they are.”

Scavenger hunts in parks, fields, museum collections

A camouflaged grasshopper on tree bark. Photo by Charles Mazel / NIGHTSEA
A camouflaged grasshopper on tree bark. Photo by Charles Mazel / NIGHTSEA

Woller, now an entomologist with the U.S. Department of Agriculture in Phoenix, designed an experiment with other students to test what types of insects fluoresce under blue light. They also decided to study whether blue light could be more effective than white light for finding insects in the dark.

Woller kept in touch with Mazel, who eventually became a coauthor of the study.

Using either a blue light and yellow glasses or a white light, 12 students undertook nighttime scavenger hunts. Their task: to find freeze-dried grasshoppers Woller and other student coauthors had glued to trees in a park. Overall, the participants were able to locate more grasshoppers by looking at fluorescence.

Next, Woller’s team studied the preserved specimens of several large insect collections. The students tested every order of Hexapoda, which are animals with an exoskeleton, a segmented body and six legs. Most specimens fluoresced under blue light, regardless of how they were preserved.

Finally, the team reprised the experiment in the field. Under blue light, fresh green plants tend to fluoresce red, making a strong contrast with bugs that tend to shine in green or yellow.

A useful new tool

In the end, blue-light fluorescence has become a useful tool in Song’s lab. Some of the bugs Song studies, such as katydids, are masters of camouflage.

“They look like leaves, and they don’t move,” Song said. “Even with a headlight, they’re very easy to miss. With this fluorescence, the background looks red and the insect looks green. I was like, you can just see it!”

Though the tool can’t spot insects hiding behind leaves, Song said the blue light can definitely be helpful.

“We actually bought one more unit,” Song said. “Now, everywhere we go, we travel with it.”

For more information

The study appeared in American Entomologist in March. A grant to Song from the USDA provided funding for the study.

Undergraduate Mentorship Symposium Showcases Quality Research

February 18, 2020 by Rob Williams

Cora Garcia, right, stands with her grad student mentor, Pierre Lau.
Cora Garcia, right, with her grad student mentor, Pierre Lau. Photo by Rob Williams

The Aggie Women in Entomology recently hosted its graduate student mentorship symposium during the 2020 Mentorship Symposium in Heep 413 on Friday, February 7.

The event featured talks by undergraduate students in entomology that were mentored by a graduate mentor. Each student was given 10 minutes to talk on their research projects. This year, four undergraduates presented research ranging from striped cucumber beetle’s preferences for host-plant olfactory cues to determining the effects of nutrition on honey bee pathogen defense against the Deformed wing virus.

Laura Marmolejo, center, with Morgan Thompson, left, and Jaclyn Martin
Laura Marmolejo, center, with Morgan Thompson, left, and Jaclyn Martin. Photo by Rob Williams.

Several awards were also given at the end of the symposium to two students to help fund travel to a national or regional professional conference of the student’s choice.

The first place award was given to Cora Garcia for her talk titled “Honey bee (Apis mellifera) macronutrient regulation: Nurse bee nutritional preferences for proteins and lipids” while second place was awarded to Laura Marmolejo for “Striped cucumber beetle (Acalymma vittatum) preferences for host-plant olfactory cues.”

The symposium’s purpose is to recognize and reward research excellence and mentorship accomplished by undergraduate students and their graduate student mentors within the Department. It also offers undergraduates a way to present their research to their peers, as well as to compete for travel awards for professional conferences.

AWE Member Alex Payne said that having a mentor helps the students in their development both professionally and academically.

“Personally speaking, I think that having a graduate student mentor was extremely beneficial to developing both my research skill set and my professional development when I was an undergraduate research assistant,” Payne said.  “This symposium allowed us to not only recognize the hard work being done by undergraduate researchers, but it also recognized the time and effort that their graduate student mentors have invested in these students and their projects.”

“The presentations during the symposium were put together very well!” AWE president Jaclyn Martin said. “All of the speakers did an amazing job. It’s really awesome to see what kind of research undergraduate students are doing in the department!” president Jaclyn Martin said.

 

Congratulations Fall 2019 Graduates!

December 12, 2019 by Rob Williams

Zanthe Kotze, right, with Dr. Jeffery Tomberlin
Zanthé Kotzé, right, with Dr. Jeffery Tomberlin

The Department of Entomology experienced two milestones this fall as a Ph.D. student was a speaker at the Ph.D. graduation ceremony and our students joined a record number of students that are expected to graduate at Reed Arena on Friday afternoon.

Recent Ph.D. graduate Zanthé Kotzé got the chance to speak at the inaugural doctoral hooding and commencement ceremony held at Rudder Theater on December 7. Kotzé was selected from thousands of applicants and wanted a way to help give back to her university.

“I am honored that the Texas A&M office of the Provost selected me from a lot of applicants, particularly since this was the inaugural doctoral hooding ceremony,” she said.  “I applied to do the Expression of Appreciation as I felt this was the perfect way to give back to Texas A&M and to express my thanks and share my story, which is a fairly unique one.”

Kotzé was very honored to be a part of the ceremony and was excited to speak to the audience.

“I am privileged to have been afforded the opportunity and hope to have represented both the Department of Entomology, and Dr Tomberlin well,” Kotzé said.

Other doctoral graduates in the Department included the following:

Graduate Students – Ph.D.

Wei Chen Entomology
Ana Aurora Fontes Puebla Entomology
Zanthe Kotze Entomology
Luke Pruter Entomology
Aline Frietas Spindola Entomology
Liz Walsh Entomology

 

Undergraduate students during lineup. Photo by Rebecca Hapes
Undergraduate students during lineup. Photo by Rebecca Hapes.

 

A total of 10 undergraduate students and Master’s candidates joined more than 5,400 students universitywide during graduation ceremonies at Reed Arena on Friday, December 13. The expected degrees include 7 undergraduates and 3 Master’s candidates.

Congratulations to all of our students that are expected to graduate this December and good luck in your futures!

Master's students during lineup before commencement on Friday. Photo by Rebecca Hapes.
Master’s students during lineup before commencement on Friday. Photo by Rebecca Hapes.

Undergraduate Students:

Javier Christen Garza Horticulture and Entomology
Jennifer Maria Iglesias Entomology
Mason Lynn Marshall Horticulture major, Entomology/Plant Breeding double minor
Morgan Hailey Swoboda Plant and Environmental Soil Science and Entomology
Alexandra Brooke Smith Biomedical Science and Entomology
Alexandria Chase Strawn Entomology and Bioenvironmental Science
Steven Tanner Thweatt Entomology

 

Graduate Students-Master of Science:

Lauren Beebe Entomology
John David Gonzales Entomology
Ryan Tyler Gilreath Entomology

 

 

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