Insect diversity @ McGill
The blog and website of the Wheeler lab and the Lyman Museum at McGill University. Posts about arthropods, natural history, taxonomy, ecology, science culture, and life (or something like it) in academia.
All content copyright Terry A. Wheeler 2011-2016, unless otherwise noted.
Twitter: @ta_wheeler
-
Recent Posts
Archives
Blogs and sites we like
- Arthropod ecology at McGill
- Beetles in the Bush
- Biodiversity in Focus
- Don't Forget the Roundabouts
- Entomology Today
- flyobsession
- Observations of a budding biologist
- Scientist Sees Squirrel
- Small Pond Science
- The Heads Lab
- The Natural Histories Project
- The Natural History Network
- three lines about six legs
Tags
- Agromyzidae
- alpine
- arctic
- biodiversity
- Chloropidae
- collecting
- collection
- communication
- conferences
- curation
- Diptera
- DNA barcode
- ecology
- Ephydridae
- fieldwork
- flies
- history
- Ichneumonidae
- ideas
- natural history
- new species
- Northern Biodiversity Program
- Phoridae
- publications
- science culture
- students
- Syrphidae
- taxonomy
- teaching
- thinking
RSS Feed
-
Join 159 other subscribers
Meta
Tag Archives: Ichneumonidae
Two new papers: insects in harsh places
Two new papers on insect ecology from the Lyman group appeared this week: one in print, and one new paper in press. Amélie Grégoire Taillefer’s new paper in Restoration Ecology (see Grégoire Taillefer & Wheeler 2013 in Publications) is a … Continue reading
Another year – autumn in the lab
As always, fall is a busy time in the museum. We have a few personnel changes (fairly standard for this time of year), a pile of upcoming conference talks, and some big ongoing research projects. Amélie Grégoire Taillefer, who has … Continue reading
Posted in Lab and Field News
Tagged Coleoptera, conferences, Diptera, Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae, Northern Biodiversity Program, students
Leave a comment
Conference round-up
Conferences are a great opportunity to let colleagues know about the work we’re doing, and also to see what research is going on in other labs. They’re a chance to catch up with colleagues that we usually only interact with … Continue reading