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Why we should all be eating insects
Star Tribune (Minneapolis) via Yahoo News· 2 days agoBugs! It's what's for dinner. At least that's the pitch that the University of Minnesota Entomology Department will be making at an event this Saturday, the Great Minnsect ...
YARD AND GARDEN: Hornets keen on facial recognition
Journal Gazette & Times-Courier· 14 hours agoRecently, I was pruning the bottom branches from a row of cedar trees and I stumbled across a nearly perfect hornet's nest. At first, I felt the anxiety...
Drought puts Alberta farmers at risk of another scourge of grasshoppers
CBC via Yahoo News· 4 days agoWill Muller knew immediately that he had a grasshopper problem last spring. Dealing with drought...
Air Force base closes dining facility amid rodent infestation
WFLA· 1 day agoBarksdale Air Force Base announced the sudden closure of its Red River Dining Facility when a rodent...
A Paws for Pets: Nolan hit the lottery
York News-Times· 13 hours agoThis is the same Kelly, whose mother flew from California to York to adopt Nolan in July of 2011. It took some innovations to accommodate having a twenty...
Where are the love bugs? Researchers stumped over significant decline of insects
FOX 35 Orlando· 2 days agoORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - Central Florida residents have noticed a significant decline in love bug...
What are the hairy caterpillars in Florida? Are tussock moth caterpillars dangerous?
The Florida Times-Union via Yahoo News· 4 days agoWhere can tussock moth caterpillars be found in Florida? Tussock moth caterpillars are widespread...
2 cicada broods will emerge around the same time in the U.S.
NPR· 5 days agoTo make sense of this event and to know what exactly we are in for, it was only natural to call up the bug guy. Michael Raupp is a professor emeritus of entomology at the ...
Millions of these loud red-eyed critters are coming to SC soon. Here’s where some were already seen
The State· 14 hours agoMillions of these loud red-eyed critters are coming to SC soon. Cicada Mania website said the first reported incidence this year of Brood XIX nymph emerging was at The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill on April 8.
STD-riddled "zombie" cicadas are coming to Virginia
Axios· 2 days agoBrood XIX — are about to crawl out of their underground bunkers, where for 13 years they've been suckling on tree roots, waiting to emerge. Why it...