Tiny Brains with Big Effects: the World of Ants and Bees
Tiny Brains with Big Effects: the World of Ants,
Bees and Wasps
Wellingtonians will have
the chance to delve into the world of insects during
Professor Phil Lester’s inaugural professorial lecture at
Victoria University on Tuesday 7 May.
Professor
Lester will explore the behaviour of social insects such as
ants, bees and wasps, discussing the vital pollinating role
they play in our food production, as well as the damage they
can cause to entire ecosystems.
He will
demonstrate some of the incredible behaviours insects have
adopted in order to survive in different situations. For
example, scientists have recently discovered a new behaviour
in the common wasp when it is competing for food with native
ants. Picking their opponents up in their mandibles (or
jaws), wasps have been seen to fly backwards and drop ants
away from the disputed food resource, dealing efficiently
with their competitors.
Professor Lester will also
explain how successful insect populations can occasionally
collapse and disappear, and discuss why now, more than ever,
we need to manage social insects for conservation and
biodiversity benefits.
Vice-Chancellor Professor
Pat Walsh says Victoria University’s inaugural lecture
series is an opportunity for professors to share insights
into their specialist areas of study with family, friends,
colleagues and the local community.
“Inaugural
lectures are also an excellent way for the University to
celebrate and acknowledge our valued professors,” says
Professor Walsh.
Professor Phil Lester is based in
the School of Biological Sciences at Victoria University. He
is an authority on invasive insect species and is recognised
as one of New Zealand’s leading insect experts.
He has previously received a Marsden Fund grant
and Fulbright Senior Scholar Award to support his research,
and received a Victoria University Research Excellence Award
in 2009.
Last year, Professor Lester served as
President of the Entomological Society of New Zealand and
was also named as the 2012 recipient of the Royal Society of
New Zealand’s Charles Fleming Fund, which supports senior
scientists to carry out research.
Inaugural
lecture–Professor Phil Lester
‘Tiny brains with big
effects: the ecologically dominant but fragile world of
ants, bees and wasps’
Tuesday 7 May 2013, 6pm
Hunter
Council Chamber, Level 2, Hunter Building, Gate 1 or 2,
Kelburn Parade, Wellington.
RSVP by Friday 3 May.
Phone 04-472 1000 or email rsvp@vuw.ac.nz with ‘Lester’
in the subject line.
Click on this link to view a
video of wasps picking up and dropping ants:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DILNPkA9vwY.
ENDS