Entomology students aren’t normally the ones under the microscope, but at the annual Linnaean Games, a national insect trivia competition, they are scrutinized as closely as their own six-legged subjects. Before a crowd of more than a thousand, the larval scholars – mostly PhD candidates – struggle with categories like “Name That Pest” and “Know Your Bug Families.” They tackle current events – this year, expect questions on the emerald ash borer, a beetle poised to wipe out the nation’s ash trees – and high culture. Who wrote the poem “My Butterfly?” (Robert Frost.) Who composed “Flight of the Bumblebee?” (Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov.)
But the ant lion’s share of the 16 questions at the championships, held on Nov. 18 at the Entomological Society of America’s meeting in Reno, Nev., will likely be along the lines of this pop quiz:
“Name the family of beetles that has one set of eyes on the top of its body and one set below.”
“The action of shifting allele frequency toward the homozygous condition in small populations is called what?”
“Name the portion of the insect brain that receives both sensory and motor fibers from the antennae.”
Tom Turpin, the contest’s longtime moderator, stopped grilling me for a moment.
“You didn’t even know they had brains, right?”
The answers are, respectively, Gyrinidae, genetic drift, deutocerebrum, and not really.
Turpin, a Purdue University entomology professor who teaches, among other courses, “Insects: Friend and Foe,” helped found the contest in the early 1980s. He hoped it would be a lark for graduate students attending the ESA meeting, which these days covers such heavy-duty topics as tick genomics and “21st Century Western Corn Rootworm Management at Home and Abroad.” The games are named for Carl Linnaeus, the 18th-century father of binomial nomenclature, who is also the event mascot: on the official banner, Linnaeus, in a wig, is shown carefully recording the genus and species of a crab louse. “He probably had lice,” Turpin says. Thus the wig.
The games have become one of the conference’s best-attended events.



Comments
Wow!! So cool!! I've just become interested in Entomology (I already have a B.S. in Biology but I was too disgusted by insects to take the class when I was in college). I wish they had similar competetions for other parts of the field of biology. And I love the scan!!
Posted by Christina Green on November 19,2008 | 04:18PM
Teaching kids is good because insects are good for the garden and your yard . We don't need chemicals to treat our yards . You let insects take care of your yard . You take care of your house. Everybody needs to know about insects. What they do and how they help .
Posted by John E Plake on November 19,2008 | 07:16PM
Great article! I competed in Linnaean Games five times and was on a champion team twice., I've met lots of great friends through Linnaean Games, and it is always a highlight of our meetings.
Posted by Evan Lampert on November 20,2008 | 11:24AM
As a member of the winning team at the national games in 2001 from Oklahoma State University, I can say the games are truly a fantastic experience. I would love to coach a team some day and be a part of a new generation of entomologists as they learn.
Posted by Mary Roduner on November 20,2008 | 07:20PM
As a close friend of Dr. Jim Edmiston, I must say the Smithsonian and the world lost one of the Top Notch entimologist of this century. He will be sadly missed by the world of entimology and research as well as the Franciscan order. Good Bye Old Friend
Posted by j. sue gibbons on November 22,2008 | 10:53AM
I was on a ntl championship team at Purdue back in 1993! Go Boiler Bugs! :)
Posted by Dr. Kathy Heinsohn on December 5,2008 | 01:49PM
I agree with Mr. Plake's comment about using insects as a way to preserve one's garden. It would be beneficial to the general public if this kind of information was as mainstream as the knee-jerk reaction of adding insecticide in order to maintain a flourishing crop. Still, I would pose the question of allowing a certain group of benign insects to co-exist with the vegetation. Wouldn't that create an environment that would attract other insects intent on devouring our six-legged helping hands?
Posted by Ryan Caisse on December 8,2008 | 07:26AM