- Author: Kathy Keatley Garvey
The students, along with the three winners in the Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences category, received their awards at a recent ceremony in the UC Davis Shields Library Courtyard.
A paper written by Maram Saada, a student in a longevity class taught by UC Davis distinguished professor James R. Carey, won first place in the SEM category and a $1000 prize. Saada's research paper, “Huntington's Disease: Etiology, Research Models and Treatment,” is now online. It will be published in eScholarship, an open-access scholarly publishing service affiliated with the University of California.
Second place in the SEM category went to Jocelyn Chu, a student in a medical entomology class taught by assistant professor Geoffrey Attardo, for her paper, “Vector-borne Disease Control Plan for West Nile Virus in California.” She received $750.
Two of Carey's students, Jessica Hevener and David Vo, tied for third place in the SEM category. Hevener, of Carey's longevity class, submitted her paper on “The Impact of Maternal Obesity on Maternal and Offspring Health,” while Vo, enrolled in a special study class for advanced undergraduates, entered his paper on “Surviving the Cold: How Circumpolar Peoples Have Adapted to the Extreme Conditions of the Arctic Entomology." They shared the third-prize award of $500.
The Lang Prize competition recognizes students who make exceptional use of library resources and services — such as primary source materials and special collections, online databases and journal articles; inter-library loan services, or consulting with a librarian, according to Alesia McManus, chair of the Lang Prize for Undergraduate Information Research and head of student services, UC Davis Shields Library.
In a earlier news release, McManus announced that “It was a strong pool of applications, with 17 out of the 21 applications meeting the average 39.99 score threshold for being considered for an award." The Lang Prize honors the legacy of professor emeritus and plant biologist Norma Lang, 1931-2015, a member of the faculty from 1963 to 1991.
UC Davis Distinguished Professor James R. Carey. Carey, a member of the UC Davis entomology faculty since 1980, instructs undergraduates in his classes--which usually exceed 200 students--how to research topics, use style sheets, and structure their papers. He has produced 13 videos on how to research and write a research paper, along with a new video on the use of style sheets.
Highly honored by his peers for his teaching expertise, Carey received the Entomological Society of America's 2015 Distinguished Teaching Award; a 2018 Robert Foster Cherry Award from Baylor University, which presents international teaching awards; and the UC Davis Academic Senate's 2014 Distinguished Teaching Award, an honor given to internationally recognized professors who excel at teaching.
Carey is considered the preeminent global authority on arthropod demography. He directed the multidisciplinary, 11-institution, 20-scientist program, “Biodemographic Determinants of Lifespan,” which garnered more than $10 million in funding from the National Institute on Aging from 2003 to 2013.
Assistant Professor Geoffrey Attardo. UC Davis medical entomologist-geneticist Geoffrey Attardo, who joined the UC Davis Department of Entomology and Nematology in 2017 from the Yale School of Public Health's Department of Epidemiology of Microbial Diseases, is a global expert on vectorborne diseases, and renowned for his groundbreaking work on tsetse flies. The Attardo lab monitors the dynamics of vector insects at the levels of physiology, population genetics and environmental interactions.
Attardo, who won the 2022 Medical, Urban, and Veterinary Entomology (MUVE) Award from the Pacific Branch, Entomological Society of America, “excels not only as a researcher, but as a teacher, mentor, scientific illustrator, macro photographer,videographer and science communicator,” said UC Davis distinguished professor Bruce Hammock in his letter of nomination for the MUVE Award. Attardo drew praise for his "highly effective teaching style in helping students build critical thinking skills and confidence."
The 2022 winners of the Lang Prizes in the Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences category are Joyce Do, Annie Miyadi, and Sarah Grimes. (See more on Shields Library website.)
- Author: Kathy Keatley Garvey
My inaugural Bug Squad blog on Aug. 6, 2008 dealt with a swarm of bees that "hitched" a ride on Aug. 1 from El Cerrito to UC Davis on a commuter van.
"At 7 a.m., a group of UC Davis employees approached their commuter van in an El Cerrito parking lot. But, after glancing at the passenger side, they weren't at all sure they wanted to board. A huge swarm of bees bearded the entire passenger side of the vehicle and part of the windshield. Thousands of bees. Did I say thousands of bees? Thousands of bees."
"What to do? Knowing about colony collapse disorder and the declining bee population, they didn't want to hurt them. So they climbed in the van via the driver's side and circled the block, hoping the bees would disperse. They didn't."
"In an un-bee-lievable sight, the white van, accompanied by the bees and their queen, buzzed to the UC campus on a 60-mile freeway ride. When the vehicle pulled into the Shields parking lot shortly before 8 a.m., so did a long line of bees hanging around the door frame."
“We lost most of them along the way,” vanpool driver Keir Reavie, head of the Biological and Agriculture Sciences Department at Shields Library, told us.
How did the survivors survive?
That was the question.
Cooperative Extension apiculturist Eric Mussen, based in the UC Davis Department of Entomology (it's now the Department of Entomology and Nematology) explained that "some bees must have slipped inside the door frame and held on to the others by linking legs. The queen bee was probably inside the crack.”
Mussen recommended that the commuters leave them alone or contact a beekeeper on campus or in El Cerrito to vacuum off the swarm. “The bees in a swarm usually won't bother you unless they are significantly disturbed,” he said.
Meanwhile, the social insects spent the day on campus, periodically leaving the van for food and water, while others—the scouts—searched for a new home. Some bees parked on the “Van Pool Parking Only” sign and the motorcycle permit parking sign. A spider took the opportunity to snack on a bee snared in its web.
So many memories.
And so many memories of the incredible Eric Mussen, who died June 3 at age 78 after being diagnosed with liver cancer on May 31. We are all grieving and heartbroken over the tremendous loss of our friend, colleague and fellow human being who loved bees and delighted in sharing information about them.
Mussen, who served as the state's Extension apiculturist for 38 years, joined our Department of Entomology in 1976, and retired in 2014. But he never really retired. He kept busy during his retirement years with his various projects, including serving as the 2017 president of the Western Apicultural Society for the 40th anniversary conference at UC Davis.
He gained state, national and international stature for his expertise on bees and his skills as a science communicator. You may have heard him on National Public Radio (Science Friday) or on BBC or read about him in the nation's top newspapers. (Read the tributes from colleagues, fellow scientists, bee breeders and beekeepers on the Department of Entomology and Nematology website.)
For nearly four decades, Eric drew praise as “the honey bee guru,” “the pulse of the bee industry" and "the go-to person" when consumers, scientists, researchers, students, and the news media sought answers about honey bees.
“Eric's passing is a huge loss," said longtime colleague Lynn Kimsey, director of the Bohart Museum of Entomology and a UC Davis distinguished professor of entomology. "He was always the go-to person for all things honey bee. He worked happily with hobbyists, commercial beekeepers and anyone just generally interested."
Eric was, indeed, the "go-to" person for all things honey bee.
"I was such a fan of Eric and he was an educator of everything honey bees and an all-around great guy," Christine Souza, assistant editor of Ag Alert, told us this morning. "For many years he was an amazing source for me for Ag Alert. No one had the knowledge or charisma that he had to talk about entomology and make the average person out there listen to scientific information. He was great at it and made me want to learn more about bees every time I had the great opportunity to talk to him. I feel very blessed to have met him and interviewed him."
We were all blessed. It was a honey of a ride and he left a whale of a legacy.
(A Celebration of Life for Eric Mussen is planned from 4 to 6 p.m., Sunday, Aug. 28 in the Putah Creek Lodge, UC Davis campus.)