Posts Tagged: Lacie Newton
From Students to University Professionals: A Gathering of Arachnologists at UC Davis
One of the scores of arachnologists you'll see at the "Eight-Legged Encounters" open house on...
UC Davis doctoral candidate and arachnologist Lacie Newton delivering her exit seminar. She will be participating in the American Arachnological Society conference at UC Davis. An open house at the Bohart Museum on June 25 will kick off the conference.
Lacie Newton's Exit Seminar: Evolution and Speciation in a Trapdoor Spider Genus
UC Davis doctoral candidate Lacie Newton covered two chapters of her dissertation when she...
UC Davis doctoral candidate Lacie Newton delivering her exit seminar.
Meet Awesome Annie, the Scorpion, at UC Davis Biodiversity Museum Day
Are you ready to meet awesome "Annie" at the 11th annual UC Davis Biodiversity Museum Day on...
Doctoral candidate Lacie Newton collected this scorpion, Centruroides vittatus, at the Big Bend National Park in Texas. (Photo by Lacie Newton)
Doctoral candidate Lacie Newton collected this tarantula, Aphonopelma chalcodes, from the Superstition Mountains near Phoenix. (Photo by Lacie Newton)
Of Butterflies and Hornets and Spiders and Millipedes
If you're a wanna-be entomologist or arachnologist, or just curious about insects and arachnids,...
Five members of Jason Bond lab at the UC Quail Ridge Reserve, Napa County. From left are Lacie Newton, Xavier Zahnle, Emma Jochim, Lisa Chamberland, and Jim Starrett. Not pictured are the newest lab members Iris Bright and Megan Ma.
Doctoral candidate Lacie Newton of the Jason Bond lab digging out a trapdoor spider, genus Aliatypus, at the Moore Creek Park in Napa County.
Bohart Museum associate Greg Kareofelas (left) shares his expertise on California dogface butterflies with Rob Stewart of the television program, "Rob on the Road."
UC Davis Graduate Students to Present Their Research in ESA Competitions
Twelve graduate students with the UC Davis Department of Entomology and Nematology--and one...
In the ant genus Dorymyrmex, a rapidly evolving group of similar-looking species includes this specimen of Dorymyrmex “pr01” collected by Jill Oberski in Paraná, Brazil. Oberski, a fifth-year doctoral candidate in the Phil Ward lab, is president of the UC Davis Entomology Graduate Student Association.