Posts Tagged: Tracie Hayes
New Additions to Bohart Museum Open House on Beetles
A Cal Fire display of bark beetles and a children's activity by Project Learning Tree California...
Project Learning Tree (PLT) California aims to "use trees and forests as windows on the world to increase students' understanding of the environment and actions they can take to conserve it."
Cal Fire senior environmental specialist Curtis Ewing examining a coast live oak with cankers and flatheaded borer damage.
Bohart Museum Spotlight on Yellow-Bellied Burying Beetles
When you go to Bodega Bay, you may see giggling young beachgoers playfully bury one another in the...
A carrion beetle, genus Heterosilpha, from a screen shot of a video by UC Davis doctoral candidate Tracie Hayes, an ecologist and artist.
The Bohart Museum's family arts-and-crafts activity will be to color this drawing of a carrion beetle, genus Heterosilpha, by doctoral candidate Tracie Hayes, an ecologist and artist. (Credit: Tracie Hayes)
Doctoral Candidate Tracie Hayes to Lend Expertise on Burying Beetles at Bohart Open House
If you're a burying beetle, you bury a small carcass, such as a mouse, and use it as a food source...
This is a carrion beetle, genus Heterosilpha. (Screen shot from Tracie Hayes' video)
The Bohart Museum of Entomology's family crafts activity will be to color Tracie Hayes' drawing of a carrion beetle, genus Heterosilpha. (Art by Tracie Hayes)
'Beetle Mania' at the Bohart Museum of Entomology on Jan. 22
There's "Beatlemania" and then there's "Beetle Mania." One involved the fanaticism directed at the...
The burying beetle is known for burying carcasses of small vertebrates, such as mice, squirrels and birds, and using them as a food source for its larvae. (Photo courtesy of Wikipedia)
A dung beetle with two balls of dung. (Photo courtesy of Wikipedia)
Beetles! Bohart Museum Open House Set Sunday, Jan. 22
Beetles! And with an exclamation point! That's the theme of the Bohart Museum of Entomology...
This is a burying beetle, Nicrophorus germanicus. It buries the carcasses of small vertebrae and uses them as a food source for its larva. (Photo courtesy of Wikipedia)
A multicolored Asian beetle and her eggs. (Photo by Kathy Keatley Garvey)
A dung beetle with two ball of dung. (Photo courtesy of Wikipedia)