The Fall of Empire

A photo from Flickr user Stéfan:

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I'm leaving shortly for the 2008 International Congress of Entomology in Durban, South Africa. This means another break from the blog for me, but when I return in mid-July there will be plenty of African insect photos.  St. Lucia, where I'm headed the week before the conference, has African weaver…
“If everything seems under control, you’re not going fast enough.” -Mario Andretti One of the toughest things to wrap your mind around in the natural world is the idea of special relativity: the faster you move, the closer you get to the speed of light, the more difficult it becomes to increase…
My apologies for the lack of posts.  Life and work are conspiring this week to make blogging difficult.  In the meantime, here's what's new in ants on the internet: Roberto Keller explains the clypeus. PLoS One reports that ant-dispersed plant lineages diversify more rapidly than ant-free…
A perpetually happy Venezuelan Leptogenys We don't really know why some species of Leptogenys hunting ants sport a permanent grin. The oddly ecstatic mandible shape might, however, have something to do with handling the broadly curved exoskeleton of their preferred prey: isopods (the sow bugs and…

Goodness that blaster armor is useless. First twigs and rocks now ants!

By MrILoveTheAnts (not verified) on 30 May 2009 #permalink

The top-secret truth of the shuttle mission's latest space walk?

By James C. Trager (not verified) on 31 May 2009 #permalink