Santa Cruz

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Malay Lacewing butterfly (Cethosia hypsea). Photographed by Richard Tenaza and identified by professor/butterfly expert Arthur Shapiro of UC Davis.
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The Sounds of a Rainforest

April 19, 2012
When you listen to a rainforest, what do you hear? What does it tell you? Those who attend the free public event, Mentawai: Listening to the Rainforest, on Sunday, April 22 on the UC Davis campus will find out.
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Light Brown Apple Moth-Male 2
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Light brown apple moth in Santa Barbara County

December 22, 2011
Light brown apple moth (LBAM), Epiphyas postvittana (Walker) was recently found in Santa Barbara County for the sixth time. LBAM is a quarantine pest on the United States mainland and can cause serious damage to various crops, nurseries, fruit trees, landscapes, and native plants.
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CWSS weed research reports

July 5, 2011
By Brad Hanson
This week we are finalizing plans for the 55th Annual UC Davis Weed Day on July 14th. It's not too late to register if you are interested in a sampling of the current weed science research at UCD! More info and registration information on Weed Day can be found here: http://wric.ucdavis.
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UC DAVIS ENTOMOLOGIST James Carey believes that the light brown apple moth has long been established in California and cannot be eradicated. He is featured in the Jan. 8 edition of Science Magazine in a NewsFocus piece headlined "From Medfly to Moth: Raising a Buzz of Dissent." (Photo by Kathy Keatley Garvey)
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Medfly and Moth Wars

January 7, 2010
James R. Carey is used to dissent. The entomology professor at the University of California, Davis, fervently believes that the Mediterranean fruit fly and light brown apple moth, two exotic and invasive pests, have long been established in California and cannot be eradicated.
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HONEY BEE nectaring lavender. Los Alamos National Laboratory has developed a method for training the common honey bee to detect the explosives used in bombs. The method involves the tongue or proboscis. (Photo by Kathy Keatley Garvey)
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A Tongue for Explosives, Narcotics

October 20, 2009
Honey bees are involved in a unique "sting operation" utilizing their sense of keen smell to detect explosives and narcotics. And now a scientist from the Los Alamos National Laboratory, New Mexico, will talk about the project on Wednesday, Oct. 21 on the UC Davis campus.
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UC DAVIS ENTOMOLOGIST James R. Carey, director of a federally funded program on aging and lifespan, will speak on "Demography of the Finitude: Insights into Lifespan, Aging and Death from Insect Studies" from 12:10 to 1 p.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 21 in 122 Briggs Hall, UC Davis. It can be accessed live. (See above for link.) (Photo by Kathy Keatley Garvey)
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What We Can Learn from Insects

October 16, 2009
What can we learn from insects? Lots. But first, let's talk about the UC Seminar Network. It's a pilot program that involves Webcasting scientific seminars on University of California campuses.
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