Gall wasp Essays

  • Background Research on the Goldenrod Gallfly Eurosta Solidaginis

    1530 Words  | 4 Pages

    may lay several eggs per goldenrod stem, each plant usually ends up with one surviving larva in one gall. Once born, the fly larvae hatch from their eggs and begin eating the inside of the goldenrod stem. The larvae emit a chemical in their saliva which mimics a plant hormone that causes the plant to grow a gall in which the larvae live (Abrahamson and Heinrich, 2000). The larvae stay in the gall and then make an escape tunnel in the fall which they will utilize in the spring. The gallfly larvae

  • Plant Galls Lab Report

    1120 Words  | 3 Pages

    Introduction A gall is an abnormal growth that occurs on plant tissues. A plant growth is similar to a tumor or a wart that would occur on an animal; plant galls, however, are typically caused by various parasites and insects. In order for a gall to form, a female insect needs to implant an egg into a plant. It is important that the insect does so when the plant is maturing, this ensures the plants meristem is extremely active and prepared to grow a gall suitable for the insect’s young. The larvae

  • Rosenberg's Use of Words to Communicate Themes in his Poem

    1261 Words  | 3 Pages

    of words and phrases to communicate themes in his poem and to see how the poem has been made memorable. To me, the poem on its own is a metaphor portraying life and its elements of uncertainty and others. In line 1’’ Two aerial tigers…’’, the wasps are being referred to as ‘’aerial tigers’’ because they do all their activities in the air (aerial). They are referred to as ‘’tigers’ for two reasons. The main one being that they are ragingly ferocious and much undomesticated. The second one

  • Animal Motifs in A Passage To India

    515 Words  | 2 Pages

    outside of the animals who acknowledge this peace are Mrs. Moore and Professor Godbole who specifically identify with a wasp extending their voluntary cognizance to Indian culture and the understanding of unity among all living creatures on Earth. "Pretty dear," Mrs. Moore gently refers to the wasp that she spots resting on the indoor cloak peg (Forster, 35). Instead of encouraging the wasp to rest elsewhere, Mrs. Moore, the idealized Englishwoman of the novel, sympathizes with the insect and says, "Perhaps

  • Shigella flexneri

    965 Words  | 2 Pages

    cytoskeletal rearrangements. This alteration to the cytoskeleton allows the bacteria to be macropinocytosed by the host cell. Once inside the host, the pathogen colonizes the cytoplasm. IcsA, a bacterial surface protein, activates the host protein N-WASP and, in turn, stimulates actin assembly by host Arp 2/3. Thus, S. flexneri develops actin-based motility enabling the pathogen to become efficient at cell-to-cell spread and host cell cytoplasmic colonization. Infected cells become highly proinflammatory

  • Animal Images in Taming of the Shrew

    803 Words  | 2 Pages

    animals are used constantly. Right from the start, Katherine refers to Petruccio as a "buzzard" to which he quickly retorts that as a buzzard, he will carry her away (2.1.204-205). In the same interaction, Katherine warns Petruccio to be wary of her wasp-like sting to which he says he will pluck it out once he finds where it lies (2.1.208-214). This interaction and use of animals in the first scene of act two illustrates the beginning of Petruccio's plan for the taming of his shrew. Petruccio continually

  • Insects in Popular Culture

    1172 Words  | 3 Pages

    Contents Film: The Wasp Women- 25 points Film: The Black Scorpion- 25 points Poetry: Haikus- 6 points Poetry: Short Poem- 5 points Insects in Popular Culture – 10 points Original Comic- 30 points References Honor Pledge The Wasp Woman, 1959 The Wasp Women tells the story of Janice Starlin, owner and CEO of a cosmetics company. To bolster her declining sales she enlists the help of recently fired beekeeper Dr. Zinthrop. Zinthrop was fired for experimenting with wasps, specifically enzyme

  • William Shakespeare's The Taming of the Shrew

    1161 Words  | 3 Pages

    people say she is transformed into a very kind and gentle person, while again others will argue that she is not “tamed” but just putting on an act to “show up” her younger sister Bianca, whom has always been more beautiful and charming. Kate is “like a wasp, like a foal, like foal that kicks from his halter; pert, quick and determined, but full of good heart.” 1. This statement made by one author, shows clearly that he does not see her as shrew-like, even at the beginning of the play. The same author

  • Aristophanes Voices Concerns for Ancient Greek Culture in His Plays

    1818 Words  | 4 Pages

    Aristophanes was not a proponent of the majority of Athenian culture, as well as other aspects of Greek life as whole. He despised the political, educational, and societal views that remained persistent throughout Athens. While his plays may be comedies, he uses them in an assortment of ways. His plays are used to demonstrate a purpose far beyond that of entertainment. He uses his writing for voicing the problems that lie in Ancient culture. Aristophanes uses each play to reveal certain issues that

  • Social Wasp Essay

    1458 Words  | 3 Pages

    traits and strategies can be seen in social wasp populations. Social wasps live in a hierarchy of a queen wasps and worker wasps. A single reproductive queen wasp produces all of

  • Antipredator Defense as a Limited Resource : Unequal Predation Risk and Broods of an Insect With Maternal Care

    2739 Words  | 6 Pages

    INSECTS WITH PARENTAL INSTINCTS More than two centuries ago, a Swedish scientist named Modeer described what appeared to be maternal behavior in the acanthosomatid shield bug Elasmucha grisea. He noted that the female did not fly away when an intruding object threatened her compact egg mass; instead, she remained steadfast and tilted her body towards the object (Tallamy). Unfortunately, this evidence, no matter how well documented, was not enough to convince countless people of the possibility

  • essay volunteer

    562 Words  | 2 Pages

    Since the start of freshman year, I have collectively “clocked in” about 260 hours of community volunteering. My volunteering ranged from helping the elderly at a local nursing home, to helping elementary students with homework at after-school programs, and assisting with church retreats. In addition, I just completed a week-long missionary trip to Port-au-Prince, Haiti, where my group and I helped care for and play with young children at a local orphanage. While volunteering, I have seen many children

  • Facing Fears

    635 Words  | 2 Pages

    I am not too great of a story teller, nor can I recall my past too easy, but I do know that I have many fears. Many of them are similar to most everyone elses' fears. Some of them include the fear of heights, a fear of bees, and my greatest fear which is glossophobia, or speaking in public. I can manage each of them, however they make my anxiety heighten extensively. These three fears are rated pretty equal if I was to rate them from least fearful to most. I have always been scared of heights ever

  • The Ramist Logic of Edward Taylor's Upon a Spider Catching a Fly

    923 Words  | 2 Pages

    the spider. These two insects serve as a metaphor for the two differing castes of humans within the Calvinist school of thought. The wasp is representative of 'the elect'; those who are predestined to enter into the kingdom of heaven while the fly is representative of those who are doomed for damnation from the point of their incarnation. Within the life of the wasp, it is evident that it surpasses the fly, just as the Calvinists believed that 'the elect' were more successful in life than other humans

  • Personal Narrative- Converting to Judaism

    886 Words  | 2 Pages

    grade five, I decided to find myself. Most people are not "lost" when they are eleven years old, but in my own naïve, inexperienced world, I needed a change. My teacher was the indirect cause of this awakening. She was Jewish and opened our closed WASP-y minds to a whole new world of Judaism. We explored the Jewish holidays, learned about the Holocaust, and watched Fiddler on the Roof. This brief yet fascinating view into the world of another religion captured my attention and compelled me to investigate

  • Stephen Gould Nonmoral Nature

    774 Words  | 2 Pages

    life of the parasitic ichneumon wasp. The ichneumon wasp is a creature of controversy, as its entire way of life is dependent on its ability of parasitize and eat other insects. Though many religious figures interpret this lifestyle as immoral, scientists argue that humans cannot apply the concept of morality to the wasps, as their motive for killing is based purely on securing the future of the species. To effectively present the differing views, Gould analyzes the wasps through each perspective. The

  • Patroclus: A Tragic Hero

    1658 Words  | 4 Pages

    "Patroclus," Achilles started, his voice notably low and serious in comparison to the cheerful tone it had been just seconds before. "Do not move."

  • The Problem Of Evil

    767 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Problem Of Evil It is impossible to deny the existence of evil in the world as we as human beings experience pain and suffering every day. It is generally accepted that there are two different types of evil – natural (based on God) and moral (based on humans). Moral evil is caused by human beings and occurs when humans inflict suffering on other people like September 11th, world wars, the Holocaust and other human related travesties. We also inflict evil on animals with testing or hunting for

  • Loren Eisley's The Brown Wasps

    1770 Words  | 4 Pages

    Loren Eisley's The Brown Wasps Loren Eisley's "The Brown Wasps" explores a sense of belonging inherent in all life that causes displaced beings to construct memorials to their fond experiences that, while such memorials are often more bound by time than the beings who created them, provide a yearned-after stability. These seemingly self-imposed delusions are actually the only anchors and pointers in life and, in turn, life desperately clings to them, its own symbols of the past. Speaking

  • The Wasp Factory

    1292 Words  | 3 Pages

    “A Gothic horror story of quite exceptional quality...macabre, bizarre and...quite impossible to put down.” The above quote is the response of the Financial Times to the best-selling novel, “The Wasp Factory”, and in my opinion, truer words were never spoken. I myself had to force the book out of my hands in the early hours of the morning on several occasions. This clearly says something about the sheer power of Iain Bank’s debut novel. Whether you love it or hate it, once you have read the first