By John
Hawkins MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Specialists met in Starkville recently to study a
subject that most people would find rather questionable: how
to raise and keep insects alive and well. "Growing
quality insects is crucial to many areas of entomology and
integrated pest management," said Frank Davis, Mississippi
State University emeritus adjunct professor of entomology
and workshop coordinator. The
five-day workshop, titled "Principles and Procedures of
Rearing Quality Insects," began Sept. 29 and was sponsored
by MSU's Department of Entomology and Plant Pathology, in
partnership with the U.S. Department of Agriculture's
Biological Control and Mass Rearing Research Unit.
Twenty-five specialists attended the event from such
countries as Australia, Belgium, Germany, Switzerland,
Canada and the United States. This
year's workshops were dedicated to the retired USDA
researcher and former MSU adjunct professor Alan Bartlett,
who made many contributions to the area of insect rearing
and the effects that domestication has on the genetics of
laboratory-reared insect colonies. This is
the sixth workshop MSU has offered to further educate
professionals who already work in the fields of insect
rearing and research. Universities and colleges around the
world offer courses in entomology, but none offer
instruction in the science and technology of raising
insects, Davis said. This is the gap which the workshop aims
to fill. "Insect
rearing deserves and requires a formal education, but many
specialists don't have such an opportunity. They receive
training from other specialists and experienced experts in
the field," Davis said. "This course is the first of its
kind anywhere in the world, and people come from many
backgrounds, public and private, to take advantage of what
we have to offer at the workshop." The
workshop serves as a brief A-to-Z course that covers many
aspects of insect rearing. Specialists had the opportunity
to hear experts discuss topics such as insect diets, rearing
systems and environments, diseases, genetics, quality
control and management. "We
have a wide range of professionals who attended the event.
Some work in rearing parasites and predators, and others
work in growing insects such at butterflies that can be used
by children and students as learning tools," Davis said.
"The workshop aims to provide information that can be used
by everyone." Those
who participated in the course also toured the rearing
facilities at the USDA laboratories and the Mississippi
Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station's new
state-of-the-art, insect-rearing lab at the Clay-Lyle
Entomology Building. "Not
only do participants come to listen to the speakers we
provide and look at our facilities, but they also are given
a manual that contains everything covered in the workshop,"
Davis said. "This includes speeches presented by the
specialists who have been brought in, and selected articles
which back up the concepts discussed." In the
future, Davis said he hopes the manuals provided in the
workshops will be compiled into the first-ever
insect-rearing textbook. The book could then be used by
colleges and universities to teach insect-rearing
courses. In
addition to informative talks and tours, the event provided
attendees with a chance to meet colleagues and
socialize. "The
overall goal for the workshop is to provide a high-quality
program with good, practical information, but we also want
those who come to have a chance to enjoy what we have to
offer here at MSU and in the Starkville area," Davis
said. Released:
Oct. 14, 2002
Mississippi
Agricultural News
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Workshop
educates on
insect rearing
Contact: Dr. Frank Davis, (662) 325-2983
Visit: DAFVM
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