RJ Millena
@entomolrj.bsky.social
150 followers 140 following 14 posts
Entomologist and postdoc in the U of Rochester Trop Bio Lab, working on everything Strepsiptera! [email protected] • rjmillena.com
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Reposted by RJ Millena
amnh.org
Black in Natural History Museums in now open! See it on Floor 3 in the Museum's Gilder Center. Details: bit.ly/3KfbzTS
entomolrj.bsky.social
Big fan of the spinny mechanism 🙂‍↕️
entomolrj.bsky.social
Taking this as a sign that I should just change my dissertation to gifs of every specimen I have in this state
entomolrj.bsky.social
I'm currently IDing about 1200 specimens from malaise in Madagascar and sorting them into genus or morphotype so my eye is practiced at this point haha!! If you want to send photos of the tarsi, mouthparts, and antennae I can get them to family at least
entomolrj.bsky.social
Nah it's honestly just really fun haha—at the most, one practical thing with it was making sure things are actually on the same enough plane for me to measure them in the figure reliably
entomolrj.bsky.social
If you need help IDing or describing 👀👀👀
entomolrj.bsky.social
how I feel using the keyence
Reposted by RJ Millena
entopoc.bsky.social
Team Larvae-MNH - PhD students Kate Montana, @mantodeology.bsky.social , Amanda Markee, and @entomolrj.bsky.social and coach @jessicalwarelab.bsky.social - made their Entomology Games debut at the Eastern Branch Meeting of
@entsocamerica
in Harrisburg, PA! #Entomology #EntoPOC #DiversifyEntomology
Team members stand smiling and holding name tags in a conference hotel hallway Team members sit up on the stage competing in the entomology games, celebrating after getting a question right
entomolrj.bsky.social
This is my right hand man
A tattoo of a male twisted-wing parasite (Elenchus koebelei) on my right forearm A stacked-focus image of an Elenchus koebelei museum specimen, measuring about 1.5 mm across
entomolrj.bsky.social
Thank you for your interest :) Here's a male Xenos peckii for luck haha!
entomolrj.bsky.social
Over here in New York and in California I've had the best luck with vespids and sphecids on goldenrod, especially in Polistes spp. since they tend to be superparasitized. They're a lot easier to check than hoppers for stylopization while alive since parasitized ones fly a bit punch-drunk haha.
entomolrj.bsky.social
In NZ you might have best luck sweeping for leafhoppers (Stephen Thorpe on iNat has apparently captured a whole bunch of coriophagids in the cicadellid Novothymbris notata)! Other strepsipterans that infect hoppers are also known to come to UV and mercury vapor light traps so that might work.
entomolrj.bsky.social
Oh sure, thanks for asking! I'd recommend seeking out and collecting a ton of the hosts primarily—the streps that I've collected were always housed in their hosts, and any males I've captured on film were reared out of their hosts.