by Stephen D. Gaimari
This year's Informal Conference of the North American Dipterists'
Society will be held at the Las Vegas Hilton on Monday, 9 November, at
7 pm, as part of the Annual Meeting program of the Entomological
Society of America. In addition to the Business Meeting, there are
three scheduled talks, as follows. Dr. Benjamin Foote (professor, Kent
State University) will talk about the biology of marsh-inhabiting
acalyptrate Diptera, focusing on trophic ecology and larval feeding
habits. Scott Fitzgerald (Darlene Judd's first doctoral student at
Oregon State University) will present a paper reviewing the
distributional patterns of New World Bibionidae, with a comparison of
genus and species richness by region. Martin Hauser (Mike Irwin's new
doctoral student at the University of Illinois from the Technical
University of Darmstadt, Germany; Martin also worked for 2 years as an
entomologist at the Natural History Museum in Stuttgart) will talk
about the interesting, very rare, Palearctic genus Exochostoma
(Stratiomyidae). In addition to the scheduled presentations, the floor
will be open afterwards to anyone who wants to discuss NADS business,
the goings-on in their labs, or other dipterological news and views.
Overall, this should be a great meeting, with several very interesting
talks, and a hopefully lively discussion. I hope to see you all there!
by Brian M. Wiegmann
Preliminary arrangements have been made to accommodate 50 dipterists
at Camp Broadstone, Valle Crucis, NC. Camp Broadstone, located in the
Blue Ridge Mountains, is on 53 acres of woods and meadows in the small
community of Valle Crucis, six miles west of Boone and the campus of
Appalachian State University. The camp is located near the Blue Ridge
Parkway, Linville Gorge, Grandfather Mtn., and the Pisgah and Cherokee
National Forests.
Collecting will be possible on the grounds of the camp and
excursions will be planned to sites in the Pisgah and Cherokee
Forests. Facilities include a main lodge, six cabins, business office,
maintenance building, arts and crafts cabin and classroom cabins. The
main lodge and dining hall of 4,600 square feet is a multipurpose
facility for serving meals, indoor workshops and evening activities.
The large natural stone fireplace, on a cool evening, provides a
relaxing atmosphere after a full day of outdoor activity. Meals are
served family style from the fully-equipped modern kitchen located in
the main lodge. Sleeping accommodations are in modern, clean and
comfortable bunk-house style cabins. The cabins feature bunk beds,
indoor bathroom facilities with individual hot showers and are fully
insulated and electrically heated. They are able to accommodate up to
100 people in the six cabins.
The projected cost per person is $120, covering registration,
lodging and meals for the entire meeting.
If you would like to be put on the mailing list to receive
registration materials and further information about the meeting check
out the NADS meeting website at:
http://www4.ncsu.edu/unity/users/b/bwiegman/public_html/ncflies99.html
or contact: Brian M. Wiegmann Department of Entomology
Box 7613 North Carolina State University Raleigh, NC 27695
email: bwiegman@unity.ncsu.edu
phone: 919-515-1653 fax: 919-515-7746
by Dick Deonier
In 1965, I collected and sent to Dr. J.L. Laffoon (now deceased)
several thousand insects from various localities in Thailand. Jean had
all of them processed, fully labelled, and deposited there in the Iowa
State Collection. For the most part these were Diptera and I would
estimate there are at least 4,000 to 5,000 specimens (other than
Ephydridae) awaiting proper study.
D.L. Deonier P.O. Box 405 Lawrence, KS 66044
from Dan V. Hagan
The organizers (Dr. Frank E. French, Georgia Southern University, et
al.) of the 1999 BFW are considering holding the BFW jointly with the
1999 NADS meeting in North Carolina. Further details are not yet
available.
from Jose A. Rafael Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da
Amazonia, Manaus
Jose writes that he is currently in Ottawa for a year and a half on
a Brazilian fellowship, working with Jeff Cumming researching the
subfamily Empidinae. Jose's projects in Ottawa include revisions of
the Neotropical genera Macrostomus and Porphyrochroa,
and the phylogeny and higher classification of the Empidini. The
project will finish at the end of 1998.
from Scott Fitzgerald
Scott is a Ph.D. student working with Darlene Judd at Oregon State
University. He wrote to say he plans to work on the classification of
the bibionid genus Plecia (i.e. species groups, subgenera,
etc.) on a world scale. He believes there will certainly be other
projects that stem from this along the way, but he "hasn't been
at it long enough to know what those may be".
by Terry A. Wheeler
The Lyman Entomological Museum is the insect collection and
systematic entomology lab of McGill University. The museum was founded
in 1914 and over the past 85 years the collection has grown steadily
and now numbers about 2.8 million specimens, making it the second
largest insect collection in Canada (behind the CNC). The collection
is particularly strong in Orthopteroids, Lepidoptera and Coleoptera
but the Diptera collection has lagged far behind other orders in
growth. There has not been a dipterist associated with the Lyman
Museum for many years and the Diptera collection reflects that
grievous oversight.
I joined McGill University in 1995 and became Director of the Lyman
Museum in 1997. Most of my time since then has been focused on trying
to build the Diptera collection and establish a research and training
program in Diptera systematics and diversity. We have finally reached
the point where there is something worth reporting so it seemed like a
good time to profile the Lyman Diptera program.
Collection development has been a major priority, mainly because we
need some specimens to work on. In 1995 the Diptera collection was
almost completely uncurated, with only a few families reliably
identified to the generic or specific level, and much of the rest only
to family (with about 75% accuracy). Almost half the collection was
unidentified to family. We have put a lot of effort into sorting the
miscellaneous material to family and, where reasonable expertise
exists, to genus. Also, through the efforts of some hard core
students, a few long collecting trips, and a lot of sorting of
existing residues, the Diptera collection has been growing by about
20,000 pinned specimens per year since 1996. The collection is now
about 80% sorted to family and further in some groups. The focus was
initially on acalyptrate families, especially the Chloropidae and
Agromyzidae, but as more students have developed their own interests
and we have launched some multi-taxon sampling programs, the
representation across all families of Brachycera is getting better.
The Nematocera still lags behind but hopefully we'll find a good
student or two who'll straighten out the inequality.
We've been very lucky to attract a solid group of students in the
first few years of the new Lyman. It's a particularly busy time now,
with a couple of cohorts of students overlapping in their programs.
The following list outlines the current roster of graduate students
working on Diptera, with their projects:
Frederic Beaulieu (M.Sc.): Diptera community associated with wetland
sedges in southern Quebec. Stephanie Boucher (M.Sc.):
Zoogeography of Brachycera of relict grasslands in the Yukon.
Scott Brooks (Ph.D.): Higher classification of the subfamily
Dolichopodinae. Vanessa Crecco (M.Sc.): Ecology and diversity of
Agromyzidae in arid grasslands. Joanne Mudd (M.Sc.): Ecology and
diversity of grassland acalyptrates. Cyrena Riley (M.Sc.):
Diversity and host associations of arthropod fauna in bird nests.
I also have two undergraduate students working on B.Sc. Honours
theses who will be staying on to start graduate work in 1999. Jade
Savage has just finished a project on the systematics and phylogeny of
Cetema (Chloropidae) and Joelle Perusse is currently immersed in a
revision of the Nearctic Lauxania (Lauxaniidae).
When I'm not dealing with memos, meetings, fundraising, or reading
drafts of work by those on the above list, I continue my work in
Chloropid systematics, higher classification of acalyptrates, and
biodiversity work on Diptera in arid habitats.
Although our own Diptera collection is not a major one (yet) we are
fortunate that we are only 1.5 hours from the CNC, with their
excellent fly collection, library and the expertise of their staff.
CNC staff have taken an active role in encouraging, training and
supervising many of the Lyman's junior dipterists and a steady flow of
traffic ensures close cooperation between our two collections. I would
like to promote further use of our collection and those few dipterists
still out there doing revisionary work are encouraged to make use of
our material in studies. Loans are available and encouraged and any
dipterists passing through the Montreal area are invited to visit,
have some secret Lyman Blend coffee and look over the collection. But
if your favourite family is one that we haven't gotten around to
curating yet, then please promise not to laugh when you see it. We're
still under construction.
Readers are reminded that the Dipterology Fund has money available
for student research and travel as well as supporting the development
of North American Dipterology. Details of the fund are given in Fly
Times 19:5 (October, 1997). For those of you who have lost your copies
(unforgivable) and have no Internet access, contact:
Terry A. Wheeler Assistant Professor Department of Natural
Resource Sciences McGill University, Macdonald Campus
Ste-Anne-de-Bellevue, Quebec, H9X 3V9 Canada email:
wheeler@nrs.mcgill.ca
phone: 514-398-7937 fax: 514-398-7990
by C. Riley Nelson
In August I attended the IX International Conference on
Ephemeroptera and the XIII International Symposium on Plecoptera in
Tafí del Valle, Argentina in the company of Robert Hansen and
Lisa Weston, both of Austin, Texas. The meetings were wonderfully
hosted by Dr. Eduardo Dominguez and other folks at the Universidad
Nacional de Tucumán and the associated Instituto Miguel Lillo.
I flew into Cordoba on a cheap ticket ($599) from Miami. Flying into
Buenos Aires would have been much more expensive and more of a hassle
to change airports. From Cordoba I took buses, in steps, to Tucuman
then Tafi del Valle then Quilmes then Jujuy. The habitat on the ride
from Cordoba to Tucuman started in agricultural land that changed to
beautiful desert shrublands that no doubt harbored many asilid
species. I encountered other permutations of desert shrub land at
higher elevations in the Santa Maria Valley west of Tucuman. I would
much enjoy collecting asilids from these habitats, but it was winter
and schedules were tight. The Yunga habitat (a type of mid-elevation
cloud forest new to me) along river canyons was impressively squeezed
between lower elevation desert scrub and higher elevation grasslands
and desert. When I stayed in Tafi, elevationally above the Yunga I
could look down and see the clouds filling the canyons. It was
beautifully impressive. Epiphytes including many bromeliads and
bryophytes draped the "temperate" trees here. I did manage
to photograph a few aquatic insects in this habitat, including some of
the many blepharicerids collected by Dr. Peter Zwick of Schiltz,
Germany and myself. Robert and Lisa continued on to the Bolivian
border at La Quiaca. Here they got to see Altiplano habitat and large
lakes home to flocks of flamingos. I missed this part of the trip
because I needed to get back to the start of classes. I arrived in
Austin at 10:30 am and taught at 2:00 and 4:00 pm that afternoon.
It was winter so collecting of flies was not a major goal of the
trip, but I did make contacts with several people studying flies
there: Dr. Mercedes Lizarralde de Grosso, studying Ephydridae and a
graduate student Cristina Rueda studying systematics of robber flies
(Asilidae) especially the genus Atomosia. Cristina took
several of us collecting aquatics in the rivers near Jujuy in the
extreme north of the country. Both Mercedes and Cristina are based at
the Instituto Miguel Lillo in downtown Tucuman. This institute is
pleasantly surrounded by a small botanical garden in which I was able
to photograph quite a few colorful and otherwise interesting insects.
Moving around Argentina was cheap and easy by bus. Taxis or remisses
were easy to find and reasonable to get to short hop urban locations.
I didn't use them to get to more remote locations, but I'm sure it
would be possible, but not completely cheap ($12 per hour). Both the
nation and individual provinces have protocols for collecting permits
that need to be initiated several months before a planned visit.
I am most intrigued by getting to the southern portion of the
country, near Bariloche and Esquel. There are fine university
scientists there who I met who will be most useful in collaborative
efforts.
by Neal L. Evenhuis
I arrived to do some collaborative work just outside of London a few
days before the Congress and encountered the remnants of Hurricane
George still having enough punch to dump a bit of rain onto jolly old
England after pounding the Caribbean and eastern seaboard of North
America weeks earlier. The next hurricane due to roll into the UK was
the delegation of dipterists attending the fourth International
Congress of Dipterology in Oxford (ICD-4). Almost 300 paying customers
attended the Congress, which took place 6-11 September. Any non-paying
customers shall remain anonymous except for their names being
prominently displayed in the list of Bests and Worsts, which can be
viewed on the web at
http://www.bishop.hawaii.org/bishop/ento/icdlist.html.
The weather turned out to be, for the most part, accommodating, with
only a few hours of necessary umbrella time in between sessions. All
activity took place on the beautiful grounds of Keble (pronounced "Kee-
Bull") College just across from the famous Oxford University
Museum, which houses the Hope Entomological Collections. Stepping into
Keble College (you literally must do so through a small door) one is
at once struck by the age, grandeur, and beauty of the buildings and
grounds. The main quad area sported an immaculate lawn, which was
off-limits to everyone except a groundskeeper, who daily trimmed the
edges and picked mushrooms when they appeared [no one was able to find
out what happened to the mushrooms, though an investigation is still
ongoing]. The buildings include a large chapel and associated 3-story
buildings that housed staff, students, classes, and laboratories of
the college.
Sunday afternoon saw many of the delegates at registration where we
all got shiny new black tote bags and our program paraphenalia. The
ARCO Room, where registration took place, as well being the venue for
booksellers stalls and coffee and tea breaks, was a fair sized room
with an outside area with canopied tables for conversation and
relaxing. When there was nothing else to do, you could always go to
the ARCO Room during the Congress and browse the bookseller stalls or
meet people over a coffee or just sit and read some of the latest
Diptera journals or the various flyers and adverts on display.
Sunday evening was the official start of the Congress and included a
mixer in the Oxford University Museum exhibit hall. Drinking wines and
concurrently rubbing elbows with dinosaur skeletons was a definitely
unique experience. I think the skeleton I was getting to know will
never forget it (if I remember, I think I did manage to get the wine
bottle out of its jaws before the mixer was over ...).
Monday morning was the start of the sessions with the plenary
opening in the University Museum lecture hall and welcoming by the
Director of the Museum and the Local Organizer, David Henshaw. Here we
were presented with the announcement of the three new Honorary Council
members, Drs. D. Elmo Hardy, Graham Griffiths, and Antony Downs. After
we had a short lecture on the stiff rules we must follow at the Keble
College Dining Hall (shades of "Oliver Twist" to be sure),
we filed out of the lecture hall to walk across the street to the
Keble College lecture rooms. Soon to come would be the delegate's
first experience with the high quality of technology that Keble
College had promised its organizers with regard to media equipment
(see below).
Most sessions took place in four rooms within what was called the
Pusey Quad (pronounced "Pyoo-Zee"). One of the smallest of
these rooms -- from the looks of it, a music classroom -- was the Ley
Room (pronounced "Lee"). Unfortunately, incorrect
guestimates by the organizers as to how many people would attend
various sessions caused the Ley Room to never have been large enough
for its various sessions. Quite often, latecomers would be relegated
to sitting on the harpsichord at the back of the room and rumor has it
that bets were being placed on how many people could sit on it before
it collapsed. It did creak a few times, but no collapses as far as I
know. Others would open the door, see a full room, and hang out in the
hallway trying in vein to hear the talks through the thick oak doors;
and still others were lucky enough to either sit on the ground near
the door or to even sit in a moderator's seat if it was vacant. The
Ley Room was also prone to glare on the projection screen from the
afternoon sun -- yes, English sunshine, though some still think it is
an oxymoron. Obviously, the rarity of such an event such as sunshine
in England was not foreseen by the Keble College conference personnel
and many afternoon sessions in the Ley Room unfortunately suffered.
The upstairs Pusey Room was the largest of the lecture rooms and had
curtains to shade from the afternoon sun. This room, despite its size,
still had problems with not enough seats for certain popular sessions.
The Gibbs Room, conveniently near the first aid station and surgeon's
office, was probably the most jinxed of all the rooms. Obviously a
failed exorcism had taken place there sometime in the near past as
almost all sessions had problems with either seating, inoperable
projection equipment, or weird noises (though the last may have been
my rumbling stomach).
The poster sessions (two of them: one each for 2 1/2 days) took
place across the hall from the Ley Room and were a popular venue -- as
they are at most conferences -- here probably because most poster
viewers were those that could not get into the Ley Room. The quality
of poster production by those with enough money to afford it was very
clearly evident at this conference. Glossy color posters (large-format
roll-up single sheets) were the highlight of the sessions and
exhibited well-tuned graphics as well as good content and stimulating
project descriptions. If this last four years of the evolution and
development in the quality of posters is any indication, the next four
years may show another leap in technology in poster presentation so
that it might not be far-fetched to see hyperlinks or touch screens on
posters at the next Congress.
Probably the most popular of all the sessions was the one on the
status of Diptera collections that took place the last day of the
Congress in the Pusey Room. The afternoon portion was also the best
attended session since it did not conflict with any other concurrent
session and most every registered participant tried to get a seat or
had to stand in the hall stairway and listen. Those of us that could
get a seat were not disappointed. Among the many fine presentations,
Loic Matile gave a light hearted talk of the history and current
status of the collections at the Museum d'Histoire Naturelle in Paris
and Emilia Narchuk gave an excellent account of the history of Russian
entomology and the collections in St. Petersburg with a memorable
slide with a striking juxtaposition of photographs of Rohdendorf and
Stackelberg taken decades apart, but with almost the identical pose
next to (probably the same!) dissecting scope.
Overall, this Congress met or exceeded many expectations. There were
some unfortunate circumstances, but some of this must also be put into
the context of the situation. Unfortunately, the organizers could not,
despite many attempts, get sponsorship for the Congress. This was a
serious financial hardship that was dealt with by the organizers
taking out personal loans to see that the Congress would actually take
place. To this end, they deserve our gratitude and thanks for seeing
the Congress to its successful conclusion! However, to their and our
consternation, there were still problems that affected a few delegates
during this Congress. One was the unfortunate failure of projection
equipment in the Gibbs Room on Monday afternoon, which resulted in
quite a bit of quick adlibbing on the part of co-moderators, Dan
Bickel and Roy Crossley and a large dose of patience by presenter Marc
Pollet to have to endure not only a broken slide projector, but also a
computerized presentation that did not work correctly. My talk after
Marc's only suffered the hilarity of slides turning into projectiles
once they were advanced with the remote control.
The closing plenary session took place in the ARCO Room with David
Henshaw and Milan Chvala hosting the ceremonies. New Honorary Council
members Graham Griffiths and Antony Downes gave speeches concerning
their respective rises to stardom and Wayne Mathis and Roger Crosskey
gave eloquent anecdotal remarks in memory of Curtis Sabrosky, who had
passed away earlier this year. New Council members were introduced and
the new venue for the next Congress was announced. Saturday was the
day for post-congress field trips to various nearby forests. Ed
Jarzembowski also organized a last-minute 4 day fossil Diptera field
trip, which had some takers as well.
We all went away wanting more.
I hope to see many of this year's delegates, as well as new ones and
old ones at the next Congress (ICD-5) in Brisbane, Australia. Best of
luck to new council member David Yeates in his organization of that
Congress.
*Summaries of all talks given at the Congress were published in
an Abstracts Volume, details of which are given below under "Books
and Publications" (the editors). |