Week 12 slides
Week 12 slides
Week 12
Insects and Human Culture
Course evaluation
• Kindly complete the course evaluation at the eClass link
• If 70% or more of the class completes this by December 4 I will
give everyone a bonus mark on the final exam
Want more?
• If you like my teaching style
– NATS 1565 3.0 Plant Life Human Life S1 2025, online
– NATS 1535 3.0 Global Cultures of Science and Technology F2025, online
– STS 3750 3.0 Genomics and Society Winter 2025 and Fall 2025
• If you love nature
– NATS 1665 3.0 Plants in the City – our first field course! (hands-on work)
• If you are interested in more general science content
– consider another NATS course as an elective- ask me if you need help choosing -
https://www.yorku.ca/science/natsci/courses/
• If you are interested in science, technology and their role in society
– Consider the STS major or minor, or taking STS courses to enhance your degree
– https://www.yorku.ca/science/sts/
Term Project – Academic Honesty and Integrity
• All work should be your own
• Do not copy-paste directly from sources (this is plagiarism).
• AI should not be used to write your slide notes or design your slides
as this constitutes academic dishonesty since it is not your original
work. If you used AI for information gathering be extremely
careful, as information and references are sometimes incorrect.
• Wikipedia is not a proper source, although it can contain good
information. Get your information directly from the sources used
by Wikipedia in the references section. You may use images from
Wikimedia – be sure to credit the source
Term Project – References
• All images should have an Author, Date reference underneath
• All text in the notes should use in-text referencing format (APA
– Author, date). Wherever you use information taken from
somewhere, you should provide a source
• At least 3 sources expected, 5-7 is typical, more is ok. 1 or 2
sources may not give you diverse enough perspectives, and
may reflect minimal research effort
Term Project – submission
• Please submit in PDF format only – if you used powerpoint,
print your slides using a PDF printer
• Notes for each slide should appear underneath the slide, or on
the following page
• Submission deadline extended to Dec. 10 – please email a
request for this extension to nats1636@yorku.ca
• Similarity report available about 1 day after submission – you
may resubmit until the deadline.
Cultural Entomology
• “the study of the influence of insects in literature, languages,
music, arts, interpretive history, religion and recreation”
(Cherry 2008 in Rai et al, 2023)
• Recognizes that insects have played a role in aspects of human
civilization, including the arts and religion
https://thehumaneleague.org/article/what-is-factory-farming
Are insects sentient?
“…[T]o date there is relatively little assumed or explored regarding insect cognition, and
even less regarding sentience….We caution, however, that when faced with such little
research, we cannot assume that absence of evidence, is evidence of absence…. [I]f we
choose to consume insects, or feed them to our livestock, then we have the ethical
responsibility to ensure that production does not cause poor welfare. Therefore, whether
or not an animal is sentient and capable of suffering, is at the heart of the matter when it
comes to protective legislation. ”
Why not just eat more plants???
• Plants are alive, but not sentient
• Protein needs can easily be met by
a diet with no animal products
• A diverse plant-based diet is good
for personal health and the planet
• Preserve nutrition lost to feeding
animals for food – high in vitamins
• For more information see
forksoverknives.com, and the 2011
documentary
Plant-based options for
“animal foods”
• Dog–Day Cicadas
o Adults emerge annually in July –August
o Their life cycle involves 4 – 7 years in the ground
as a nymph (larva), but generations overlap so you
see adults each year
• Periodic Cicadas
o Native to Eastern USA © 2023 The Song of Insects,
Discarded
exoskeleton of
a Cicada
following
ecdysis
Word Breakdown:
Ecdysis = take off
Exuviae = old animal
covering that was
removed
The discarded exoskeleton
is called the exuviae
T. Nathan Mundhenk Wikipedia Karthik Easvur Wikipedia
Slide credit: J. Clark
https://songsofinsects.com/cicadas/dog-day-cicada
• Each Cicada species has a unique song
• Typically, only males produce sound. To
attract a mate
• When rib-like bands associated with a pair
of Tymbals bend it creates a sound which is
amplified through large air sacs in the animal.