WEBVTT 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 So people are more afraid of insects than they are of dying. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 (Laughter) 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 At least, according to a 1973 book of lists survey which preceded all those 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 online best, worst, funniest lists that you see today. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Only heights and public speaking exceeded the six-legged as sources of fear. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 And I suspect if you had put spiders in there, the combinations of insects 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and spiders would have just topped the chart. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Now, I am not one of those people. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 I really love insects. I think they're interesting and beautiful, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and sometimes even cute. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 (Laughter) 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 And I'm not alone. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 For centuries, some of the greatest minds in science from Charles Darwin to E.O. Wilson 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 have drawn inspiration from studying some of the smallest minds on earth. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Well, why is that? 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 What is that keeps us coming back to insects? 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Some of it of course, is just the sheer magnitude of almost everything about them. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 They're more numerous than any other kind of animal. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 We don't even know how many species of insects there are because new ones 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 are being discovered all the time. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 There are at least a million, maybe as many as 10 million. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 This means that you could have an insect of the month calendar 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and not have to reuse a species for over 80,000 years. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 (Laughter) 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Take that pandas and kittens! 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 (Laughter) 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 More seriously, insects are essential. We need them. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 It's been estimated that 1 out of every 3 bites of food is made possible 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 by a pollinator. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Scientist use insects to make fundamental discoveries about everything 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 from the structure of our nervous systems, to how our genes and DNA work. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 But what I love most about insects is what they can tell us about 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 our own behavior. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Insects seem like they do everything that people do. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 They meet, they mate, they break up. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 And they do so with what looks like love or animosity. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 But what drives their behaviors is really different than what drives our own, 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 and that difference can be really illuminating. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 There's nowhere where that's more true than when it comes to one of our most 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 consuming interests -- sex. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Now, I will maintain and I think I can defend what may seem like 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 a surprising statement. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 I think sex in insects is more interesting than sex in people. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 (Laughter) 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 And the wild variety that we see makes us challenge some of our own assumptios 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 about what it means to be male and female. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Of course, to start with, a lot of insects don't need to have sex at all to reproduce. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Female aphids can make little, tiny clones of themselves without ever mating. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Virgin birth, right there. On your rose bushes. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 (Laughter) 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 When they do have sex, even their sperm is more interesting than human sperm. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 There some kinds of fruit flies whose sperm is longer than the male's own body. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 And that's important because the males use their sperm to compete. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Now, male insects do compete with weapons, like the horns on these beetles. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 But they also compete after mating with their sperm. 99:59:59.999 --> 99:59:59.999 Dragonflies and damselflies have penises that look kind of like Swiss Army knives