1 00:00:01,857 --> 00:00:06,687 So people are more afraid of insects than they are of dying. 2 00:00:07,127 --> 00:00:08,056 (Laughter) 3 00:00:08,405 --> 00:00:14,627 At least, according to a 1973 book of lists survey which preceded all those 4 00:00:14,929 --> 00:00:19,689 online best, worst, funniest lists that you see today. 5 00:00:20,270 --> 00:00:27,444 Only heights and public speaking exceeded the six-legged as sources of fear. 6 00:00:27,884 --> 00:00:31,460 And I suspect if you had put spiders in there, 7 00:00:31,460 --> 00:00:35,989 the combinations of insects and spiders would have just topped the chart. 8 00:00:36,941 --> 00:00:38,775 Now, I am not one of those people. 9 00:00:38,863 --> 00:00:45,108 I really love insects. I think they're interesting and beautiful, 10 00:00:45,108 --> 00:00:47,204 and sometimes even cute. 11 00:00:48,111 --> 00:00:49,946 And I'm not alone. 12 00:00:49,981 --> 00:00:54,905 For centuries, some of the greatest minds in science from Charles Darwin 13 00:00:54,905 --> 00:00:59,900 to E.O. Wilson have drawn inspiration from studying some of the smallest 14 00:00:59,900 --> 00:01:01,550 minds on earth. 15 00:01:02,900 --> 00:01:04,386 Well, why is that? 16 00:01:04,386 --> 00:01:07,149 What is that keeps us coming back to insects? 17 00:01:08,240 --> 00:01:12,457 Some of it, of course, is just the sheer magnitude of almost everything about them. 18 00:01:12,457 --> 00:01:15,206 They're more numerous than any other kind of animal. 19 00:01:15,689 --> 00:01:19,122 We don't even know how many species of insects there are because new ones 20 00:01:19,122 --> 00:01:21,103 are being discovered all the time. 21 00:01:21,568 --> 00:01:24,726 There are at least a million, maybe as many as 10 million. 22 00:01:25,469 --> 00:01:29,253 This means that you could have an insect of the month calendar 23 00:01:29,509 --> 00:01:33,572 and not have to reuse a species for over 80,000 years. 24 00:01:33,781 --> 00:01:35,685 (Laughter) 25 00:01:36,660 --> 00:01:38,239 Take that pandas and kittens! 26 00:01:38,471 --> 00:01:40,073 (Laughter) 27 00:01:40,506 --> 00:01:44,973 More seriously, insects are essential. We need them. 28 00:01:45,669 --> 00:01:49,849 It's been estimated that 1 out of every 3 bites of food is made possible 29 00:01:50,058 --> 00:01:51,567 by a pollinator. 30 00:01:53,122 --> 00:01:56,930 Scientist use insects to make fundamental discoveries about everything 31 00:01:57,163 --> 00:02:01,272 from the structure of our nervous systems, to how our genes and DNA work. 32 00:02:02,492 --> 00:02:04,290 But what I love most about insects 33 00:02:04,290 --> 00:02:07,286 is what they can tell us about our own behavior. 34 00:02:07,750 --> 00:02:10,653 Insects seem like they do everything that people do. 35 00:02:10,908 --> 00:02:14,159 They meet, they mate, they fight, they break up. 36 00:02:14,716 --> 00:02:18,570 And they do so with what looks like love or animosity. 37 00:02:19,530 --> 00:02:24,790 But what drives their behaviors is really different than what drives our own, 38 00:02:24,790 --> 00:02:27,231 and that difference can be really illuminating. 39 00:02:27,825 --> 00:02:29,825 There's nowhere where that's more true 40 00:02:29,825 --> 00:02:31,666 than when it comes to one of our most 41 00:02:31,666 --> 00:02:33,686 consuming interests -- sex. 42 00:02:34,313 --> 00:02:37,935 Now, I will maintain and I think I can defend what may seem like 43 00:02:37,961 --> 00:02:39,400 a surprising statement. 44 00:02:40,954 --> 00:02:44,088 I think sex in insects is more interesting than sex in people. 45 00:02:44,320 --> 00:02:45,783 (Laughter) 46 00:02:46,131 --> 00:02:52,231 And the wild variety that we see makes us challenge some of our own assumptions 47 00:02:52,231 --> 00:02:54,955 about what it means to be male and female. 48 00:02:55,470 --> 00:02:58,059 Of course, to start with, a lot of insects 49 00:02:58,059 --> 00:03:00,319 don't need to have sex at all to reproduce. 50 00:03:00,319 --> 00:03:04,707 Female aphids can make little, tiny clones of themselves without ever mating. 51 00:03:05,751 --> 00:03:08,004 Virgin birth, right there. On your rose bushes. 52 00:03:08,491 --> 00:03:09,583 (Laughter) 53 00:03:11,366 --> 00:03:16,061 When they do have sex, even their sperm is more interesting than human sperm. 54 00:03:16,316 --> 00:03:21,979 There are some kinds of fruit flies whose sperm is longer than the male's own body. 55 00:03:21,979 --> 00:03:26,370 And that's important because the males use their sperm to compete. 56 00:03:27,090 --> 00:03:31,060 Now, male insects do compete with weapons, like the horns on these beetles. 57 00:03:31,710 --> 00:03:35,797 But they also compete after mating with their sperm. 58 00:03:36,726 --> 00:03:41,876 Dragonflies and damselflies have penises that look kind of like Swiss Army knives 59 00:03:41,876 --> 00:03:43,738 with all of the attachments pulled out. 60 00:03:43,993 --> 00:03:44,899 (Laughter) 61 00:03:46,106 --> 00:03:51,377 They use these formidable devices like like scoops, to remove the sperm 62 00:03:51,702 --> 00:03:54,790 from previous males that the female has mated with. 63 00:03:55,163 --> 00:03:56,671 (Laughter) 64 00:03:56,909 --> 00:03:59,347 So, what can we learn from this? 65 00:03:59,921 --> 00:04:03,451 (Laughter) 66 00:04:05,540 --> 00:04:11,508 Alright, it is not a lesson in the sense of us imitating them or of them setting 67 00:04:11,693 --> 00:04:13,992 an example for us to follow. 68 00:04:13,992 --> 00:04:16,782 Which given this, is probably just as well. 69 00:04:17,265 --> 00:04:20,835 And also did I mention sexual cannibalism is rampant among insects? 70 00:04:20,863 --> 00:04:22,751 So, no, that's not the point. 71 00:04:22,829 --> 00:04:24,976 But what I think insects do, 72 00:04:24,976 --> 00:04:30,965 is break a lot of the rules that we humans have about the sex roles. 73 00:04:31,453 --> 00:04:36,259 So people have this idea that nature dictates kind of a 1950s sitcom version 74 00:04:36,747 --> 00:04:38,851 of what males and females are like. 75 00:04:38,851 --> 00:04:42,044 So that males are always supposed to be dominant and aggressive, 76 00:04:42,044 --> 00:04:43,963 and females are passive and coy. 77 00:04:43,963 --> 00:04:45,644 But that's just not the case. 78 00:04:46,986 --> 00:04:51,202 So for example, take katydids, which are relatives of crickets and grasshoppers. 79 00:04:51,392 --> 00:04:55,228 The males are very picky about who they mate with 80 00:04:55,228 --> 00:04:58,308 because they not only transfer sperm during mating, 81 00:04:58,308 --> 00:05:02,798 they also give the female something called a nuptial gift. 82 00:05:02,798 --> 00:05:06,499 You can see two katydids mating in these photos. 83 00:05:06,499 --> 00:05:10,507 In both panels, the male's the one on the right and that sword like appendage 84 00:05:10,716 --> 00:05:12,759 is the female's egg-laying organ. 85 00:05:13,317 --> 00:05:19,770 The white blob is the sperm and the green blob is the nuptial gift, and the male 86 00:05:19,770 --> 00:05:24,601 manufactures this from his own body and it's extremely costly to produce. 87 00:05:24,679 --> 00:05:27,387 It can weigh up to a third of his body mass. 88 00:05:27,693 --> 00:05:30,343 I will now pause for a moment and let you think about 89 00:05:30,343 --> 00:05:34,603 what it would be like, if human men -- everytime they had sex 90 00:05:34,730 --> 00:05:41,196 had to produce something that weighed 50, 60, 70 pounds. 91 00:05:41,528 --> 00:05:44,407 (Laughter) 92 00:05:44,778 --> 00:05:48,029 Okay, they would not be able to do that very often. 93 00:05:49,455 --> 00:05:51,628 And indeed, neither can the katydids. 94 00:05:52,092 --> 00:05:54,915 And so what that means, 95 00:05:54,915 --> 00:06:01,124 is the katydid males are very choosy about who they offer these nuptial gifts to. 96 00:06:01,333 --> 00:06:04,747 Now, the gift is very nutritious and the female eats it during 97 00:06:04,747 --> 00:06:06,117 and after mating. 98 00:06:06,227 --> 00:06:09,554 So, the bigger it is, the better off the male is because that means 99 00:06:09,554 --> 00:06:12,888 more time for his sperm to drain into her body and fertilize her eggs. 100 00:06:13,521 --> 00:06:19,210 But it also means that the males are very passive about mating, where as the females 101 00:06:19,210 --> 00:06:23,081 are extremely aggressive and competitive, in an attempt to get as many as these 102 00:06:23,252 --> 00:06:25,899 nutritious nuptial gifts as they can. 103 00:06:26,062 --> 00:06:29,939 So, it's not exactly a stereotypical set of rules. 104 00:06:30,787 --> 00:06:35,838 Even more generally though, males are actually not all that important 105 00:06:35,838 --> 00:06:37,787 in the lives of a lot of insects. 106 00:06:37,976 --> 00:06:41,735 In the social insects -- the bees and wasps and ants 107 00:06:42,442 --> 00:06:46,208 the individuals that you see everyday, the ants going back and forth 108 00:06:46,322 --> 00:06:50,198 to your sugar bowl, the honey bees that are flitting from flower to flower. 109 00:06:50,371 --> 00:06:52,461 All of those are always female. 110 00:06:53,300 --> 00:06:57,708 People have had a hard time getting their head around that idea for millennia. 111 00:06:58,010 --> 00:07:03,397 The ancient Greeks knew that there was a class of bees, the drones, that are 112 00:07:03,513 --> 00:07:07,691 larger than the workers, although they disapproved of the drones' laziness 113 00:07:07,691 --> 00:07:10,770 because they could see that the drones just hang around the hive 114 00:07:10,770 --> 00:07:12,885 until the mating flight -- they're the males. 115 00:07:12,885 --> 00:07:15,305 They hang around the hives until the mating flight, 116 00:07:15,305 --> 00:07:18,142 but they don't participate in gathering nectar or pollen. 117 00:07:18,168 --> 00:07:20,376 The Greeks couldn't figure out the drones sex, 118 00:07:20,376 --> 00:07:25,955 and part of the confusion was that they were aware of the stinging ability of bees 119 00:07:25,955 --> 00:07:28,148 but they found it difficult to believe 120 00:07:28,148 --> 00:07:31,395 that any animals that bore such a weapon could possibly be a female. 121 00:07:31,883 --> 00:07:34,251 Aristotle tried to get involved as well. 122 00:07:34,739 --> 00:07:38,895 He suggested, OK, well if the stinging individuals are going to be the males, 123 00:07:39,104 --> 00:07:42,981 then he got confused because that would have meant that males were also taking 124 00:07:42,981 --> 00:07:46,511 care of the young in the colony and he seemed to think that would be 125 00:07:46,511 --> 00:07:47,603 completely impossible. 126 00:07:47,973 --> 00:07:52,824 He then concluded that bees had the organs of both sexes in the same individual, 127 00:07:52,824 --> 00:07:54,335 which is not that farfetched. 128 00:07:54,338 --> 00:07:58,422 There are some animals that do that, but he never really did get it figured out. 129 00:07:59,026 --> 00:08:04,668 And you know, even today, my students for instance call every animal they see 130 00:08:04,877 --> 00:08:07,245 including insects, a male. 131 00:08:07,710 --> 00:08:11,727 And when I tell them that the ferocious army ant soldiers with their giant 132 00:08:11,982 --> 00:08:18,089 jaws, used to defend the colony are all always female, 133 00:08:18,091 --> 00:08:19,807 they seem to not quite believe me. 134 00:08:20,081 --> 00:08:20,968 (Laughter) 135 00:08:21,200 --> 00:08:25,147 Certainly all of the movies -- Antz, Bee Movie 136 00:08:25,542 --> 00:08:31,858 portray the main character in the social insects as being male. 137 00:08:31,858 --> 00:08:33,708 Well, what difference does this make? 138 00:08:33,708 --> 00:08:34,911 I mean, these are movies. 139 00:08:34,911 --> 00:08:35,769 They're fiction. 140 00:08:35,769 --> 00:08:37,439 They have talking animals in them, 141 00:08:37,439 --> 00:08:40,403 what difference does it make if they talk like Jerry Seinfeld? 142 00:08:40,403 --> 00:08:41,795 (Laughter) 143 00:08:42,027 --> 00:08:46,784 I think it does matter and it's a problem that actually is part of a much deeper 144 00:08:46,784 --> 00:08:52,274 one that has implications for medicine, and health and a lot of other aspects 145 00:08:52,274 --> 00:08:53,271 of our lives. 146 00:08:53,823 --> 00:08:57,112 You all know that scientists use what we call model systems, 147 00:08:57,112 --> 00:09:00,254 which are creatures -- white rats or fruit flies 148 00:09:00,579 --> 00:09:05,270 that are kind of stand-ins for all other animals including people. 149 00:09:05,409 --> 00:09:09,199 And the idea is, that what's true for a person will also be true 150 00:09:09,199 --> 00:09:10,772 for the white rat. 151 00:09:11,098 --> 00:09:13,419 By in large, that turns out to be the case. 152 00:09:13,652 --> 00:09:17,413 But you can take the idea of a model system too far. 153 00:09:17,924 --> 00:09:23,413 And what I think we've done, is use males, in any species, 154 00:09:23,413 --> 00:09:25,888 as though they are the model system. 155 00:09:26,213 --> 00:09:29,626 The norm. The way things are supposed to be. 156 00:09:29,858 --> 00:09:34,618 And females as a kind of variant -- something special that you only study 157 00:09:34,734 --> 00:09:36,638 after you get the basics down. 158 00:09:38,032 --> 00:09:40,794 And so back to the insects. 159 00:09:40,794 --> 00:09:44,858 I think what that means, is that people could not see what was in front of them. 160 00:09:44,974 --> 00:09:51,336 Because they assumed that the world's stage was largely occupied by male players 161 00:09:51,545 --> 00:09:55,306 and females would only have minor, walk-on roles. 162 00:09:55,841 --> 00:10:00,842 But when we do that, we really miss out on a lot of what nature is like. 163 00:10:01,715 --> 00:10:08,611 And we can also miss out on the way natural, living things incudling people 164 00:10:08,611 --> 00:10:09,609 can very. 165 00:10:10,236 --> 00:10:15,124 And I think that's why we've used males as models in a lot of medical research, 166 00:10:15,124 --> 00:10:19,338 something that we know now to be a problem if we want the results to apply 167 00:10:19,733 --> 00:10:22,032 to both men and women. 168 00:10:22,760 --> 00:10:26,637 Well, the last thing I really love about insects is something that a lot of people 169 00:10:26,637 --> 00:10:28,533 find unnerving about them. 170 00:10:28,788 --> 00:10:32,271 They have little, tiny brains with very little cognitive ability the way 171 00:10:32,271 --> 00:10:33,780 we normally think of it. 172 00:10:34,663 --> 00:10:39,074 They have complicated behavior, but they lack complicated brains. 173 00:10:40,049 --> 00:10:45,065 And so, we can't just think of them as though they're little people 174 00:10:45,320 --> 00:10:48,339 because they don't do things the way that we do. 175 00:10:48,849 --> 00:10:52,774 I really love that it's difficult to anthropomorphize insects, 176 00:10:52,960 --> 00:10:56,301 to look at them and just think of them like they're little people 177 00:10:56,301 --> 00:10:58,439 in exoskeletons with six legs. 178 00:10:58,927 --> 00:11:00,273 (Laughter) 179 00:11:00,459 --> 00:11:04,065 Instead, you really have to accept them on their own terms 180 00:11:04,065 --> 00:11:09,213 because insects make us question what's normal and what's natural. 181 00:11:09,654 --> 00:11:14,367 Now, you know, people write fiction and talk about parallel universes. 182 00:11:14,483 --> 00:11:19,522 They speculate about the supernatural, maybe the spirits of the departed 183 00:11:19,522 --> 00:11:21,403 walking among us. 184 00:11:22,749 --> 00:11:30,295 The allure of another world is something that people say is part of why they want 185 00:11:30,295 --> 00:11:32,268 to dabble in the paranormal. 186 00:11:32,757 --> 00:11:36,681 But as far as I'm concerned, who needs to be able to see dead people? 187 00:11:37,029 --> 00:11:38,747 When you can see live insects? 188 00:11:39,212 --> 00:11:40,094 Thank you. 189 00:11:40,256 --> 00:11:43,228 (Applause)