WAA Founder’s Day

A big thanks to the Wisconsin Alumni Association Lakeland Chapter for hosting me for a Founders Day Dinner in Minocqua at the lovely Norwoods Supper club.  I had the opportunity to talk about some of the work that we’ve been doing on bioenergy crops and the potential role in sustaining biodiversity and ecosystem services. Wonderful up-north hospitality and great food too! 


Ken Krall, at WXPR radio did a short radio piece that aired a few times in the area.  Thanks to Ken for that opportunity.  Here are the transcripts of the piece and the audio:

“A UW professor will be speaking next week to the Wisconsin Alumni Association-Lakeland Badger Chapter Founders Day Dinner. Claudio Gratton is an entomologist…he studies bugs. The new twist on this research is the potential loss of bees because of the conversion to things like biofuels. There has been a decline of pollinators, crucial to food production. WXPR News Director Ken Krall talked with Gratton about the relationship between insects, our food and fuel….

 GRATTON FEATURE

Bees 

Entomologist Claudio Gratton from the UW Department of Entomology. He will be the keynote speaker May 14 at Norwood Pines Supper Club on Highway 70 west Minocqua. Scholarships for graduating seniors at Lakeland Union High School will be awarded at that night’s presentation. More information is at uw alumni dot com forward slash lakeland.”


Posted by Claudio Gratton

Share on Facebook+1Pin it on PinterestSubmit to redditShare on Twitter

Gratton Lab research featured in UWRightNow

See a video made about the Gratton Lab’s research on native bees, land-use change and agricultural management.  This video was created and published for UWRightNow, a multimedia project that aims to capture as much about UW-Madison life as possible through videos, stories, and images collected in a 24-hour period.

Link to video:   http://uwrightnow.wisc.edu/posts/2522

Share on Facebook+1Pin it on PinterestSubmit to redditShare on Twitter

Claudio promoted to full professor

Claudio-iceland

Congratulations to Claudio who was recently promoted to full professor! 

This week we interviewed Claudio to learn a little bit more about him.

When did you decide you wanted to be a professor?

I was probably 8 years old.  My dad was a professor.  He worked in an underground lab with lasers and I thought that would be neat to have my own underground lab with lasers too.

What do you like most about being a professor?

Two things.  Working with my students.  Just the “Ah ha!” moments and watching their skills and confidence grow.  It’s also really rewarding that we get to constantly be learning and doing new things every day.  The other cool thing in academia is that I get to do what I am really excited about and  get paid to do it.  I can’t think of many other professions where you get that.

If you weren’t a professor, what profession would you choose?

That’s a really hard one.  I don’t know.  I can’t think of many other jobs that are as fun.  I’ve thought about being a baker.  That could be kind of fun.  Not a chef in a big kitchen – too much work.

What is your favorite insect?Claudio-pizza

I LOVE parasitoids.  Parasitic hymenoptera are just so cool.

What do you like to do in your “spare” time?

Spending time with my family, going to soccer games and recitals.  I also love playing the guitar.

What is the most important lesson you have learned from your pet chickens?

Great question.  They poop a lot.  But really, I’ve probably learned more about my kids than anything.  No matter how much kids say they will take care of the chickens, they really won’t.  I’ve also learned that chickens are really wonderful animals.  They have so much character.  I never knew that about chickens.

If Steven Spielberg made a movie about you, which actor would play you?

If it were an action film, obviously Tom Cruise.  Otherwise George Clooney.  He’s got the coolness and swagger that I don’t have.  He’s dark and clever and you never quite know everything about his characters.

 

 

Share on Facebook+1Pin it on PinterestSubmit to redditShare on Twitter

Will Spotted Wing Drosophila be here next year?

If you noticed higher prices or fewer raspberries at your local farmer’s market this fall, you’re not alone. Wisconsin raspberries faced a new pest, Spotted Wing Drosophila (Drosophila suzukii) this year and the big question is: where is it now and will it return?

Male SWD

Native to Southeast Asia, Spotted Wing Drosophila (SWD) is a fruit fly with a sclerotized ovipositor capable of piercing the skin and successfully laying eggs in ripening fruits. The fly was first described in Japan in 1916 and detected in Hawaii in 1980. By the mid-2000s, SWD was in central California & spread rapidly throughout the Pacific Northwest and Florida. In 2010, SWD was in the Southeastern US, Michigan, and Wisconsin, but no significant crop damage was reported in Wisconsin until August 2012 when it was detected by raspberry growers in 17 counties.

While other fruit flies rely on fermenting or damaged fruit, SWD’s ability to attack ripening fruits can cause total crop loss, making it a potential pest for raspberry, blueberry, blackberry, grapes, strawberries and cherries in Wisconsin. Other fruit varieties at risk (e.g. elderberry, aronia) have been gaining popularity, especially in the Driftless area where growers are trending towards higher value perennial crops to increase sustainability and income. Wineries, farm stands, and value-added products are major tourism draws to the Driftless area, as well as other fruit growing regions in Wisconsin such as the southern shore of Lake Superior and Door County, and these customers tend to have a zero to low tolerance for insect larvae in fruit, so minimizing infestations are critical.

SWD are generalists which means they can jump from host-to-host throughout the year depending on ripening fruit availability. As many Wisconsin vineyards and small fruit operations are part of diversified farms, they offer the perfect season-long availability of food.  Together, these characteristics may create ideal conditions for high local population growth and significant crop damage in the Upper Midwest. Current recommendations are limited to culling fruit and heavy season-long pesticide sprays, which simply are not options for the many growers who use organic, IPM or no-spray practices.

How did Spotted Wing Drosophila reach Wisconsin? The two main theories are 1) summer winds blow the flies in from southern locales 2) local overwintering. Field monitoring and laboratory tests have confirmed that SWD can overwinter in California and the Columbia River Gorge in Oregon. While Wisconsin winters are usually much harsher than the Pacific Northwest’s, the ability of small protected populations to survive (in thicker-skinned wild fruits, leaf litter, soil, heated buildings) may be enough to cause or supplement annual outbreaks.

To help answer the overwintering question, the new fruit crop entomologist, Christelle Guedot and I  have constructed 21 apple cider vinegar traps at 5 locations in Dane County with confirmed infestations at small fruit farms, natural areas, and raspberry high-tunnels. We will continue monitoring traps throughout the winter months to detect any flying adult presence which indicates overwintering in Southern Wisconsin. If adults are overwintering, they may fly on warm, sunny winter days, so although our traps are few, they may be one of the only attractive ‘fruits’ available in the dead of winter. Our first month of trapping (mid-December thru mid-January) only trapped two male SWD in a fall-infested high-tunnel; high-tunnels may be especially at risk for infestation due to their controlled mild temperatures and weather protection. Our second month (mid-Jan thru mid-Feb) trapped no SWD.  Starting in April, in a partnership with DATCP, we will be coordinating a farmer-based monitoring program at 15+ farms statewide to track population trends.

So will we see SWD this year? We suspect a combination of benign overwintering conditions, 2012 infestation status and landscape effects will determine if any particular county or raspberry patch will face infestation. Monitoring this year will show if SWD is overwintering and help growers make early management decisions. 

Share on Facebook+1Pin it on PinterestSubmit to redditShare on Twitter

Moved into New Building!

The Gratton Lab has a new home! We recently moved from our old location at Russell labs to a sparkling new building called the Wisconsin Energy Institute. The purpose of this move is two fold- one is to provide a space for us to use as they renovate Russell labs in the coming years and two, is to allow for increase collaboration with other university colleagues doing energy-related research. There are four labs that occupy our floor, with all the graduate students/post docs from all four labs working in one large open space. This may sound crowded, but so far it has promoted a relatively quite and productive atmosphere. In addition to new desks, the new lab offers us plenty of  space for sample processing, along with a view of lake Mendota in the distance. Below, photos showcase our new work space, lab space and our first lab meeting in one of the building’s conference rooms.  The open design and mixed group structure will hopefully foster interesting conversations, brainstorming, and overall information flow! 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Share on Facebook+1Pin it on PinterestSubmit to redditShare on Twitter

Un-BEE-lievable that it’s 2013 already

Kaitlin just produced and aired another Perpetual Notion Machine science radio show for WORT 89.9 FM in town, this time interviewing recent UW-Madison Entomology PhD recipient Dr. Sai Suryanarayanan and his current collaborator, Dr. Daniel Kleinman, about colony collapse disorder.  They’re actually in the Department of Community and Environmental Sociology, which may sound surprising. But! They study how groups interested in honeybee management — commercial beekeepers, hobby beekeepers, toxicologists, academic entomologists, government regulators, etc — approach research and knowledge generation differently.  And they’ve found some interesting results, especially in comparing the experience of US and French beekeepers dealing with colony collapse.

So check out the show here and stream or download through the WORT Archive. It’s part of a broader show revisiting three topics the science collective covered in 2012: gray wolf ecology and management, frac sand mining and potential iron mining in the state, and colony collapse disorder in honeybees.

And for more information on Sai and Daniel’s work and insights into the folks working on colony collapse disorder in the US, check out their piece in the journal Issues in Science and Technology, “Disappearing Bees and Reluctant Regulators.”  A response, written by two prominent beekeepers and a former apiary inspector from Florida, in the same journal, can be found here.

Share on Facebook+1Pin it on PinterestSubmit to redditShare on Twitter

Bowling and bon voyage

The Gratton Lab recently went bowling together in Union South to thank Amanda for her years of hard work and positive energy as a lab assistant with us. She recently accepted a position with the WI Department of Natural Resources related to deer management.  Amanda was a Wildlife Ecology graduate of UW-Madison in 2011.   Thanks and best of luck, Amanda!

855         875          874        850        866

Share on Facebook+1Pin it on PinterestSubmit to redditShare on Twitter

Seeds of Change

907        913    900

Gratton lab members just attended Emma’s skit, as part of the fourth annual Agroecology Plays.  Emma is a Masters student in the UW-Madison Agroecology program.  

Her group’s skit was about seed saving, genetic modification, and multinational corporations’ role in plant genetics and farm futures.    Agroecology-affiliated professors Michael Bell and Jack Kloppenburg made guest appearances.

Great job, Emma!

 

 

Share on Facebook+1Pin it on PinterestSubmit to redditShare on Twitter

Gratton Lab “flies” down to ESA

During the past week, the Gratton Lab members attended the annual Entomological Society of America national conference in Knoxville, TN.  We had two car loads drive the 12 hours down to TN , with both presenters and non-presenters in attendance. This was the first time some of us (Maddy, Emma, Kaitlin) had been to this particular conference and thus did not present. However, it was a valuable experience simply to gauge how things worked and to see what makes a successful, and sometimes unsuccessful, presentation of science.  Communicating science to a broad audience can be very difficult, and we were able to pick up some pointers by listening to the vast diversity of presentations (in addition to learning about some cool new research!)

The Gratton Lab was well represented- Claudio, Jamin, Hannah and Rachel gave talks, and Julia presented her poster. Everyone did a great job. Below are the titles of their presentations:

Claudio: To what extent do native pollinators contribute to fruit production in Wisconsin?

Hannah: Assessing the pollination requirements of a perennial crop 

Rachel: Impacts of local and broad-scale landscape structure on the diversity of pollinators in Wisconsin agroecosystems

Jamin: Aquatic insects have positive indirect effects on terrestrial prey

Julia: Species-specific physiological response of common Coccinellidae to the impact of landscape composition

Heidi, David, and Erica were also at the conference, which was a nice reunion for the Gratton lab. Another benefit of going to these national conferences is to catch up with past lab members and friends. We were able to have an alumni dinner together on Tuesday night, enjoying each other’s company and the beautiful surroundings of Knoxville.  All in all this was a successful conference for everyone who came! Below are some of the few photos we took…

Share on Facebook+1Pin it on PinterestSubmit to redditShare on Twitter

Zoology retreat 2012

Hannah and Kaitlin joined several other Zoology program graduate students for the annual fall retreat at the University of Wisconsin’s Trout Lake research station a few weekends ago. Zoology graduate students are spread across campus in at least five different buildings, so the fall retreat is a great opportunity to meet other students, learn about the wide range of science going on in the department, and have break-out sessions about topics like teaching, outreach, and proposal writing.

Thumbs up for zoology! As you can see from the hats and mittens, it was a crisp morning out on the dock.

(Gratton Lab graduate students are in a few programs and departments, including Zoology, Entomology, and Agroecology.)

Share on Facebook+1Pin it on PinterestSubmit to redditShare on Twitter

 

Feedback, questions or accessibility issues: Click here to send an email
Copyright © 2013 The Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System