Ambrosia Symbiosis
  • Ambrosia Symbiosis
  • Beetles
    • Free Bark and Ambrosia Beetle Identification
    • Classification
    • Ecology
    • Diversity
    • Importance
    • Genetics and Sociality
    • Fungus Pockets
    • Fungus Stealing
    • Rearing Beetles
    • Catching Beetles
  • Fungi
    • Who Are the Fungi?
    • Genetics and Metabolism
    • Beetle-Fungus Interactions
  • Researchers
    • UF Forest Ent Lab members
      • Jiri Hulcr
      • Andrew Johnson
      • Benjamin Schwartz
      • Christopher Marais
      • Miranda Barnes
      • Daniel Kelley
      • Yiyi Dong
    • Collaborators
      • Tom Atkinson
      • Anthony Cognato
      • Seunghyun Lee
      • Andre Rodrigues
      • Peter Biedermann
      • Bjarte Jordal
      • Jason Smith
      • Sarah Smith
      • Synergy Semiochemicals
    • Alumni
      • A. Simon Ernstsons
      • Gabriel LeMay
      • Adam Black
      • Melanie Cabrera
      • Allan Gonzalez
      • Caroline Storer
      • Craig Bateman
      • Demian Gomez
      • James Skelton
      • João Araújo
      • Kirsten Prior
      • Morgan Hull
      • Martin Kostovcik
      • Rabern Simmons
      • Sawyer Adams
      • Sedonia Steininger
      • Surendra Neupane
      • Yin-Tse Huang
      • You Li
  • Resources
  • Media
  • Login
  • Blog
  • Lab Protocols

Have fun exploring your backyard!

Posted on July 18, 2013 by jirihulcr in Announcements

Looking for grad students & postdocs

Posted on January 4, 2013 by jirihulcr in Uncategorized

Several PhD or Masters student & postdoc positions available in bark beetle evolution, systematics & symbiology

Students seriously interested in any or all of the following should apply:
• molecular phylogenetics
• hi-tech morphological systematics
• bark beetles, their ecology and evolution
• symbioses among insects, fungi and bacteria
• citizen science, science communication

Join our growing Forest Entomology and Symbiology team at the University of Florida on a new NSF-funded project. Feel free to call for more info on 352-273-0299, or simply send your CV and a short summary of your accomplishments to Jiri Hulcr, hulcr@ufl.edu. Please use PHD APPLICANT 2013 as the e-mail Subject.

Application deadline: February 15, 2013.
Start date: flexible, the sooner the better.

Jiri Hulcr

Congratulations, winners 2012!

Posted on October 29, 2012 by jirihulcr in Uncategorized
Paranthrene simulans

Like this beautiful Paranthrene simulans, many insects pests are worth studying for more than how to kill them. A moth that looks like a hornet but is soft on touch, and whose caterpillar doesn't eat leaves but carves tunnels inside living trees, is a source of wonder to an observant entomologist. Photo (C) Mark J. Dreiling

Annual Student Award for the Appreciation for the Biology of Insect Pests

We are proud to announce the winners for the year 2012. Over 20 submissions were received from students all around the world, all works of great passion for insects, full of intriguing discoveries. The quality of several papers was so high, and the “coolness” aspect so great, that the committee was unable to decide on a single winner. Instead, the prize of $500 is divided between two winners:

José G. Crespo, Department of Biology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA

for the article Pheromone mediated modulation of pre-flight warm-up behavior in male moths published in The Journal of Experimental Biology (2012) 215, 2203-2209.

Nathan S. Little, Department of Entomology and Plant Pathology, Mississippi State University, Starkville, MS, USA

for the article Feeding Preference of Native Subterranean Termites (Isoptera: Rhinotermitidae: Reticulitermes) for Wood Containing Bark Beetle Pheromones and Blue-Stain Fungi published in the Journal of Insect Behavior (2012) 25:197–206.

Congratulations, Jose and Nathan! Thank you for your discoveries, and for your interest in the wonders of insect pests. Our sincere thanks also go to all other students who submitted their papers.


This award serves to promote the study of unexplored aspects of natural history of insect pests. For more information on the award, and for submission of a paper for the year 2013 click here.

The award is supported by the TREE Foundation in Sarasota, FL, and conferred by the Ambrosia Symbiosis Research Group (Jiri Hulcr and Andrea Lucky at University of Florida, Rob Dunn at North Carolina State University, and Anthony I. Cognato at Michigan State University).

Please send any further inquiries to hulcr@ufl.edu.

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

(c) 2013 Ambrosia Symbiosis - Web Work by Jiri Hulcr and Neil Mccoy Design