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Tom Saunders

PhD Candidate

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native species

An Open Gallery of Native NZ Wasps

July 9, 2018 By Tom Leave a Comment

Yes, we have native wasps in New Zealand!

Unfortunately we also have a handful of introduced social wasps. The introduced wasps prey on native invertebrates and create a nuisance (especially for people who are allergic to their stings). But our native wasps do not live together in colonies and they do not sting. They are parasitoid wasps: a very diverse and important group, and we are just beginning to unravel the complex relationships they have with other species here in New Zealand.

During my masters research I caught 61 species of parasitoid wasps from the group I was interested in (the Ichneumonidae). Fifty-six of these species are represented here. You’ll notice most are given a ‘first name’ and then ‘sp.#’ – This means we know the first name (the genus), and we know it is a species, but it is not yet described as a species. Most of our invertebrates are like this because there are so many species and so few people to describe and name them.

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Filed Under: Community Tagged With: creative commons, darren ward, glamwiki, hymenoptera, ichneumonidae, landcare research, native species, new zealand, nz species, open data, open images, open science, tom saunders, wasps

Finding NZ’s Rarest ‘Bug’

April 23, 2018 By Tom 2 Comments

I’m riding in a truck with Brian Lyford through the valleys surrounding Queenstown on a crisp December morning. Our destination is 1400 meters up on a nearby mountain. We complete the trip through private forestry land mostly by vehicle. An amazing view of the surrounding landscape greets us as we emerge from the tree-line. This is the mountain harbouring a special stink bug, Hypsithocus hudsonae, or the Alpine shield bug.

Otago is awash with views like these.

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Filed Under: PhD Research Tagged With: alpine shield bug, barbara barratt, BMSB, brian patrick, brown marmorated stink bug, bryan lyford, endemic, hypsithocus hudsonae, insect rearing, native species, new zealand, otago, pentatomidae, phd, queenstown, saurai wasp, shield bug, stink bug, trissolcus japonicus

Radio Interview: NZ’s Weird Native Wasps

March 21, 2018 By Tom Leave a Comment

“What? Native wasps?” I hear you say. Yes, thousands of them! And they don’t sting!

I was interviewed on Radio New Zealand’s ‘Our Changing World Programme’ by Alison Ballance. We chatted about our misunderstood parasitoid wasps, my masters research, and the value of taxonomy. You can check out the interview here. Happy listening!

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Filed Under: Media Tagged With: alison ballance, conservation, hymenoptera, landcare research, Lusius malfoyi, masters research, media, native species, new zealand, our changing world, parasitoid wasp, radio new zealand, science, science communication, university of auckland, wasps

A 1080 on pest control

December 7, 2017 By Tom Leave a Comment

We’re going round in circles on the issue of pest control.

We haven’t even had a proper conversation about how we define pests, why we should eradicate them, and what the ethics are of such a mammoth undertaking. The unveiling of the Predator Free 2050 strategy drew lots of praise, but first we need to develop some consensus on what it is we’re trying to achieve and why. In order to do this, we need have an accurate understanding of what the issues are and how we can approach them.

 

Egmont National Park by DoC, via Flickr (CC-BY-2.0)

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Filed Under: Factsheets Tagged With: 1080, 1080 poison, battle for our birds, biodiversity, birds, department of conservation, DoC, kaka, kea, mohua, native species, new zealand, pest control, pests, possums, rats, riflemen, robins, rock wren, stoats, yellowhead

What Are Parasitoid Wasps?

October 31, 2017 By Tom 4 Comments

Most Wasps Are Misunderstood…

‘Wasps’ are truly a diverse group of insects – with over 100,000 species known out of an estimated total of 350,000, they make up a considerable chunk of biodiversity.

It’s true that some wasps wreak havoc against native biodiversity and cause serious allergic reactions when they turn their sights on people. However, only a handful of species give wasps their bad reputation in New Zealand:…

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Filed Under: Factsheets Tagged With: biodiversity, biological control, conservation, hymenoptera, native species, new zealand, parasitoid, parasitoid wasp, wasp, yellowjacket

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Hi!
I'm a PhD candidate in the School of Biological Sciences at The University of Auckland. My research focuses on improving the methods used to test biological control agents for their potential non-target impacts.

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academic publishing biodiversity biological control biosecurity BMSB brown marmorated stink bug figshare GC-EAD github halyomorpha halys hymenoptera hypsithocus hudsonae landcare research Lusius malfoyi media native species new zealand open access open data open education open science parasitoid parasitoid wasp peer review pentatomidae phd Plant & Food Research post-print reference manager research samurai wasp scholarly publishing scicomm science science communication science learning hub species description taxonomy tom saunders trissolcus japonicus university university of auckland wasp wasps zotero

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