I LOVE ANTS! FALL. learn how A childhood love for insects spurred a career dedicated to researching ants.

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FLL 2010 FIELD MUSEUM COMICS learn how childhood love for insects spurred a career dedicated to researching ants. I LOVE NTS! Field Museum rt work by lexandra Westrich Story By Matt Matcuk

New Orleans in the 1980s Tough going for a little girl interested in nature and animals. Her name was Corrie. But in the cracks on the sidewalk, Corrie and her little brother David could always find...nts! ren t ya afraid to poke em like that? If you re quick you won t get stung. These ones are called fire ants because when they bite you it burns like a red-hot poker. Chapter One: Childhood There wasn t much wildlife around, and pets weren t allowed in her building.

In elementary school I would check out books from the library, to learn about what the ants were doing. nts always seemed to have a plan. Sometimes she would do experiments, like dropping a crumb to see how long it took them to find it, how many ants were needed to carry it away, or which direction they took it in. Don t let anyone tell you that a six-year-old can t be a scientist. From the start, Corrie was making scientific observations. nts are insects so they have six legs and three main body parts See, there are lots more different kinds than just red ones and black ones. You never see just one of them, alone. Why is that? Head thorax abdomen. What s next? Will Corrie continue to study ants? Will she discover a new species? Will she get bitten? Turn to chapter two dolescence! to find out

In junior high, Corrie started feeling that some of the things she liked weren t considered cool for girls to do... Chapter Two: dolescence! No wonder she doesn t wear nice clothes. What if she fell off her skateboard and ripped them? such as studying insects. Which is ironic, because almost every ant we see is female: from workers to soldiers. (Middle school is also where you start to think more about the birds and the bees and the ants.)

Corrie s interest in ants went underground. But like ant nests, just because something s underground doesn t mean there s nothing happening there. Corrie s fascination with nature never really went away. You see, when fishermen catch tuna, they use trawling nets that also trap every kind of marine animal in their path. She became interested in the environmental movement. nd although she wasn t a straight- student she still checked out books from the school library She became a vegetarian. nd later, she won first place in the Louisiana State Fair in the science competition. snake in the world, and is able to ingest prey as large as this goat...and she read the magazines that were around the house. Cool Most of all, she loved watching nature specials on PBS. But where would her interests lead her? Stay tuned for Chapter three: College

Chapter Three: College fter high school Corrie left Louisiana behind and headed off to college. She thought that she might be a teacher, but then she did something that changed her life forever The second I was in there, it was clear. s soon as that class was done I declared my major in biology In biology she rediscovered her love of the natural world, and of ants in particular.

fter she got her degree She continued on to a Master s degree, where she did her first field work, collecting and studying the evolution of Eventually Corrie went on to get her Ph.D. in evolutionary biology at Harvard University where she studied with one of the most famous biologists of all time: the great E. O.* Wilson! During that time she continued her study of ant behavior and ant evolution while doing research in Peru and Ecuador. (*That s Edward Osborne Wilson to those in the know ) See them feed on the fluids of their unsuspecting larvae! It was in graduate school that she also met her future husband Jay. They got married while Corrie was working on her Ph.D., just as she was about to begin Chapter Four: Her Professional Career.

Chapter Four: Her Professional Career So how does an ants curator divide her time? Early in 2007 Corrie traveled to Chicago for an interview, and soon 1/4 time in field 1/4 time in lab We would like to offer you the position of ssistant Curator in the Insects Division, Dr. Moreau. In fact, if you cut a hole through the exhibition s ceiling and the floors up above here, you could almost look into my office. began her position as a curator of ants. Here at The Field Museum. What is a curator responsible for? dding to the collections Promoting and caring for the collections 1/4 time in collections Mentoring students Sharing the science they are doing Most importantly original research. 1/4 time at desk Writing grants to fund research

Right now, Corrie has three kinds of projects going. The first is to help fill in the ant family tree. In another project, she extracts bacteria from the stomachs of ants and sequences the DN of the bacteria* found there. It s not easy to get inside an ant s gut. I can t drink any coffee before I do this. To do this, she sequences ant DN in a lab that you can see on the second floor of the museum. It s kind of like a regular family tree. But it s for species. nd there are no mothers, fathers, or uncles: just ants. You can often find me working in the DN lab, so stop by to see if I m there sequencing ant DN. *This is good bacteria: it helps the ants get protein out of their all-plant diet. Then she can study how the bacteria and the ants have evolved together over time. What we found was that, basically, no matter where they were in the world, ants that ate plants had this same kind of bacteria in their gut, to help them get the nutrients out of their food.

The third project she s working on is really complex. I m studying the evolutionary history of ants in rainforests of the ustralian Wet Tropics to learn more about climate change See, all of ustralia used to be covered by rainforests, millions of years ago. But as the environment changed in various places, the ants had to change, too. Now, if you correlate the diversity of ant species in a particular region with the climatalogical data for that place (as determined by, for example, the diversity of fossil plant specimens and the density of stomata for C02 absorption on angiosperm leaves Too much info. If they really want to dive in deep on this stuff can t we just give them the Expeditions web address? Fieldmuseum.org /expeditions

What s next for Dr. Corrie Moreau? Sequencing the DN of a Cephalotes varians specimen s lunch? Re-writing the evolutionary history of the Polyrhachis genus? It doesn t matter what s next for me. What matters is what s next for you. Collecting specimens of So get outside and look at some ants. Draw some pictures. Go online, or go to the library. Or even just watch a nature special! Look closely: nature s full of little surprises. Go discover some of your own.