4 B SIUSLAW NEWS ❚ WEDNESDAY, JUNE 3, 2015 © 2015 by Vicki Whiting, Editor You might want to study entomology. Entomology is the study of insects and an entomologist is a bug scientist. There are lots of careers for entomologists! By Nellie Fly Do you love bugs? How would you like to have a job where you got to be with bugs everyday? Vol. 31, No. 26 Make a flipbook! Paste each of these pictures on heavy paper (an old deck of cards works great). Flip the cards to see this bug flip out! Two of the pieces of information below are true and one is false. Can you figure out which is which? 1. The smallest insect in the world, the Tanzanian parasitic wasp, is smaller than the eye on a housefly. 2. An ant is capable of lifting fifty times its own weight and is capable of pulling thirty times its own weight. 3. A mosquito has 47 teeth, which it uses to bite people. Find the two identical movie bugs. ANSWER: Numbers 1 & 2 are True. Number 3 is False. While a mosquito has 47 teeth, it does not use these to bite. Instead, it has a proboscis, which is a little tube that it uses to prick skin and suck blood. When a movie scene needs bugs, who gets a call? Entomologists study how insects behave, they know how to get them to do things movie directors want them to do. Bug directing entomologists have made bees swarm a beekeeper for a fried chicken commercial and made a cockroach run across a floor then flip over! Jeff Schinkel, Graphics Many zoos have bug exhibits with live bugs and they need entomologists to take care of the bugs. Entomologists create special terrariums that imitate each bug’s natural habitat. Entomologists also know what kind of food to feed their bugs and how much heat and light they like. Standards Link: Reading Comprehension: Follow simple written directions. Which label goes with which symbol? Unscramble the letters on each label and then draw a line from the label to its corresponding exhibit symbol. Standards Link: Spelling: Spell grade-level appropriate words correctly. Draw a line from each missing word to where it belongs in this article. By Nellie Fly Standards Link: Life Science: Students know that animals progress through life cycles. This book that has been grossing out children and adults since 1973. This is the story of Billy, a ten-year-old who takes a bet that he will eat 15 worms in 15 days—all for $50. Unscramble the title of this book. Then, check it out at your local library this summer! Standards Link: Reading Comprehension: Follow simple written directions. … reading the newspaper to learn more about the world around you. Betty’s bug has spots but not tiny ones. It has stripes but it doesn’t have short antennaes. Her bug has an odd number of spots. Standards Link: Reading Comprehension: use context clues. Bug Verbs Look through the newspaper for verbs that describe the way different kinds of bugs move. Copy these verbs onto a piece of paper in abc order. Standards Link: Grammar/Spelling: Identify verbs; list words in alphabetical order. Find the words in the puzzle, INSECTS then in this week’s Kid Scoop ENTOMOLOGY stories and activities. HORNET R O T C E R I D B U NATURAL F L O U R N G B L N SWARM DIRECTOR M R A W S I U S A C STAGE T O T E N G M T R R LARVA T A C E S H U E V I CRIME E T E T N R M O A C CRICKET S V A H A R M I E K IMITATE FLOUR Y G O L O M O T N E BUGS E T A T I M I H S T HARM Standards Link: Letter sequencing. Recognized identical HEAT words. Skim and scan reading. Recall spelling patterns. Bug Business LARVA The noun larva is an insect after it hatches from an egg and before it changes into its adult form. A caterpillar is a kind of larva. Try to use the word larva in a sentence today when talking with your friends and family members. When I Grow Up Look through today’s newspaper for examples of businesses that can be affected by bugs. For example, grocery stores have a problem if moths get into their flour. What other examples can you find? ANSWER: Lunar ticks! Standards Link: Life Science: Know that distinct environments support the life of different plants and animals. Complete the grid by using all the letters in the word BUGS in each vertical and horizontal row. Each letter should only be used once in each row. Some spaces have been filled in for you. What do you want to be when you grow up? Write a paragraph about the job you would like to have one day and why you would be good at it. 2015 CENTRAL COAST BACCALAUREATE SERVICE CLASS of 2015 We want to celebrate you! Join us June 3 @7 pm LOCATION: CROSS ROAD CHURCH 1380 10TH ST. FLORENCE, OR 97439