Our team's bombardier beetle project is a finalist in a contest to sequence 
"the most interesting 
genome in the world." The winner will be determined by popular vote, and we'd 
love your support in 
pushing this extraordinary little beetle to the top. Here's the link to vote 
and to learn more about 
bombardiers and the contest: https://goo.gl/FXXOup 
(you can vote daily, up to 3x/day with different email addresses)

Bombardiers' extraordinary chemical weaponry was described and popularized by 
the late Tom Eisner. 
He and others (including members of our team) have documented how bombardiers 
use rapid-fire, 
precisely aimed explosive bursts of toxic compounds, delivered explosively at 
over 100C, to repel 
predators. Bombardiers represent just a few branches in a family tree (beetle 
family Carabidae, with 
>35,000 species) that represents one of the most remarkable diversifications of 
>defensive chemistry 
in the animal kingdom. Yet no genomic information is available for the entire 
clade. We're asking your 
help in establishing the bombardier beetle as a mini model for chemical 
ecology, evolutionary biology 
and other fields!

-Aman Gill, postdoc, UC Berkeley


2017 SMRT Grant Finalist

UNRAVELLING THE MYSTERIES OF THE EXPLOSIVE BOMBARDIER BEETLE
Principal Investigators:
Dr. Tanya Renner, San Diego State University
Dr. Aman Gill, University of California, Berkeley
Dr. Wendy Moore, University of Arizona
Dr. Kipling Will, University of California, Berkeley
Dr. Athula Attygalle, Stevens Institute of Technology

Reply via email to