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Research of Laboratory of Entomology

The yellow fever mosquito, Aedes aegypti.

The Laboratory of Entomology studies fundamental aspects of insect biology, ecology, and evolution with the aim to understand how insects function in their ecological setting and how they evolve.

The team at the Laboratory of Entomology is driven by curiosity and aims to make significant contributions to important societal issues such as food security, biodiversity loss and a healthy living environment. This is achieved by research on the interface of molecular, physiological, developmental and evolutionary biology, with special attention to the ecological, behavioural and molecular interactions between insects and their environment. This is accomplished with laboratory, greenhouse, and field experiments at national and international study sites, and through an active dialogue with stakeholders and the society.

Research at the Laboratory of Entomology is divided in 5 themes, see below. You can also download our research poster that summarizes these themes. 

Sitobium-Avenae-EnglishGrainAphid

Sitobium avenae-english grain aphid

Facilities

The Laboratory of Entomology has a strong expertise in linking fundamental to applied entomological research, from the molecular to the ecological and ecosystem levels, and is uniquely positioned to address these objectives. For this, the chair group has various facilities available:

  • Unique insect rearing facilities, maintained by dedicated insect rearing staff
  • State-of-the-art greenhouse spaces
  • Biological Safety Level 3 laboratory (in collaboration with the Laboratory of Virology),
  • D-I laboratory for CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing,
  • Camera-equipped experimental lab to study insect flight and behaviour. 

At Wageningen University, the chair group benefits from large experimental fields and an experimental farm on campus. The chair group is nationally and internationally recognised and visible in different insect science domains, such as insect-plant interactions, multi-trophic interactions, insects as food and feed, vector-borne disease ecology and control, and insect molecular development, physiology and behaviour. This fits well with the research themes of WUR to preserve biodiversity and provide sustainable food security. The group exploits citizen science to involve the general public, and actively invests in the dissemination of its work via public lecture series, books, television and social media. In addition, the research lines connect to the National Science Agenda and the FAO domains agroecology, food safety, biodiversity and One Health.

The chair group has intensive collaboration with national and international partners. In addition, the group valorises knowledge in cooperation with biocontrol, plant breeding and biotech companies via (inter)national projects funded by EU, ESF, NWO and TKI.

Research on the effects of strip cropping on the presence of natural ennemies of pest insects

Direct link to teaching

The fundamental and applied entomological research inspires the chair group in its teaching. We incorporate our research findings in basic and advanced courses for a wide spectrum of teaching programmes. We highly value the central position of fundamental knowledge in the domains of ecology, evolution, physiology and development in our courses and offer specialised courses on the state-of-the-art of our research fields. We are strong in bringing these perspectives to societal challenges and applied sciences such as sustainable crop management, breeding for resistant crops, disease vectorcontrol and insects as food and feed. Each staff member, including the chair, is dedicated to teaching in multiple courses and supervision of BSc, MSc and PhD students. We find it highly valuable that most of our courses are developed and taught in collaboration with teachers from a broad range of chair groups to stimulate interdisciplinarity in training of our students.

To strengthen its research and education portfolio, the Laboratory of Entomology sees opportunities in expanding and consolidating across various scientific domains, including research on the role of insects in ecosystems services, insects and food security, and insect biodiversity. The Laboratory values interdisciplinary approaches, which may vary from using state-of-the-art molecular tools (e.g. CRISPR-Cas, RNAi, genome sequencing) to answer ecological questions, to the inclusion of social sciences to address societal challenges.

All our research is embedded in the Graduate Schools Experimental Plant Sciences (EPS) and Production Ecology and Resource Conservation (PE&RC).

Social safety

The Laboratory of Entomology consists of a diverse group of people that actively invests in social safety, inclusiveness and a positive working atmosphere. The chair group looks for inclusive leadership that facilitates personal development, team effort, transparency, collective decision making, and stimulates a healthy work-life balance and vibrant social atmosphere.

Entomology

Entomology, led by Bregje Wertheim, works on the physiology of insect-plant interactions and the ecology of parasite-host and predator-prey interactions.

Go to Entomology