Connected on 2008-05-22 12:00:00 from Troy, NY, US
- 12:04pm
- Teacher The students will be logging on in about 15 minutes. I just wanted to see if everything was up and running. Looks great!
- Bugscope Team Cool. We are ready.
- Bugscope Team ok sounds good! let us know when you have any questions











- Bugscope Team bee's knee










- Bugscope Team preset 3 shows pollen grains in the bee's knee







- 12:09pm
























- Bugscope Team this is where the stinger would be -- maybe what we see with the charging on it




- 12:15pm

















- Bugscope Team hello welcome to bugscope!
- Student hi
- Student bagel
- Student ello
- Student hello :)
- 12:20pm
- Student Hey!
- Student Hello
- Student hi
- Student hi
- Student Hello
- Bugscope Team Hello!
- Student oi
- Student hi
- Bugscope Team Welcome to Bugscope!
- Student what bug is being shown under the bugscope?
- Student Hello!
- Student zwitter
- Student thank you
- Student danka
- Bugscope Team This is the edge of the wing of the bee you sent.
- Bugscope Team the bee is to the left of where we are
- Student vgors gone
- Student okay, thank you :)
- Student this is a great oppertunity so thanks for sharing with us
- Student cool
- Student cool
- Student ok
- Bugscope Team I had been looking for hamuli, which are the hooks that secure the fore-and hindwings when some four-winged insects fly

- Student ???
- Student what is the Hamuli?
- Student what is that?
- Student she means what happened
- Student what is a hamuli?
Bugscope Team they are little hooks they hook 2 wings together. flying insects with 2 pairs of wings usually have them
- Student what do you mean by that?
- Student oh, nevermind, i didnt see that before.
- Bugscope Team hamuli are tiny hooks but we did not find any today

- Student is that the head?
Bugscope Team This is the head of an ant

- Bugscope Team You all have control of the 'scope.
- Student so this is a flys head?
- Student thank you :)
- Student a bees head*




- Student what is this?
- Student [color=indigo]its a bug[/color]

- Student wow this is pretty cool

- Student THIS IS VERY COOL THANK YOU
- Student are there different bugs on the slide?
- Student ya thank you

- Student What are those little hairs?
- Guest i wanna know that too

- Student woah
- Student what is that
- Bugscope Team whoa cool I did not see this before
- Student spider fangs XD
- Student scroll down
- Bugscope Team at the top of the screen are 2 fangs of a spider
- 12:25pm
- Bugscope Team spider fang poison pore
- Student that's REALLY AWESOME
- Student like. what bug is it from
- Bugscope Team you can see the venom pores
- Student spiders have fangs?
Bugscope Team Yup they do
- Student where abouts?
- Student i mean im freaked out but cool
- Student awsome
- Student What are the advantages of using an electron microscope instead of a regular microscope

- Guest is the fang the big thing?
- Bugscope Team the pores are the indentations that were on the fangs


- Bugscope Team you can try to lower the mag to see where you are
- Student What are the advantages of using an electron microscope instead of a regular microscope?
- Student cody, you can get better images
- Student What are these little hairs?
Bugscope Team you are going to see a lot of hairs on the insects today. insect hairs are called setae (see-tee), and they are connected to nerves allowing the insect to feel/taste/smell
- Guest this is crazy bro!!!!


- Student What are the advantages of using an electron microscope instead of a regular microscope?
- Student How long would it take for the decrease of the bee population to visably decrease the amount of plants?
- Student What are the advantages of using an electron microscope instead of a regular microscope?
- Student what is this
- Student What are the advantages of using an electron microscope instead of a regular microscope?
- Student What are the advantages of using an electron microscope instead of a regular microscope?
- Bugscope Team an electron microscope allows you to see with better resolution and at higher mag

- Student woot beetle head
- Student what is the unit of measurement?
Bugscope Team The scale bar in the lower left corner of the screen is in micrometers
- Student oh god
- Bugscope Team but you can tell that we cannot see color

- Student How long would it take for the decrease of the bee population to visably decrease the amount of plants?
Bugscope Team We would see a visible decrease within a year. And it the decrease would be different between annuals and perennials. Any annual plant that is obligately bee pollinated would not set fruit, and there would be fewer seeds and fewer plants the next year. We would see a decrease in perennials later.
- Bugscope Team the units here are microns, or micrometers

- Guest its kinda hairy. why is it hairy

- Student what are the economic and ecological significance of pollinators?...if you know.
- Student whaaaa!
- Student does the vacuum ensure that the electrons don't dissipate
- Student thank you.
- Student to the bees!
- Student Awesome, thanks!
- Student thank you Cate
- Bugscope Team a micrometer is a thousandth of a millimeter or a millionth of a meter

- Student wow, that is really in depth.
- Student is the black and white of the microcope a fault?
- Student hey admins do you guys do feild work? and if so how long do you have to wait before getting a good specimen on average?
Bugscope Team Any specimen that you collect is usually good for imaging, providing that it has all its legs and wings and antennae. It depends on what part of the insect you want to examine.
- Student whats the highest resolution on this bad boy
Bugscope Team this microscope, under optimal conditions, can get to a resolution of 2nm
- Bugscope Team annie does field work
- Bugscope Team oh yeah Chelsea it just has to do with the way the images are collected
- Student oh ok
- Student thank you =]
- Student teacher broke it >.
- Student Moly wants yoyu to answer her question
- Student c
- Student x
- Bugscope Team we don't see color -- we see the surfaces as signals
- Student x
- Student what else can a bugscope determine?

- Student oh. ok.
- Student i mean, what else can you see?
- Bugscope Team oops what was Moly's question?
- 12:30pm
- Student How long would it take for the decrease of the bee population to visably decrease the amount of plants?
- Student thats ok

- Bugscope Team try lowering the mag, or jumping to another preset
- Bugscope Team there we are
- Bugscope Team sometimes the presets move a little bit
- Bugscope Team this is the tip of the proboscis
- Bugscope Team to the right and up -- to the NE
- Student do you guyes do this every day?
Bugscope Team we do this around 3 times a week
- Student thanks

- Bugscope Team your teacher is doing an awesome job of driving the scope
- Student no they don't
- Student should we try loggin off
- Student its kk
- Student then loggin on again?
- Student annie?
Bugscope Team yes
- Bugscope Team Dylan we have been doing this about three times a week
- Student how long does it take to get a good specimen
Bugscope Team Did you see my answer?
- Student she wants to know what to do
- Teacher should we log off and log on again?
- Student that is like just so cool
- Guest ok
- Student Homer
- Student do bugs have to be a certain size in order to view them under the bugscope?
Bugscope Team Again, it depends on what you are trying to examine. If you are trying to see setae on antennae, it really doesn't matter what size the insect is--big or small, the setae are probably similar in size. However, if you are trying to examine the shape of a larger body part, say a beetle's elytra or the entire antenna, the larger insects are a problem.

- Bugscope Team insects/arthropods are better if they are small, for this
- Teacher we can't see anything and none of the presets are loading
- Student i c a bug
- Bugscope Team well hit refresh first
- Student cool


- Bugscope Team let us know if refreshing works


- Bugscope Team clearly someone is driving and able to see
- Student yup
- Student =]
- Teacher thank you that worked
- Student yes
- Student What are these orbs?
- Student what are those

- Bugscope Team those are pollen grains
- Student they look like sponges
- Bugscope Team Cool LP I am glad.
- Student arent we supposed to be looking at bees?
- Student pollen grains
- Student hey gg stop it NOW
- Bugscope Team this is on the bee, Rose
- Student are these pollin grains from a bee specimen?
- Student grain is a funny word
- Student hey crogers
- Student Are there any solutions to the CCD problem?
Bugscope Team Not yet. We are not sure what is causing CCD...there are some theories, but no one has a solution yet.
- Student i get it bee knee!
- Bugscope Team yes there are a lot of them on the bee
- Student what gareth
- Student are electon microscopes common in labs
- Student any known solutions?
Bugscope Team To what?
- Student gg stop
- Student yeah are hey
- Bugscope Team Chelsea are you having trouble imaging?

- Student me?
- Student no
- Student lkelly: gg stop
- Student lkelly: gg stop
- 12:35pm

- Student Are there any solutions to the CCD problem?
Bugscope Team i'm not sure what the problem is
- Bugscope Team This is a particularly good scanning electron microscope, and there are relatively few
- Bugscope Team it is out of focus from what i can tell

- Student Crogers: lkelly: gg stop enough
- Student do you look at macroinvertibrates under the microscope




- Student CCD is Colony Collapse Disorder
- Student Colony Collapse Disorder
- Bugscope Team at a large university you would expect to have several SEMs, TEMs
- Bugscope Team these are scales from a monarch butterfly
- Student what are the spots on the wing?
- Student awesome!


- Student cool!

- Student um do any of you know the answer to the question i asked? before??? well its "what is the economic and ecological significance of pollinators?"
Bugscope Team They are supremenly significant. I don't have the exact monetary figures, but it is not exaggeration to say that the end of pollinators would be the end of the world as we know it.


- Student scale?
- Student what is that?

- Guest what are those holes in the wings?


- Bugscope Team sorry we are trying to answer everyone's questions




- Student sorry if were confusing you :)
- Student Are there any known solutions to Colony Collapse Disorder, for the bees?
Bugscope Team Did you see my answer just now?
- Bugscope Team like, they get lost

- Student silver paint?

- Bugscope Team There have been a number of big grants awarded in the last year or so...so we might know something soon.
- Bugscope Team yeah for a minute I was thinking of the charge-coupled device camera inside the 'scope


- Student Crogers: do you look at macroinvertibrates under the microscope? and if so have you ever seen a midge or a stonfly, mayfly, water penny?
- Student Do you believe that cell phones have an affect on a bee's navigational system?
- Student whoa, is that its foot?
Bugscope Team yes, its a claw
- Bugscope Team we use silver paint to help make the specimen conductive --so the electrons run to ground after they hit the specimen


- Bugscope Team not sure about cell phones but I had heard that as well
- Guest why does it have little barbs on it?
- Student Do you look at macroinvertibrates under the microscope? and if so have you ever seen a midge or a stonfly, mayfly, water penny?

- Bugscope Team i think we have seen some mayflies
- Student Do you look at macroinvertibrates under the microscope? and if so have you ever seen a midge or a stonfly, mayfly, water penny?
- Bugscope Team some of the harder parts of the body do not shrivel when they air dry
- Student whats this
- 12:40pm

- Student can you view chromosomes and genes?
- Bugscope Team this is a spiracle
- Bugscope Team a spiracle is a breathing hole
- Bugscope Team we can see chromosomes using light microscopes and the transmission electron microscope
- Student is that a eye
Bugscope Team it is a spiracle, which is a breathing hole
- Student kewl!
- Student Can we see a macroinvertibrate
- Bugscope Team genes are part of the DNA but not something you can specifically see using a microscope
- Bugscope Team we lost the teacher, does someone want to drive?
- Bugscope Team this is a macroinvertebrate
- Student why did the beatle eye have bumbs
- Bugscope Team You all are asking some really great questions--and the answers are a bit complicated. I am trying to give you all the best answers I can, so "bee" patient and I will try to give you a thoughtful answer!
- Student oh
- Student Can I drive?
- Bugscope Team the bumps are the ommatidia -- the individual eye facets
- Student ill driv
- Bugscope Team go for it crogers
- Student can i have a turn when crogas is done
- Bugscope Team sure GG
- Bugscope Team ommatidia are an advantage over a normal lensed eye because apparently they are better able to process motion
- Bugscope Team so you can click on a preset if you like
- Student sweet danka
- Student why did the beatle eye have bumbs

- Bugscope Team when you see nothing take the mag down



- Student wow, you have an awsome jobs






- Bugscope Team the bumps are ommatidia, laptop

- Student why did the beatle eye have bumps
- Student What do you purpose as a solution to the decrease in the bee population?







- Student how many people work in ur faciliuty

- Student another foot?
Bugscope Team that was the tip of the bumble bee proboscis
- Student i like feet

- 12:45pm

- Bugscope Team we do not have a proposal but would like to know what the problem really is, of course

- Student whoa


- Student My neighboor keeps bees, how are domesticated bees different than wild bees? How do kept bees influence the bee popultation? Are domesticated bees decreasing as well?
Bugscope Team The bees that live in your neighbor's hives are most likely the European honey bee, Apis mellifera. There are several different Apis mellifera subspecies, depending on where the race evolved. The genus Apis is not native to North America--they are an introduced genus. There are some populations of wild honeybees, those that have escaped from captivity and established hives elsewhere. There are lots of non-Apis honey bees in the world---in the US there are leaf cutting bees, bumble bees, sweat bees,

- Student what are those specs?
- Bugscope Team these are crystals
- Student Can you view other things under the electron microscope? What are those things?
Bugscope Team the things on the eye were crystals, these are pollen grains on the bee's knee
- Bugscope Team there are 4 or 5 of us in the microscopy suite


- Bugscope Team when you get to one place you can drive from there, as now


- Student k thank you





- Bugscope Team you made it back LP!

- Student what were those specs on the eye?
Bugscope Team crystals



- Teacher yes, the computer froze and I had to reload
- Bugscope Team we can image bacteria, dirt, sand, silicon devices, plant material, cells that have been fixed, etc.

- Student cool :)
- Student whats the claw thing
- Student How can you fix a cell?
- Student how did it get crystals on its eye?

- Bugscope Team as well as insects and other small arthropods
- Bugscope Team we arent sure what that curved spike is
- Student can you view things like genes and microfibers
Bugscope Team I think that DNA is better viewed with a TEM, than an SEM.
- Guest is that a bees knee?
Bugscope Team yes
- Student THIS WAS VERY COOL THANK YOU
- Bugscope Team yes we can see microfibers -- we can see nanotubes
- Bugscope Team it looks kind of like a scoop to me
- Student thank you
- Bugscope Team but genes you cannot see, particularly, just the DNA

- Student My neighboor keeps bees, how are domesticated bees different than wild bees? How do kept bees influence the bee popultation? Are domesticated bees decreasing as well?
Bugscope Team Kept bees (Apis mellifera) are non-native and frequently they are used to pollinate other non-native crops, like oranges, apples, almonds, cherries, etc. I don't know if they have a significate affect on native bees because they tend to pollinate different things. If the habitat of the native bees is eliminated to make room for crops, then the populations of the native pollinators will decrease.
- Student wait we can see the DNA? if so can you show us?
Bugscope Team I don't think that we can see the DNA with the specimens that we have today...we would have to prepare them in a special way.
- Bugscope Team these are tenent setae on a ladybug
- Student what is a nanotube
- Bugscope Team domesticated bees are suffering as well
Bugscope Team Domesticated bees are of primary concern, actually.
- Bugscope Team they allow the bug to walk on walls
- Student Thank You for Taking Your Time to Answer Our Questions and Let Us View the Bugscope :) - Group 9
- Bugscope Team a nanotube is a tiny tube made of carbon laced together
- Bugscope Team thank you for your questions brionna

- Bugscope Team Thank You!
- Guest thank you

- Guest peace out girl scout
- Student thank you scoot goodbye


- Student Thank You for giving us ur time....GROUP 8

- Student Thanks! Your all really knowledgable
- 12:50pm

- Student ciao
- Student okay nevermind but thank you for helping us we hope to do this next year goodbye admins
- Student thanks guys!
- Student Thanks Once Again and Have a Good Day :)
- Student Thank you for all your help!
- Bugscope Team You are welcome. Sorry I couldn't get to all of your questions!!!!

- Student its ok but thatnx
- Bugscope Team They were so good they warranted lots of explanation!




- Teacher Thank you Cate, Scott, and Annie. The other 20 students will be coming on shortly. I may have them pair up 2 per computer and see if everything loads better.



- Bugscope Team you can see the vibration
- Bugscope Team a lot of it is from the air conditioner that sits over the scope
- Bugscope Team yeah it is part (the vibration) due to the long WD
- Bugscope Team the guys who make money driving hives all over the country are not doing so well...
- Bugscope Team I have tried to go through an answer a few more of the questions that I couldn't get to...they will be available on the session webpage later if the students want to check them out.
- 12:56pm
- Teacher Thank you. The students asked if they would be able to read the responses later and will be happy to know that is possible,
Bugscope Team yes, after the session is done, you can log into your bugscope page and there is a transcript available with images


- Bugscope Team Cate I did not realize we were at 90,000x. That was not so bad given the long WD.
- Student hello everybody
- Bugscope Team Hello!
- 1:01pm

- Bugscope Team it is anonymous, but if you log in to the page, you will see an option to see it with names
- Student hi
- Bugscope Team hello

- Student hello
- Student Hello this is Josh and Joey
- Student hi?
- Bugscope Team here are spider fangs
- Student that is awesome
- Bugscope Team Presently we are looking at a spider's fangs, through a bunch of setae (hairs)

- Student Hello, the nickname Bruno is on behalf of me (Bruno) and Tim
- Student this is interesting




- Student Hey, hows everbody doing
- Student Spider Fangs?? wow thats cool
- Student yea it is


- Bugscope Team now we are looking at scales from a butterfly or moth
Bugscope Team monarch butterfly
- Student How much can the electron microscope magnify?
Bugscope Team you wont see anything very well above 200,000x usually. but this scope can go much higher

- Bugscope Team and silver paint that was used to hold them down and make them a little more conductive
- Bugscope Team we can take the mag over 800,000x but there is not much to see there, as Cate says

- Bugscope Team this is the head of a beetle
- Bugscope Team you can see the eyes - the compound eyes
- Bugscope Team and the antennae, and the mouthparts
- Student we have a question
- Bugscope Team cool!
- Student what are the potential solutions to CCD?
- Student What allows telectron microscopes to have such high miagnification
- 1:06pm
- Student what is a bee?
Bugscope Team Bees are several families of insects in the order Hymenoptera, in the suborder Aculeata. Bees are separated from the other Hymenoptera by having forked setae on their bodies.
- Bugscope Team we need to find out what the cause/causes of CCD arfe
- Bugscope Team are
- Bugscope Team we do not know for sure although there are many ideas
- Student okay
- Student well then what are the theories behind climate change, urbanization, malunutrion, pathogens, mites, pesiticides, and GM crops for CCD?
Bugscope Team Well, you answered your own questions. All of those have been pointed to as potential causes, but no one has been able to orve the link. What we do know is that the CCD bees are sick...when they are dissected they don't look healthy. We are not sure why right now.
- Bugscope Team electron microscopes use electrons rather than light to image samples, and when that is done in a vacuum we can get high-resolution images
- Student i meant for causing CCD
Bugscope Team Those are all theories---hypotheses that are being tested.
- Bugscope Team currently HCO has control of the microscope, did someone else want to drive instead for now?
- Bugscope Team another potential cause is air pollution




- Bugscope Team if bees cannot pick up chemical scents they can get lost



- Bugscope Team they seem to get disoriented





- Bugscope Team there is a hole in it from a pin








- Bugscope Team this belonged to something that has scales
- Student what is this on the bee?
Bugscope Team it was something that has scales. this insect was with a bunch of other insects, so something body parts that dont belong can be found
- Student to clarify, we meant, why do people think that those are some of the causes?
Bugscope Team All of those things that you mentioned are relatively recent advances--recent changes/ challenges to bees. The challenge for scientists is to see if any of these recent changes could actually cause CCD.
- Bugscope Team so like Cate says a lot of this can be traced back to urbanization with its increased air pollution, loss of habitat, fewer trees, etc.
- Student how long is a bees life span?
- Student with these scopes, can you see bacteria and things along those lines?
- Bugscope Team they are guessing, and no one knows the answer for sure
- 1:11pm
- Student How long is an average bees lifespan?
Bugscope Team Workers live about 2 months, I believe. During that time, they perform different tasks. The division of labor in a hive is related to the age of the bee. A worker is a nurse at first, and a forager later in her life.
- Bugscope Team we can see bacteria when they are there
- Student How do bees survive over winter?
Bugscope Team Honeybees are pretty special. They huddle together for warmth in the center of the hive. They consume honey stores for food. Here's something really interesting: bees do not eliminate waste inside the hive---they hold it all winter!!!
- Bugscope Team a bacillus is usually two microns (2 micrometers) long, and we can see them when they are present
- Student what are the characteristics of CCD?
- Teacher Can ron drive now?
- Bugscope Team for one thing, an unhealthy-looking bee, at autopsy
- Student no he cant
- Student does he have his license
- Bugscope Team Ron has control.
- Student a bacillus is a part of a bee right?
Bugscope Team it is a type of bacteria
- Bugscope Team a bacillus is one of the three different kinds of bacteria

- Bugscope Team cocci, bacilli, and spirochetes
- Student Ok

- Student I thought it said it was part of a bee
- Student Is it true that once bees sting someone they die.?
Bugscope Team it is true for honeybee's, a bumble bee can sting you multiple time like a wasp
- Bugscope Team these are pollen grains on the bee's knee
- Student what have been the population trends of the honey bee in the U.S. over the past century?
Bugscope Team I think they domesticated bee colonies have increased. Wild honeybee populations have significantly declined due to disease and parastites.
- Bugscope Team cocci are small round bacteria, bacilli are rod-shaped, like small capsules, and spirochetes are actually spiral
- Student the Bees Knees?
Bugscope Team thats where that phrase came from
- Student how do they actually collect the pollen
- Student what have been the population trends of the honey bee internationally over the past century?
Bugscope Team That is sort of a complicated question, because internationally there are several species of honeybees (bees in the genus Apis). They are kept in different places in the world, many places that don't necessarily keep track of bees.
- Student ?
- Student do bees have knee caps?
Bugscope Team Nope, no insects have knee caps. I think ticks and mites have knee caps though...if I remember correctly
- Student how does the pollon get stuck on the knee??
- Bugscope Team CCD is fairly recent -- these problems have become apparent only recently, from what I understand
- Student I get it

- Student Its a bee knee!
- Bugscope Team pollen is shaped so that it will stick to surfaces easily so it may be transported
- Student i think...


- 1:16pm
- Bugscope Team here you can see the poison pore on the lower fang
- Teacher Can you send the controls to lebron james? thanks
- Student what is a honey bee's most prefered flower to pollinate
Bugscope Team i found on one website that Purple and White Cone Flowers are an all time favorite of the honey bee.
- Bugscope Team ok lebron james have control

- Student Lebrons Evil

- Bugscope Team I am not sure whether the bees have a favorite
- Student whats that we atre looking at now?
Bugscope Team these are setae, which are hairs
- Student are*
- Student thats cool
- Student →what do bees do in the winter?←
Bugscope Team Honeybees huddle together in the hive for warmth. Bumblebee queens and some other bees hibernate over the winter.
- Student Do bees have a preferred type of pollen
Bugscope Team Not honeybees, they like everything. Native bees do prefer certain flowers. For example, bumblebees are attracted to purple and dark blue flowers.
- Bugscope Team the setae are connected to nerves, and they allow the bug to feel/smell/taste/sense vibrations (if it is a spider)/feel wind movement (if it is a fly)
- Student Why does the electron microspcope only shows black and white pictures?
- Bugscope Team as Cate says they seem to like purple and white cone flowers


- Student What are some reliable sources that you can recommend that we can use to get info about honey bees?
Bugscope Team You can try the Beespotter website http://beespotter.mste.uiuc.edu/
- Student i read there are several species of honey bees what makes each one different

- Student Thnak you very much for your time.
- Student is it true that when you wear bright colors, you attract bees?
Bugscope Team Bees and other hymenoptera are attracted to the color yellow
- Bugscope Team the image is black and white because we are not picking up wavelengths of light, which have color, but signals from the secondary elecrtron detector
- Student I see
- Bugscope Team the SE detector is achromatic, meaning it doesn't sense the energy of the secondary e-'s, only how many of them came into the detector. Thus the monochrome image, you're only seeing intensity
- Bugscope Team bees can see colors, sometimes, that we cannot see
- Student Thanks for your time (we have to go)
- Bugscope Team i think they see red, or dont see red. i forget
- 1:21pm

- Bugscope Team some insects, for example, can see in the ultraviolet, which we cannot



- Student *think
- Bugscope Team this is the tip of the proboscis of the bee you sent
- Student are their any books or websites that you recommend that will help us out with scientific illustration?
Bugscope Team There is a book called bees of the world by Charles Michener ( I think that is the title). Also see the Beespotter website
- Student than2s ☺
- Teacher Can Leilani etc. drive for the last couple minutes?
- Bugscope Team scientific illustration as in drawing?
- Student yes
- Teacher The students are starting to log off and return to project work. You guys are great. Thank you!

- Student thanks tons ♫
- Bugscope Team Thank You!
- Bugscope Team thanks for your interesting questions

- Bugscope Team We do not have to draw much anymore, and I am not sure where to go to get the best advice on the web or in books.
- Student Thank you very much for your time =)
- Student thanks for the site
- Student Thank you very much.

- Bugscope Team it used to be that entomologists and herpetologists, among other biologists, could take classes in illustrating their specimens


- Student muchas gracias
- Teacher We're signing off thanks!
- Student thanks so much!
- 1:26pm
- Bugscope Team Thank You!
- Bugscope Team See you next year...
- Student thankk you
- Bugscope Team remember you can go to http://bugscope.beckman.uiuc.edu/members/2008-016/ to access your images and transcript of the session


- Bugscope Team ye syou are free to go
- Bugscope Team Over and out. Have a good afternoon in the Underworld and out in the fields.