EPISODE · Jun 14, 2022 · 28 MIN
377 | A Spoonful of Trehalose Helps the Crickets Chill Out
from GradCast · host Ariel Frame, Laura Muñoz, Yousuf Hasan, Elizabeth Mohler, Hira Nadeem, Rose Giles, Danica Facca, Ana Moyer, Amalie Hutchinson, Bahaaldin Sahouli, Claire Bottini, Brittany Melton, Michelle Krasovitski
If you have ever wondered what happens with insects during the winter, this episode will provide some answers. Hosts Ariel Frame and Laura Muñoz Baena chat with Alyssa Stephens, a student of the Biology department who just defended her Masters thesis on freezing tolerance in spring field crickets. More specifically, Alyssa studied how crickets modify their metabolism to accumulate trehalose, a sugar that crickets use as source of energy in the summer and protection for cell freezing during the winter. Follow Alyssa on Twitter @lyssastephens and for more interesting facts about crickets and other insects, follow the Entomological Society of Ontario on Twitter @EntSocOnt Recorded on June 7 2022 Produced by Ariel Frame Theme song provided by https://freebeats.io/ Produced by White Hot.
What this episode covers
If you have ever wondered what happens with insects during the winter, this episode will provide some answers. Hosts Ariel Frame and Laura Muñoz Baena chat with Alyssa Stephens, a student of the Biology department who just defended her Masters thesis on freezing tolerance in spring field crickets. More specifically, Alyssa studied how crickets modify their metabolism to accumulate trehalose, a sugar that crickets use as source of energy in the summer and protection for cell freezing during the winter. Follow Alyssa on Twitter @lyssastephens and for more interesting facts about crickets and other insects, follow the Entomological Society of Ontario on Twitter @EntSocOnt Recorded on June 7 2022 Produced by Ariel Frame Theme song provided by https://freebeats.io/ Produced by White Hot.
NOW PLAYING
377 | A Spoonful of Trehalose Helps the Crickets Chill Out
No transcript for this episode yet
Similar Episodes
Jun 25, 2026 ·33m
Jun 24, 2026 ·64m
Jun 12, 2026 ·50m
Jun 9, 2026 ·36m
May 26, 2026 ·28m