The Six-Legged Narrative

The Six-Legged Narrative EPS 2026-06-22

11 min · 23. juni 2026
episode The Six-Legged Narrative EPS 2026-06-22 cover

Description

From ancient hell ants with scythe-like jaws to moths that navigate by starlight, this episode of the Six-Legged Narrative covers 113 million years of insect history in about ten minutes. Also on the agenda: the orchid mantis that outperforms real flowers, the return of a beloved folklore insect to European skies, a case for putting more invertebrates on museum walls, and a deeply personal chigger story that may change how you dress for fieldwork.

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episode The Six-Legged Narrative EPS 2026-06-25 artwork

The Six-Legged Narrative EPS 2026-06-25

On this episode of The Six-Legged Narrative: moths are finally getting the credit they deserve as nocturnal pollinators — and community moth nights are making it possible to see them up close. Then, a breakthrough in monarch butterfly tracking is turning smartphones into wildlife receivers and filling in the gaps of one of nature's most epic journeys. We visit the last eastern population of the regal fritillary butterfly, holding on at an active military installation in Pennsylvania. A look at the genetics of ant colonies reveals that the rules governing who becomes queen may be written into the genome in surprisingly compact form. A new fly species from the Himalayas brings a forty-eight-year taxonomic mystery to a close. And finally — please stop putting your house spiders outside.

Yesterday19 min
episode The Six-Legged Narrative EPS 2026-06-24 artwork

The Six-Legged Narrative EPS 2026-06-24

From courtship gifts to Roman war machines made of silk — this episode of The Six-Legged Narrative covers six stories that prove the invertebrate world never runs out of surprises. Tiny dance flies are performing elaborate love rituals right in your garden. A newly described spider in the Queensland rainforest has engineered a silk catapult that fires ants at forces that would knock a human unconscious. A decade-long partnership between scientists and a brewery has raised thousands of dollars for imperiled butterfly conservation in ways no journal article ever could. Researchers in Japan have mapped 842 genetic switches that control honeybee metamorphosis. An invasive sawfly from Asia has turned up in Michigan for the first time. And the National Audubon Society wants you to try bugwatching — here's why that's actually a great idea.

25. juni 202619 min