"Catch a Bug" outreach program headed to Oahu public libraries
The Hawaii State Public Library System and Bishop Museum will this summer present "Catch a Bug," an educational outreach program in entomology featuring samples of insects from one of the world's largest insect collections.
The program is designed to introduce students to the study of insects and help them have an awareness of the living world around them.
Bishop Museum Entomology Collections Manager Shepherd Myers, and intern Shar Hashimoto, will be visiting O'ahu libraries beginning June 16 through July 12. They will bring along examples of insects from Bishop Museum's collection, which includes more than16,500 types — mostly from the Pacific, but also those resulting from early Hawaiian-based biological control explorations from around the world.
"Catch a Bug" is a fun summer learning program supported in part by the U.S. Department of Education, Office of Innovation and Improvement's Education through Cultural & Historic Organizations (ECHO). The ECHO initiative provides educational enrichment to Native and non-native children and lifelong learners.
Catch a Bug scientists will be at the following libraries:
For more information about "Catch a Bug," call your local public library or Bishop Museum at 847-3511 or visit www.bishopmuseum.org