Thursday 21 June 2012

NO, Uno's a BOY!!!

After much to-ing and fro-ing with photos to the Zoo Keeper, Rohan, he thinks Uno is a boy!

This is what Rohan said in his last email:

Looks like a male to me in this photo.  If you look closely at the brown part towards the tip of the abdomen you will see it is more rounded.  If it was a female it would be very pointed.  I saw the photos on your blog of the students involved in the radio cross yesterday.  Looked great.
Sincerely
Rohan

Sorry Uno. Apparently his rear end is flattened, not pointy like a girl's.

We're all learning!


Tuesday 19 June 2012

Uno's a girl!

See those TINY claspers at the end of her tail? And those delicate female thighs. At this stage we have decided Uno is a GIRL! 

Sorry, we've been calling Uno a "him" all this time! But it's only now that she's big enough to really see the body parts clearly.

Uno's carers on the radio




Today was pretty special: it's not every day you get to take over the Principal's office! This afternoon four of my students stayed back at school for an hour so they could talk about our special Lord Howe Island Stick Insect project on a radio station. It was a live to air program called Primary Perspectives, run by kids for kids, on the FM band at 94.1. The radio station will be saving it as a podcast too!

Monday 18 June 2012

Uno is a radio star!

Uno is noticeably bigger - about 3.5 cm long. He is 6 weeks old now




If a student hasn't seen him for a while, they are quite surprised at how much he has grown. His colour is changing slightly too. He is not the bright lime green of his early days any more. He's dulled off in colour and gone a slightly darker green. There are brown stripes on the segments of his antennae, and his abdomen has a whitish stripe on it at the moment.


We are wondering if he is about to shed his exoskeleton. Or maybe he has already? We haven't seen him shed, or found any evidence of a moult (shed skin) on the base of the enclosure. I think one of the other insects at another school has already shed. We'll just keep our eyes open.





Here, Uno is being gently transferred onto a fresh plant. Yum! The other one had been insdie for a few extra weeks, and it was definitely ready for a bit of fresh air, sunshine and water!

As for the eggs... They are still eggs! We didn't end up putting them in the chicken incubator because I could not get the temperature stable in the right range. And, then we started taking the egg container to a different classroom where they get full northern sun through their window most of the day. They have spent a few weekend days at my house on the heater or in front of the sunny window. Still not happy...The latest advice from the Zoo Keeper is to shine a desk lamp straight on them!



This afternoon, we are quite excited because we are doing a radio interview! Between 4-5, on  94.1fm 3WBC

Details of the show are:

Here’s the blurb for the podcast:
Christian College Bellarine was a successful applicant from the Melbourne Zoo, selected to participate in a pilot program where schools could raise critically endangered Lord Howe Island Stick Insects in captivity. Year 8 Environmental Studies students applied for the project with their teacher. The special story of how this insect was thought to be extinct for over 80 years has spread throughout the school. Many students from the Prep –Year 9 campus visit the specially made enclosure to try and find where Uno is hiding. He is so named as the first and so far only, Lord Howe Island Stick Insect to hatch at the school. Conditions for a healthy environment for the insects have meant cleaners have avoided using chemical cleaning products around the enclosure. Young children rush up to search for Uno in the foliage in his enclosure; older students are monitoring the “climate” conditions on a daily basis. Other students have conducted a behaviour research project. Eventually, all animals and research information will be returned to the Zoo. During the project, the school is keeping the Zoo and other schools informed of progress via a dedicated blog site. The project has been a highlight for the students and the school.


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by the multi-award winning team at Wonderful World Media/SBN
Streaming live world wide via www.3wbc.org.au
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and wwwpositiveimpactmagazine.com

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If you miss the live program, we will be saved to a podcast for later listening!