What if Alien wasn't science fiction, but a documentary? 2026 Science Podcast of the Year winner Dr. Jeffrey Zurek sits down with Dr. Rebecca Millena (University of Rochester) to explore Strepsiptera, an enigmatic & bizarre insect order.
We untangle the "Strepsiptera Problem"—a century-long academic debate over where these creatures belong on the tree of life. From males with "raspberry" eyes to worm-like females that live inside their hosts, we cover the visceral reality of behavioral hijacking, traumatic insemination, & the genomic revolution. We also show the "sausage-making" of museum research.
Topics
Sexual Dimorphism: Why males & females look different.
The Strepsiptera Problem: How DNA solved a taxonomic mystery.
Matrophagy: "Bag of larvae" stage where young consume their mother.
Longevity Research: Link between parasitic infection & extreme host aging.
Museum Science: Vital role of "back-catalog" collections in modern genetics.
Chapters
0:00 Universal Obscure: Welcome to Strepsiptera
1:30 Xenomorphs in RL: Parasitoids vs. Parasites
3:50 "Strepsiptera Problem" in Academia
5:15 Dr. Rebecca Millena’s "Bug Kid" Origins
8:00 Twisted Wings & Raspberry Eyes: Anatomy 101
11:15 Dimorphism: Males vs. Worm-like Females
14:35 Sexual Hijacking: Pheromones & Ant-Crickets Hosts
17:40 Cephalothorax: Breathing & Living In a Host
20:30 Traumatic Insemination & Bag of Larvae
23:45 Matrophagy: When Young Consume the Mother
26:50 Taxonomy’s 150-Year Detective Story
30:50 Genetics vs Morphology: Fly-Beetle Debate
36:10 Genomic Revolutions: 2012 the Shift to Beetles
41:40 Cryptic Species: Hiding in Plain Sight
46:40 Parasites of Parasites: Wolbachia Connection
53:30 Fountain of Youth? Lifespan Extension in Wasps
59:45 Museum Research: "Sausage-Making" of Science
1:05:00 Millipedes & the Science Joke
Links
Papers: Strepsiptera systematics: past, present, and future
Web: WhimsicalWavelengths.com
Support: Pateron
Socials: Bluesky | Instagram | Facebook
Whimsical Wavelengths: Deep-dive conversations where a working scientist unpacks how we know what we know, one paper, one idea, or whimsical detour at a time. Hosted by Dr. Jeffrey Zurek (P.Geo).