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Dr.William H. Cade (Bill Cade) is a biologist and the President of the University of Lethbridge. He researches the role of acoustic signals in field cricket mating behaviour.
EducationCade completed his BA (1968), MA (1972) and PhD (1976) in Zoology at the University of Texas at Austin. For his Master's degree he worked with Professor Osmond Breland on unusual aspects of insect sperm cell. Cade's doctoral work was on the evolution of mating behavior in insects and he studied with Professor Daniel Otte ResearchEvolution of animal behavior, Insect reproductive behavior, Acoustic signals in cricket and cockroach mating behavior, Parasite-Prey Coevolution are subjects researched by Cade. Flies and CricketsIn 1975, together with his wife, Elsa Salazar Cade, Cade discovered the parasitic fly Ormia ochracea is attracted to the song of male crickets. Only female flies are attracted to the song, and they deposit living larvae on and in the vicinity of calling males. The larvae burrow into and eat the cricket who dies in about 7 days when the flies pupate. This was the first example of a natural enemy that locates its host or prey using the mating signal of the host/prey.[1]
Cade has a long collaboration with Dan Otte collecting and studying the crickets and grasshoppers of Africa.[3] OtherWhen he was an undergrad at Texas he was a member of the Kappa Sigma fraternity. References
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Mercedes Car
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