{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/624385341d00f90014929e95/64029a65c5ea8c00111766bd?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"Sex Life of Bugs ","thumbnail_width":200,"thumbnail_height":200,"thumbnail_url":"https://open-images.acast.com/shows/624385341d00f90014929e95/1651116165159-031ec8193638164882ca88820f323e03.jpeg?height=200","description":"<p>CHECK OUT THE INTIMATE LIVES OF INSECTS IN BUG SEX PREMIERING</p><p><br></p><p>FRIDAY, MARCH 10 ON THE NATURE OF THINGS</p><p>Bug Sex premieres Friday, March 10 at 9 p.m. (9:30 NT) on CBC and CBC Gem</p><p><br></p><p>There is 10 quintillion of them on this planet and their numbers keep growing so they must be</p><p>up to something, right? They are. But how do bugs actually mate? In this new documentary,</p><p>filmmakers use cutting-edge camera technology –and a healthy sense of humour--to take</p><p>viewers into the little-known and rarely-seen world of insect sexual activity. What the bugs do</p><p>is surprising, sometimes borderline tender or even shockingly brutal. Bug Sex premieres on The</p><p>Nature of Things, Friday, March 10 at 9 p.m. (9:30 NT) on CBC and the free CBC Gem streaming</p><p>service.</p><p>Why should the sex lives of bugs interest us? “If human beings ceased to exist, the planet</p><p>would continue just fine,” director Andrew Gregg. “But eliminate all the insects and arachnids</p><p>and the world’s ecology would collapse.” He notes that seeing how insects breed and go to</p><p>incredible lengths to ensure their genes carry on is a window into how evolution works.</p><p>With intriguing visuals, Bug Sex looks at how a wide variety of spiders, crickets and flies breed,</p><p>everything from black widow spiders to Pacific field crickets. Viewers will be astonished at the</p><p>mating habits of fruit flies and at what the male black widow spider sacrifices for the sake of a</p><p>sexual union. Then there is the kinky behaviour of the wolf spider with its sexual cannibalism</p><p>and just wait until you see the courting technique of dance flies! “Looking at the bug world is</p><p>like stepping into an alternate reality that exists all around us,” Gregg notes.</p><p>To guide viewers into this world, Gregg assembled a number of insect biologists, and he feels</p><p>that now with more women scientists in the field, there is a greater understanding of the female</p><p>half of the insect population. He points out that many bug scientists are actually partnered</p><p>couples who share a mutual interest. Like biologists from the University of Toronto, Maydianne</p><p>Andrade and her husband Andrew Mason, who we join as they observe monster haglids in Alberta.</p><p>“We are both interested in the libido of bugs,” Dr. Andrade explains.</p><p>Joining them in this documentary are Marlene Zuk and her husband John Rotenberry as they</p><p>seek field crickets in Hawaii, and on Vancouver Island, we find Catherine Scott and partner Sean</p><p><br></p><p>McCann looking out for black widow spiders. Bug Sex even ventures to Uruguay where solo</p><p>scientist Anita Aisenberg explores the unconventional mating rituals of wolf spiders.</p><p>Darryl Gwynn explores the machinations of tree cricket courting and then the intricacies of how</p><p>they actually get it together. “Insects are so diverse,” he says. “And as the years go by they are</p><p>coming up with more and more novel systems, new insect systems that do bizarrely different</p><p>things.” Is it possible that insects derive any pleasure during their couplings? Dr. Lisha Shao at</p><p>the University of Delaware provides evidence that the lively and intoxicated fruit fly is actually</p><p>having a good time.</p><p>Bug Sex is a unique opportunity to glimpse into the fascinating and hidden world of the tiny</p><p>creatures that are all around us. It is an invitation to be a bug voyeur!</p><p>*****************</p><p>Bug Sex is written and directed by Andrew Gregg and co-produced with Deborah Parks. It is</p><p>made by Red Trillium Films in association with CBC.</p><p>For CBC: Sally Catto is General Manager, Entertainment, Scripted, and Sport; Jennifer Dettman</p><p>is Executive Director, Unscripted Content; Sandra Kleinfeld is Senior Director, Documentaries;</p><p>Sue Dando &amp;amp; Lesley Birchard, Executives in Charge of Production.</p>","author_name":"Dave Glover"}