Of all the animals on earth, which are the strongest for their size? What about the fastest? Who were the first animals to evolve flight? Insects take all of these titles and more! As the most abundant animals on the planet, insects and other arthropods affect our lives in so many ways. From beneficial interactions like pollination and biological pest control, to the transmission of life threatening diseases; this course will teach you about the big ways that these little arthropods impact our lives.

Bugs 101: Insect-Human Interactions
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Skills you'll gain
- Pollution Prevention
- Biology
- Environment and Resource Management
- Anthropology
- Taxonomy
- Social Studies
- Microbiology
- Sustainable Systems
- Public Health and Disease Prevention
- Environmental Science
- Anatomy
- Environmental Monitoring
- Life Sciences
- Criminal Investigation and Forensics
- Art History
- Infectious Diseases
- Physiology
- Socioeconomics
Details to know
14 assignments
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There are 13 modules in this course
Arthropods, which includes insects, are the most speciose group of animals on the planet. In this module, we explore some of the traits that have allowed insects to dominate terrestrial landscapes around the world, and introduce you to the major insect orders you’ll deal with in the course.
What's included
12 videos9 readings2 assignments2 plugins
12 videos•Total 106 minutes
- 00.01 Welcome to Bugs 101•11 minutes
- 00.02 Introduction to your Course Facilitator•3 minutes
- 01.01 Introduction•2 minutes
- 01.02 Arthropods•10 minutes
- 01.03 Arthropod Evolution and Classification•16 minutes
- 01.04 Small Body Size•6 minutes
- 01.05 Metamorphosis, Dispersal, and Reproductive Capabilities•9 minutes
- 01.06 Major Insect Orders•13 minutes
- 01.07 Insect Collections in Museums•19 minutes
- 01.08 Starting Your Insect Collection•12 minutes
- 01.09 Module 01 Wrap Up•1 minute
- Royal Alberta Museum Bug Gallery Tour•3 minutes
9 readings•Total 200 minutes
- Course Information Packet•10 minutes
- Interactive Learning Objects•10 minutes
- Meet the BUGS 101 Team•10 minutes
- Course Glossary•10 minutes
- Useful Biological Prefixes and Suffixes•10 minutes
- Extra Study Material: Flashcards•10 minutes
- Why we kill bugs (optional but encouraged reading)•10 minutes
- Module 01 Course Notes•120 minutes
- Module 01 Supplementary readings•10 minutes
2 assignments•Total 40 minutes
- Pre-Course Bugs Survey•30 minutes
- Module 1 Quiz•10 minutes
2 plugins•Total 30 minutes
- Interactive Learning Object - Arthropod Body Plans•15 minutes
- Interactive Learning Object - Arthropod Phylogeny•15 minutes
What makes an insect an insect? How do these strange creatures operate? This module begins to uncover the inner workings of insects, starting with the digestive and circulatory systems.
What's included
6 videos2 readings1 assignment4 plugins
6 videos•Total 37 minutes
- 02.01 The Business of Being an Insect•1 minute
- 02.02 Insect Body Regions and Head•10 minutes
- 02.03 Insect Thorax and Abdomen•3 minutes
- 02.04 Digestion and Excretion•10 minutes
- 02.05 Circulation and Gas Exchange•12 minutes
- 02.06 Module 02 Wrap Up•1 minute
2 readings•Total 130 minutes
- Module 02 Course Notes•120 minutes
- Module 02 Supplementary Readings•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 10 minutes
- Module 2 Quiz•10 minutes
4 plugins•Total 60 minutes
- Interactive Learning Object - Mouthparts•15 minutes
- Interactive Learning Object - Digestive System•15 minutes
- Interactive Learning Object - Circulatory System•15 minutes
- Interactive Learning Object - Gas Exchange System•15 minutes
Building on the previous module, we continue to explore insect biology through an overview of the major physiological systems of insects. We look at the nervous and reproductive systems, and highlight some of the ways insects court, seduce, and reproduce.
What's included
7 videos2 readings1 assignment3 plugins
7 videos•Total 50 minutes
- 03.01 More Business of Being an Insect•1 minute
- 03.02 Nervous System•11 minutes
- 03.03 Courtship and Mating•11 minutes
- 03.04 Male and Female Reproductive Structures•6 minutes
- 03.05 Modes of Reproduction•15 minutes
- 03.06 Mating Disruption and SIT•6 minutes
- 03.07 Module 03 Wrap Up•1 minute
2 readings•Total 130 minutes
- Module 03 Course Notes•120 minutes
- Module 03 Supplementary Readings•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 10 minutes
- Module 3 Quiz•10 minutes
3 plugins•Total 45 minutes
- Interactive Learning Object - Nervous System•15 minutes
- Interactive Learning Object - Reproductive System: Female•15 minutes
- Interactive Learning Object - Reproductive System: Male•15 minutes
Did you know that insects are the strongest animals in the world for their size? Find out what makes insects so strong in this module, in which we introduce insect musculature and how they use it to get around. From swimming to flying, we explore the many ways insects move and the specialized appendages they've evolved to do so.
What's included
12 videos2 readings1 assignment2 plugins
12 videos•Total 73 minutes
- 04.01 Insects on the Move•2 minutes
- 04.02 Passive and Active Dispersal•12 minutes
- 04.03 Insect Musculature•5 minutes
- 04.04 Insect Legs and Modifications•7 minutes
- 04.05 Insect Wing Structure•4 minutes
- 04.06 Insect Wing Modifications•8 minutes
- 04.07 Insect Flight Muscles•7 minutes
- 04.08 Studying Insect Flight•4 minutes
- 04.09 Insect Migration•8 minutes
- 04.10 Insect Migration: Locusts•6 minutes
- 04.11 Insect Migration: Monarch Butterfly•10 minutes
- 04.12 Module 04 Wrap Up•2 minutes
2 readings•Total 130 minutes
- Module 04 Course Notes•120 minutes
- Module 04 Supplementary Readings•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 10 minutes
- Module 04 Quiz•10 minutes
2 plugins•Total 30 minutes
- Interactive Learning Object - Insect Leg•15 minutes
- Interactive Learning Object - Bug Box•15 minutes
Without decomposers, dead trees and leaves would pile up in forests, and we would be walking knee deep in dung and animal carcasses. Insect decomposers help to recycle these materials and many others back into the earth, recycling the nutrients to be used by other organisms again. This module unearths the importance of these decomposers to our ecosystem, and even discusses some ways these insects can be used to help solve crimes.
What's included
6 videos2 readings1 assignment
6 videos•Total 55 minutes
- 05.01 Insects as Decomposers•2 minutes
- 05.02 Nutrient Cycling•4 minutes
- 05.03 Detritivore Feeding Guilds•18 minutes
- 05.04 Insect Development•8 minutes
- 05.05 Development and Succession in Forensics•22 minutes
- 05.06 Module 05 Wrap Up•2 minutes
2 readings•Total 130 minutes
- Module 05 Course Notes•120 minutes
- Module 05 Supplementary Readings•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 10 minutes
- Module 05 Quiz•10 minutes
This module focuses on the vegetarians of the insect world. A long evolutionary history with plants has led to the development of some interesting feeding strategies in insects, and some wild defenses in the plants they eat. Some of these herbivores can be important pests, and may change entire ecosystems through their feeding.
What's included
7 videos2 readings1 assignment1 plugin
7 videos•Total 64 minutes
- 06.01 Plant Feeding and Impacts of Herbivory•2 minutes
- 06.02 Coevolution & Ecological Fitting•8 minutes
- 06.03 Levels of Diet Specialisation•11 minutes
- 06.04 Plant Defences•16 minutes
- 06.05 Plant Feeding Guilds•20 minutes
- 06.06 Impacts of Insect Herbivores•5 minutes
- 06.07 Module 06 Wrap Up•2 minutes
2 readings•Total 130 minutes
- Module 06 Course Notes•120 minutes
- Module 6 Supplementary Reading•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 10 minutes
- Module 06 Quiz•10 minutes
1 plugin•Total 15 minutes
- Interactive Learning Object - Herbivores•15 minutes
Over millions of years, pollinators have formed a close relationship with flowering plants, and have helped shape our society and the world around us. Today, many crops are reliant on pollinating insects, and entire industries have been developed around beekeeping. We explore pollination and beekeeping in this module, and discuss some of the challenges pollinators face in our rapidly changing world.
What's included
9 videos3 readings1 assignment
9 videos•Total 81 minutes
- 07.01 Pollination and Beekeeping•3 minutes
- 07.02 Pollination•10 minutes
- 07.03 Pollinator Challenges and Importance•7 minutes
- 07.04 Apiculture•16 minutes
- 07.05 Honey Bee Eusociality and Castes•16 minutes
- 07.06 Honey Bee Biology•8 minutes
- 07.07 Honey Bee Communication•9 minutes
- 07.08 Threats to Honey Bees•11 minutes
- 07.09 Module 7 Wrap Up•2 minutes
3 readings•Total 140 minutes
- News: Varroa mites feed on fat body, not hemolymph•10 minutes
- Module 07 Course Notes•120 minutes
- Module 07 Supplementary Readings•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 10 minutes
- Module 7 - Pollination and Apiculture•10 minutes
Many globally important diseases can be transmitted by insects, and insects themselves can present a nuisance in some situations. This module compares different modes of disease transmission, and highlights some important diseases of plants, humans, and other animals.
What's included
6 videos2 readings1 assignment
6 videos•Total 69 minutes
- 08.01 Insects and Disease•1 minute
- 08.02 Etiological Agents and Disease Vectors•17 minutes
- 08.03 Arthropod-borne Human Diseases•29 minutes
- 08.04 Arthropod-borne Animal Diseases•8 minutes
- 08.05 Arthropod-borne Plant Diseases•13 minutes
- 08.06 Module 08 Wrap Up•1 minute
2 readings•Total 130 minutes
- Module 08 Course Notes•120 minutes
- Module 08 Supplementary Readings•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 10 minutes
- Module 8 - Insects and Diseases•10 minutes
Integrated pest management (IPM) is a pillar of modern crop production, and the preservation of ecosystem function/health. A variety of chemical pesticides can be a part of IPM programs. The different insecticides available to manage insect pests vary in many regards, such as their modes of action and application. The use of these pesticides is not without risks, however, and these must be considered if we want to reap the benefits these chemicals can provide.
What's included
6 videos2 readings1 assignment
6 videos•Total 79 minutes
- 09.01 Sustainable Human-Insect Interactions: IPM•1 minute
- 09.02 Integrated Pest Management•25 minutes
- 09.03 IPM: Chemical Control•6 minutes
- 09.04 Types of Insecticides•16 minutes
- 09.05 Advantages and Limitations of Insecticides•30 minutes
- 09.06 Module 09 Wrap Up•1 minute
2 readings•Total 130 minutes
- Module 09 Course Notes•120 minutes
- Module 09 Supplementary Readings•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 10 minutes
- Module 9 - Sustainable Human-Insect Interactions I•10 minutes
Biological and cultural control strategies are critical components of IPM systems that allow us to control pests in different ways, and reduce the input of chemical pesticides into the environment. This module introduces these two approaches, and a wide variety of biological control agents which can be employed to control insect pests.
What's included
6 videos3 readings1 assignment
6 videos•Total 94 minutes
- 10.01 IPM: Biological and Cultural Control•2 minutes
- 10.02 Biological Control•30 minutes
- 10.03 Types of Biological Control•25 minutes
- 10.04 Pros and Cons of Biological Control•9 minutes
- 10.05 Cultural Control•27 minutes
- 10.06 Module 10 Wrap Up•3 minutes
3 readings•Total 140 minutes
- Module 10 Course Notes•120 minutes
- Interactive Learning Object - Pest Management in an Orchard - Capstone activity•10 minutes
- Module 10 Supplementary Readings•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 10 minutes
- Module 10 - Sustainable Human-Insect Interactions II•10 minutes
Many of us have thought at one time or another that the world may be better off without pest insects like mosquitoes. This module aims to change that view, as we discuss the importance of insect conservation and the variety of ways the changing world impacts insect populations.
What's included
7 videos3 readings1 assignment
7 videos•Total 114 minutes
- 11.01 Insect Conservation•2 minutes
- 11.02 Conservation of Insect Diversity•17 minutes
- 11.03 The Changing World and Insects•25 minutes
- 11.04 The Changing Climate and Insects•16 minutes
- 11.05 Invasive Species and Harvesting by Humans•19 minutes
- 11.06 Conserving and Managing Insect Diversity•34 minutes
- 11.07 Module 11 Wrap Up•2 minutes
3 readings•Total 140 minutes
- Module 11 Course Notes•120 minutes
- Road Map to Insect Conservation•10 minutes
- Module 11 Supplementary Readings•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 10 minutes
- Module 11 - Insect Conservation•10 minutes
Entomologists are not the only ones to be inspired by the insect world. From historical myths and folklore, to modern art, film, and even video games; insects and other arthropods have appeared throughout human culture. They have even influenced the development of new technologies, and could be part of the solution to global issues like food shortages.
What's included
6 videos3 readings1 assignment
6 videos•Total 104 minutes
- 12.01 Insects in Human Culture•2 minutes
- 12.02 Myths and Symbols•16 minutes
- 12.03 Art, Literature, and Film•22 minutes
- 12.04 Products, Science and Technology•34 minutes
- 12.05 Entomophagy: Insects as Food•28 minutes
- 12.06 Module 12 Wrap Up•1 minute
3 readings•Total 150 minutes
- Module 12 Course Notes•130 minutes
- Playlist of Entomology-inspired Music•10 minutes
- Module 12 Supplementary Readings•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 10 minutes
- Module 12 - Insects in Human Society•10 minutes
We hope that you have enjoyed the course, and walk away with a newfound appreciation for the insect world. Check out this module to hear about your instructors favourite insects, and don’t forget to complete the post-course quiz to see if your perceptions have changed!
What's included
1 video1 reading1 assignment
1 video•Total 13 minutes
- Bugs 101 Wrap Up•13 minutes
1 reading•Total 10 minutes
- Acknowledgements•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 10 minutes
- Post-Course Bugs Survey•10 minutes
Instructor

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Frequently asked questions
You'll learn how insects and their arthropod relatives are built, how they evolved, and why they matter so much to people. It starts with diversity, anatomy, and major adaptations, then moves into insect roles in ecosystems, agriculture, health, and human culture. You'll also use short interactive exercises to identify body structures and work through examples such as pollination or orchard pest management.
No, you don't need formal biology or entomology training to begin. It starts with basic arthropod traits, insect body regions, and major groups before moving into bigger topics like disease, pollination, and conservation. Some scientific vocabulary may be new at first, but the course includes a glossary and extra study materials.
Yes, it's beginner-friendly if you want a broad introduction to insects and their relationship with humans. The course builds step by step from classification and anatomy into ecology, agriculture, public health, and conservation, with quizzes and interactive activities reinforcing each module. It may feel especially wide-ranging if you're only looking for species identification or one narrow insect topic.
The course takes about 50 hours in total. At roughly 10 hours a week, that's about five weeks of study for many learners. The time is spread across lessons, readings, quizzes, and interactive activities.
Yes, but the practice is guided rather than project-based. You'll use interactive activities to label insect anatomy and body systems, and there are applied activities around starting an insect collection and exploring pest management in an orchard. That gives you a concrete way to apply each topic as you learn it.
You'll cover insect diversity and biology, then see how that science connects to ecosystems and everyday human concerns. Major themes include locomotion, decomposition, pollination, herbivory, disease transmission, integrated pest management, conservation, and the place of insects in art and culture. The course gives you a wide view of insects as both living organisms and part of larger environmental and social systems.
After finishing, you should be able to identify major insect groups, explain traits like metamorphosis or flight that help insects succeed, and evaluate common insect-human interactions. For example, you should be able to discuss why pollinators matter, how vectors spread disease, or why an IPM plan might rely on monitoring and biological control. That's a broad outcome, but a useful one if you want to think and speak about insect issues with more context.
It's more focused on understanding how insects work, with guided practice built in. You'll spend more time on lessons, readings, and explanations than on open-ended projects, while quizzes and interactive exercises help reinforce the material.
Choose this course if you want insect biology taught through real human concerns, not just identification or taxonomy. It connects the science of insects to topics like pollination, forensic entomology, disease, pest management, conservation, and even mythology and art, and reinforces that with interactive exercises. If you want one beginner course that explains both how insects work and why they matter, this is a strong fit.
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