Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 17
pro vyhledávání: '"Stefan Cover"'
Publikováno v:
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Significance Identifying the conditions associated with a life history transition from cooperative colony life to exploitative social parasitism is important for understanding how changes in behavior contribute to speciation. To explore the evolution
Publikováno v:
ZooKeys, Vol 921, Iss, Pp 23-48 (2020)
ZooKeys 921: 23-48
ZooKeys
ZooKeys 921: 23-48
ZooKeys
In ants, social parasitism is an umbrella term describing a variety of life-history strategies, where a parasitic species depends entirely on a free-living species, for part of or its entire life-cycle, for either colony founding, survival, and/or re
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::e1f994ba7b07592e56b9c691b9a7b864
https://zenodo.org/record/3735597
https://zenodo.org/record/3735597
Autor:
Xavier Espadaler, Jignasha D. Rana, Stefan Cover, Gerard Talavera, Anne Andersen Andersen, Roger Vila, Sämi Schär
Publikováno v:
Journal of Biogeography. 45:1917-1928
Publikováno v:
Insectes Sociaux. 65:401-410
Over 40 years ago, the dacetine ant Strumigenys arizonica was discovered in a nest of the fungus-growing ant Trachymyrmex arizonensis at Madera Canyon in the Santa Rita Mountains of the southwestern United States. This discovery suggested that the tw
Autor:
Stefan Cover, Mark Deyrup
Publikováno v:
Southeastern Naturalist. 8:191-212
Ants of the tribe Dacetini are especially diverse in Southeastern North America, with 40 known species, all in the genera Pyramica and Strumigenys. The 30 native Pyramica may represent a remnant Arctotertiary forest ant fauna. The 9 introduced specie
Publikováno v:
ZooKeys
ZooKeys 552: 49-65
ZooKeys 552: 49-65
Obligately socially parasitic ants are social parasites that typically lack the sterile worker caste, and depend on the host species for survival and brood care. The genus Nylanderia has over 130 described species and subspecies, none of which, until
Publikováno v:
Annals of the Entomological Society of America. 99:487-523
The presence of the ant subfamily Myrmeciinae is established in the Early Eocene (Ypresian) Okanagan Highlands localities of Horsefly River, Falkland, McAbee (British Columbia, Canada) and Republic (Washington state, United States) and in the Mo-clay
Publikováno v:
Biological Invasions. 8:383-387
A first study of the ants on the three main islands of the Juan Fernandez Archipelago (Chile) has revealed the presence of just three species, Hypoponera confinis, Linepithema humile, and Tetramorium bicarinatum, all widely distributed invasive speci
Autor:
Mark Deyrup, Stefan Cover
Publikováno v:
Florida Entomologist. 87:136-144
The ponerine ant Odontomachus relictus n. sp. is described from specimens collected in scrub and sandhill habitats on several ancient sand ridges in Florida. It appears to be a relict species from dry periods in the Pleistocene. Workers are similar t
Autor:
Stefan Cover, Mark Deyrup
Publikováno v:
Florida Entomologist. 87:51-59
A new species of myrmicine ant is described from Florida: Leptothorax palustris is known from workers and associated queens and males collected in a marsh and in frequently flooded pinelands in the Apalachicola National Forest in northwestern Florida