Ants in Their Diverse Relations to the Plant WorldAmerican Museum of Natural History, 1922 - 251 Seiten |
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Seite 348
... upper drainage of the Rio Utinga, Branner measured mounds of leaf-cutters five meters high and sixteen or seventeen meters in diameter at the base, each containing about 340 cubic meters of earth. The illustrations in Branner's latest ...
... upper drainage of the Rio Utinga, Branner measured mounds of leaf-cutters five meters high and sixteen or seventeen meters in diameter at the base, each containing about 340 cubic meters of earth. The illustrations in Branner's latest ...
Seite 351
... upper part of the stem, and are brighter in color, white or orange, and these are not haunted by ants, but doubtless fertilized by hymenopterous or dipterous insects. If the flowers of G. Ridleyi are, as I believe, fertilized by ants ...
... upper part of the stem, and are brighter in color, white or orange, and these are not haunted by ants, but doubtless fertilized by hymenopterous or dipterous insects. If the flowers of G. Ridleyi are, as I believe, fertilized by ants ...
Seite 381
... upper hand and grow actively, it would probably be transferred to new neSts by the queens, since the infrabuccal pockets of imagines almost invariably contain fragments of hyphae or spores. Thus "pure cultures" of fungi may have been ...
... upper hand and grow actively, it would probably be transferred to new neSts by the queens, since the infrabuccal pockets of imagines almost invariably contain fragments of hyphae or spores. Thus "pure cultures" of fungi may have been ...
Seite 406
... upper part of a flowering branch is excavated for a space of one or two internodes and the cavity is inhabited by Tetraponera penzigi (Emery), its offspring, and also some coccids. The aperture is found at the tip of what appears to be ...
... upper part of a flowering branch is excavated for a space of one or two internodes and the cavity is inhabited by Tetraponera penzigi (Emery), its offspring, and also some coccids. The aperture is found at the tip of what appears to be ...
Seite 407
... upper end of the branch in order to enter the pith and are thus responsible for the dichotomous inflorescence of this species. I am rather inclined to think that the galleries are bored by some insect larva and are only settled by ants ...
... upper end of the branch in order to enter the pith and are thus responsible for the dichotomous inflorescence of this species. I am rather inclined to think that the galleries are bored by some insect larva and are only settled by ants ...
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Acacia acuminate Agric Ameisen American anthers apertures apex Attini Avakubi axillary axils Azteca Barteria fistulosa Barumbu base Beccari Belgian Congo Bequaert Botan bracts branches Brazil Bull calyx Cameroon Camponotus cavity Cecropia coccids Coll colonies Cordyceps coriaceous corolla Crematogaster Cuviera domatia Emery Engler Engler's Bot epiphytes Flora of Tropical flowers Forel forest Formica formicaries formicarum fourmis fruit fungi fungus galleries galls genera genus glabrous habits Hiern hollow hyphae inhabited by ants insects inside internodes Iridomyrmex Jahrb Journ Kohl larva lateral veins Laurent Laurentii leaves Linnaeus lobes Macaranga Mayr Messor midrib Moyen-Congo Myrmecodia myrmecodomatia myrmecophytes nectaries nests nodes oblong observed Ovary Pachysima pedicels petiole pilose pith plant Plectronia pouches Pseudomyrma Randia Region Schumann seeds sepals shrub side species specimens Stamens stem stipules subspecies swellings swollen thorns tree Triplaris Tropical Africa tube Ueber upper variety Vitex Wheeler Wildeman and Durand Zeitschr Zool
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 338 - Here are aphides, not living in the ants' nests, but outside, on the leaf-stalks of plants. The eggs are laid early in October on the food-plant of the insect. They are of no direct use to the ants, yet they are not left where they are laid, exposed to the severity of the weather and to innumerable dangers, but brought into their nests by the ants, and tended by them with the utmost care through the long winter months until the following March, when the young ones are brought out and again placed...
Seite 332 - December 28th, 1924, a meeting for the purpose of organizing a linguistic society was held in the American Museum of Natural History, 77th Street and Central Park West, New York City...
Seite 375 - Notwithstanding that many columns of the ants were continually carrying in the cut leaves, I could never find any quantity of these in the burrows, and it was evident that they were used up in some way immediately they were brought in. The chambers were always about three parts filled with a speckled, brown, flocculent, spongy-looking mass of a light and loosely connected substance.
Seite 339 - The behavior of both the ants and the membracids is much the same in all the cases studied. The ants stroke their charges with their antennae, whereupon the membracids give off from the anal tube a liquid that issues in bubbles in considerable quantity. The anal tube of the membracid is capable of great evagination, especially in the nymphs, in which it is long and cylindrical and usually tipped with a fringe of fine hairs. The honeydew is eagerly taken from the end of this tube by the ants. In many...
Seite 376 - ... not gathered together, but dispersed, apparently irregularly, throughout the flocculent mass. This mass, which I have called the ant-food, proved, on examination, to be composed of minutely subdivided pieces of leaves, withered to a brown colour, and overgrown and lightly connected together by a minute white fungus that ramified in every direction throughout it.
Seite 506 - ... three tenths of an inch long, which inflicts the most painful bites. Its antenna? are placed near the middle of the anterior portion of the head ; mandibles triangular ; peduncle of the abdomen with two rings ; the anus hairy and provided with a sting or piercer (Myrmica, Latr., nova species). They fall upon their prey with the greatest virulence, and insert their mandibles almost instantly, as soon as they come in contact with any soft substance, emitting a whitish fluid ; their bite causes...
Seite 375 - The leaves are used to thatch the domes which cover the entrances to their subterranean dwellings, thereby protecting from the deluging rains the young broods in the nests beneath.
Seite 339 - It is colorless and transparent, rather heavy, and somewhat sticky. When first exuded it is inclined to be frothy, due no doubt to bubbles of air which emerge with it, but it quickly clears on settling. It is practically tasteless even in comparatively large quantities, and many attempts to distinguish a sweet taste have proved unsuccessful. The term honeydew, therefore, commonly applied to the fluid, is hardly a descriptive one. It is very likely, of course, that the liquid may contain sugars not...
Seite 561 - The Natural History of the Agricultural Ant of Texas; a Monograph of the habits, architecture, and structure of Pogonomyrmex barbatus.
Seite 343 - Indian hut, at a height of 3000 feet, for the sake of devoting a month to the exploration of that interesting mountain. The walls of the hut were merely a single row of strips of Palm trees, with spaces between them wide enough to admit larger animals than ants. One morning soon after sunrise the hut was suddenly filled with large blackish ants, which ran nimbly about and tried their teeth on everything. My charqui proved too tough for them ; but they made short work of a bunch of ripe plantains,...