Mostrando 6 resultados de: 6
Publisher
Journal of Animal Ecology(2)
Biotropica(1)
Exotic Ants: Biology, Impact, And Control Of Introduced Species(1)
Insectes Sociaux(1)
Neotropical Entomology(1)
Área temáticas
Arthropoda(4)
Ecología(3)
Mammalia(2)
Cordados(1)
Factores que afectan al comportamiento social(1)
Origen
scopus(6)
Ant Fauna of the French and Venezuelan Islands in the Caribbean
Book PartAbstract:Palabras claves:Autores:Jaffé K., John E. LattkeFuentes:scopusArmy ant males lose seasonality at a site on the equator
ArticleAbstract: Army ants are keystone predators in the tropics and subtropics. During reproduction, males fly betwePalabras claves:Alates, New World, phenology, reproduction, tropicsAutores:Castro R.V., Dale L. Forrister, Duval M., Garwood N.C., Hays T., John E. Lattke, Longino J.T., Sendoya S., Tozetto L.Fuentes:scopusArmy ants in four forests: Geographic variation in raid rates and species composition
ArticleAbstract: The New World army ants are top predators in the litter of tropical forest, but no comprehensive stuPalabras claves:Ambient temperature, Diel patterns, Dominant species, Ecitoninae, Foraging, Species richness, Top predatorAutores:John E. Lattke, Kaspari M.E., O'Donnell S., Powell S.Fuentes:scopusPatterns of Ant (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) Richness and Relative Abundance along an Aridity Gradient in Western Venezuela
ArticleAbstract: In xeric ecosystems, ant diversity response to aridity varies with rainfall magnitude and gradient ePalabras claves:Ant diversity, Araya Peninsula, Mantel correlograms, Neotropics, semi-arid environmentsAutores:John E. Lattke, Pérez-Sánchez A.J., Viloria A.L.Fuentes:scopusPredation and patchiness in the tropical litter: Do swarm-raiding army ants skim the cream or drain the bottle?
ArticleAbstract: Swarm-raiding army ants have long been considered as episodic, catastrophic agents of disturbance inPalabras claves:Brown food webs, Density dependence, Invertebrates, predation, Prey choice, Tropical RainforestAutores:John E. Lattke, Kaspari M.E., O'Donnell S., Powell S.Fuentes:scopusSix weeks in the life of a reproducing army ant colony: Male parentage and colony behaviour
ArticleAbstract: The army ant Eciton burchellii is one of the most conspicuous ant species in New World tropical forePalabras claves:Colony fission, Eciton burchellii, Nomadism, Reproductive brood, Worker sterilityAutores:Boomsma J.J., John E. Lattke, Kronauer D.J.C., Ponce E.R.R.Fuentes:scopus