نتایج جستجو برای: ants

تعداد نتایج: 8218  

Journal: :The Iowa Review 2007

2000
Manuel A. Morales

I used a host-visitor modeling framework to examine the interaction between the treehopper Publilia conca6a and ants in the genus Formica. In particular, I tested the functional relationship between ant tending, the spatial distribution of treehoppers, and treehopper density. The per-capita density of ants at each host plant was a decreasing function of treehopper density, distance from the ant...

Journal: :The Journal of experimental biology 2004
Virginie Durier Paul Graham Thomas S Collett

We have studied the changing use of spatial memories in wood ants by charting how the ants' paths transform when ants are first trained to feed at one site and must then switch to another site. Because ants, which are trained to approach a single feeding site from a single starting point, are attracted directly to that goal when started from unfamiliar positions, we describe the ants' paths in ...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2009
Jacob A Russell Corrie S Moreau Benjamin Goldman-Huertas Mikiko Fujiwara David J Lohman Naomi E Pierce

Ants are a dominant feature of terrestrial ecosystems, yet we know little about the forces that drive their evolution. Recent findings illustrate that their diets range from herbivorous to predaceous, with "herbivores" feeding primarily on exudates from plants and sap-feeding insects. Persistence on these nitrogen-poor food sources raises the question of how ants obtain sufficient nutrition. To...

Journal: :Journal of experimental zoology. Part A, Ecological genetics and physiology 2008
Wade C Sherbrooke Kurt Schwenk

Horned lizards (Iguanidae, Phrynosomatinae, Phrynosoma) are morphologically specialized reptiles characterized by squat, tank-like bodies, short limbs, blunt snouts, spines and cranial horns, among other traits. They are unusual among lizards in the degree to which they specialize on a diet of ants, but exceptional in the number of pugnacious, highly venomous, stinging ants they consume, especi...

Journal: :The Journal of experimental biology 2015
A Sofia D Fernandes Andrew Philippides Tom S Collett Jeremy E Niven

Wood ants, like other central place foragers, rely on route memories to guide them to and from a reliable food source. They use visual memories of the surrounding scene and probably compass information to control their direction. Do they also remember the length of their route and do they link memories of direction and distance? To answer these questions, we trained wood ant (Formica rufa) fora...

Journal: :The Journal of animal ecology 2008
S M Philpott I Perfecto J Vandermeer

1. Ants are important predators in agricultural systems, and have complex and often strong effects on lower trophic levels. Agricultural intensification reduces habitat complexity, food web diversity and structure, and affects predator communities. Theory predicts that strong top-down cascades are less likely to occur as habitat and food web complexity decrease. 2. To examine relationships betw...

Journal: :Ecology 2009
J H Ness W F Morris Judith L Bronstein

Animal foraging has been characterized as an attempt to maximize the intake of carbon and nitrogen at appropriate ratios. Plant species in over 90 families produce carbohydrate-rich extrafloral nectar (EFN), a resource attractive to ants and other omnivorous insects. This attraction can benefit the plant if those arthropods subsequently attack herbivores. This protective response has been attri...

Journal: :Environmental entomology 2010
Alexei D Rowles Jules Silverman

Invasive ants are notorious for directly displacing native ant species. Although such impacts are associated with Argentine ant invasions (Linepithema humile) worldwide, impacts within natural habitat are less widely reported, particularly those affecting arboreal ant communities. Argentine ants were detected in North Carolina mixed pine-hardwood forest for the first time but were localized on...

2012
Shuang Zhang Yuxin Zhang Keming Ma

Ant-aphid mutualism is known to play a key role in the structure of the arthropod community in the tree canopy, but its possible ecological effects for the forest floor are unknown. We hypothesized that aphids in the canopy can increase the abundance of ants on the forest floor, thus intensifying the impacts of ants on other arthropods on the forest floor. We tested this hypothesis in a deciduo...

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