نتایج جستجو برای: queen

تعداد نتایج: 6047  

Journal: :علوم باغبانی ایران 0
بختیار شکری دانشجوی سابق کارشناسی ارشد، گروه علوم باغبانی، دانشگاه کردستان ناصر قادری استادیار گروه علوم باغبانی، دانشگاه کردستان تیمور جوادی استادیار گروه علوم باغبانی، دانشگاه کردستان

this experiment was conducted to study the effect of plastic mulch on the growth and some physiological characteristics of two strawberry cultivars (paros and queen elisa) under drought stress. a factorial experiment was performed based on randomized complete block design with four treatments, including mulch, without mulch, normal irrigation (control) and deficit irrigation (-10 bar) with thre...

محمد مستاجران, , رحیم عبادی, , محمدعلی ادریس, ,

To estimate the relationship between honey yield and some of the morphological characters, five queen-daughters from each of 30 queen-mothers were studied. The queen-mothers were selected randomly from the apiary of Research Center of Animal Science and Natural Resources in Isfahan Province. Summer honey yield was measured from the difference of honey comb before and after honey extraction whil...

The aim of this study was to investigate the importance of some physiological and biochemical properties related to cold adaptation mechanisms.We aimed to adopt properand efficient indices for identification of winter cold tolerance and susceptibilityin two strawberry cultivars. Differentphysiological and biochemical traits were studied under different cold treatments on the leaf and crown tiss...

Journal: :Psychological science 2011
Belle Derks Colette Van Laar Naomi Ellemers Kim de Groot

Queen bees are senior women in male-dominated organizations who have achieved success by emphasizing how they differ from other women. Although the behavior of queen bees tends to be seen as contributing to gender disparities in career outcomes, we argue that queen-bee behavior is actually a result of the gender bias and social identity threat that produce gender disparities in career outcomes....

Journal: :Neotropical entomology 2011
M S Rodrigues E F Vilela D O Azevedo R R Hora

In social insects, the typical mode of colony foundation occurs when a single queen is inseminated by a male and establishes a new colony, although we can find interspecific and intraspecific variations in queen number and queen-mating frequencies in a single colony. This study aimed to verify the queen number in Pachycondyla striata (Smith) colonies and to evaluate the level of aggressiveness ...

2003
Richard Webster

he electrochemical control of oxidation and reduction processes in organic and inorganic systems is an area of extensive research in both academia and industry. Electrochemical techniques are extremely useful in generating interesting species in unusual oxidation states, or for producing reactive intermediates (as, for example in the reductive dimerization of vinyl cyanide in the Monsanto manuf...

Journal: :The Journal of experimental biology 2016
Marine Motais de Narbonne Jelle S van Zweden Jan E Bello Tom Wenseleers Jocelyn G Millar Patrizia d'Ettorre

Queen pheromones are essential for regulation of the reproductive division of labor in eusocial insect species. Although only the queen is able to lay fertilized eggs and produce females, in some cases workers may develop their ovaries and lay male-destined eggs, thus reducing the overall colony efficiency. As long as the queen is healthy, it is usually in the workers' collective interest to wo...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2011
Richard J Gill Robert L Hammond

Understanding which parties regulate reproduction is fundamental to understanding conflict resolution in animal societies. In social insects, workers can influence male production and sex ratio. Surprisingly, few studies have investigated worker influence over which queen(s) reproduce(s) in multiple queen (MQ) colonies (skew), despite skew determining worker-brood relatedness and so worker fitn...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2010
Fabio Dercole Regis Ferriere Sergio Rinaldi

Coevolution between two antagonistic species follows the so-called 'Red Queen dynamics' when reciprocal selection results in an endless series of adaptation by one species and counteradaptation by the other. Red Queen dynamics are 'genetically driven' when selective sweeps involving new beneficial mutations result in perpetual oscillations of the coevolving traits on the slow evolutionary time ...

Journal: :Evolution; international journal of organic evolution 2012
David W Hall Michael A D Goodisman

The evolution of sociality represented a major transition point in biological history. The most advanced societies, such as those displayed by social insects, consist of reproductive and nonreproductive castes. The caste system fundamentally affects the way natural selection operates. Specifically, selection acts directly on reproductive castes, such as queens, but only indirectly through the p...

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