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Recent "hymenoptera" articles

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Claves para la identificación de los formícidos de la Península Ibérica. 1
"L. Fernandez"
Boletín SEA 8, 15-8 (1994)
Claves de subfamilias, y de especies de las subfamilias Ponerinae y Dolichoderinae
 
Bee stings
www.insectstings.co.uk
Posted by jilkat25 to sting Hymenoptera insect on Tue Feb 10 2009 at 19:23 UTC | info | related
 
Hymenoptera: Evolution, Biodiversity ... - Google Book Search
books.google.com
Posted by caido89 to parasitoids Hymenoptera on Wed Oct 15 2008 at 10:36 UTC | info | related
 
Checklist
www.fijiants.org
Posted by blJOg to fiji Hymenoptera ant checklist on Thu Jul 31 2008 at 12:52 UTC | info | related
 
The North American Invasion of the Giant Resin Bee (Hymenoptera: Megachilidae)
Hinojosa-I. A. Díaz and G Chen
Journal of Hymenoptera Research 14 (1), 69-77 (2005)
he giant resin bee, Megachile sculpturalis Smith (Megachilidae: Megachilinae), is a species originally of Asia recently adventive in North America. This large and conspicuous species was first recorded at a few localities in the mid-Atlantic states of the United States, but is now found from southeastern Canada (Ontario) to Georgia, and as far west as western Pennsylvania and northwestern Alabama. Known occurrences of this species in its native distributional areas were used to generate an ecological niche model for the species, which can be used to anticipate the geographic potential for species in novel landscapes. The niche model was tested on the native range of the species for robustness in predicting independent suites of occurrence points. The niche model was then used to predict the potential distribution of M. sculpturalis in North America—our results indicate that this species has the potential eventually to occupy the entire eastern half of the continent, as far west as the Great Plains. The model also predicts that the species would find appropriate conditions along the Pacific Coast, in Mexico, and in the West Indies. Impacts of M. sculpturalis on native Megachile species are entirely unknown.
 
A survey of the North American range of Megachile (Callomegachile) sculpturalis, an adventive species in North America.
W Mangum and S Sumner
Journal of the Kansas Entomological Society 76 (4), 658-62 (2003)
Megachile (Callomegachile) sculpturalis has been found in several parts of North Carolina, USA, prompting our surveys for it in other states. Including the reports of others, the bee is in South Carolina, Georgia, Virginia, Maryland, the District of Columbia, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Ohio, Tennessee, New Jersey, Connecticut, Delaware, New York and Alabama. We also found it in southern Ontario, which is the first Canadian record. Its host plants include Koelreuteria paniculata, Sophora japonica [Styphnolobium japonicum], Ligustrum lucidum, Ligustrum vulgare, Oxydendrum arboreum, Catalpa speciosa, Lathyrus latifolius, Lythrum salicaria, Buddleja spp., Vitex spp., and Asclepias spp. When foraging on L. latifolius and S. japonica, M. sculpturalis sometimes punctures the standard petal with its mandibles, leaving a distinctive mark that is useful for surveys. Over half of the host plants reported here originate from Asia, which is also the native range of M. sculpturalis. Perhaps this favourable foraging environment has, in part, aided the establishment and spread of M. sculpturalis in the USA.
 
First records of alien insects in Connecticut (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae; Coleoptera: Buprestidae, Chrysomelidae; Diptera: Rhagionidae, Tephritidae; Hymenoptera: Megachilidae)
C Maier
Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington 107 (4), 947-59 (2005)
Anthidium manicatum (L.), and Megachile sculpturalis Smith
 
The giant resin bee, <i>Megachile sculpturalis</i> Smith, and other newly introduced and newly recorded native Megachilidae and Andrenidae (Apoidea) from Ontario.
Paiero, S. M., and M Buck
Journal of the Entomological Society of Ontario 134, (2003)
This paper adds one more invasive species (Megachile sculpturalis) of Megachilidae to Ontario, Canada, and reports new Canadian and Ontario records for 3 species of Megachilidae (Stelis costalis) and Andrenidae (Perdita bequaerti bequaerti and Perdita maculigera maculipennis).
 
A Gynandromorphic Specimen of Andrena (Lepidandrena) chengtehensis Yasumatsu (Hymenoptera: Andrenidae) from China
Journal of the Kansas Entomological Society 80 (3), 252 (2007)
 
Repellent Efficacy of Formic Acid and the Abdominal Secretion of Carpenter Ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) Against Amblyomma Ticks (Acari: Ixodidae)
Journal of Medical Entomology 44 (4), 718 (2007)

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