Results 361 to 370 of about 350,844 (389)
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Discovery of Trissolcus japonicus (Hymenoptera: Scelionidae) in Ontario, Canada
Canadian Entomologist, 2019We report the detection and adventive establishment of the samurai wasp, Trissolcus japonicus (Ashmead) (Hymenoptera: Scelionidae), a candidate classical biological control agent for the invasive Halyomorpha halys (Stål) (Hemiptera: Pentatomidae), in ...
T. Gariepy, E. Talamas
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Proctotrupoidea. In "Hymenoptera." [PDF]
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Lubomir Masner, Joe Cora, Norm Johnson
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Supplement To Hymenoptera. [PDF]
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Norm Johnson, R. C. L. Perkins, Joe Cora
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Clinical Techniques in Small Animal Practice, 2006
The medically important groups of Hymenoptera are the Apoidea (bees), Vespoidea (wasps, hornets, and yellow jackets), and Formicidae (ants). These insects deliver their venom by stinging their victims. Bees lose their barbed stinger after stinging and die. Wasps, hornets, and yellow jackets can sting multiple times.
Kevin T, Fitzgerald, Aryn A, Flood
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The medically important groups of Hymenoptera are the Apoidea (bees), Vespoidea (wasps, hornets, and yellow jackets), and Formicidae (ants). These insects deliver their venom by stinging their victims. Bees lose their barbed stinger after stinging and die. Wasps, hornets, and yellow jackets can sting multiple times.
Kevin T, Fitzgerald, Aryn A, Flood
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2013
Aguiar, Alexandre P., Deans, Andrew R., Engel, Michael S., Forshage, Mattias, Huber, John T., Jennings, John T., Johnson, Norman F., Lelej, Arkady S., Longino, John T., Lohrmann, Volker, Mikó, István, Ohl, Michael, Rasmussen, Claus, Taeger, Andreas, Yu, Dicky Sick Ki (2013): Order Hymenoptera*.
Aguiar, A.+14 more
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Aguiar, Alexandre P., Deans, Andrew R., Engel, Michael S., Forshage, Mattias, Huber, John T., Jennings, John T., Johnson, Norman F., Lelej, Arkady S., Longino, John T., Lohrmann, Volker, Mikó, István, Ohl, Michael, Rasmussen, Claus, Taeger, Andreas, Yu, Dicky Sick Ki (2013): Order Hymenoptera*.
Aguiar, A.+14 more
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Hymenoptera (Insecta: Hymenoptera) associated with silvopastoral systems
Agroforestry Systems, 2011The objective of this work was to estimate the abundance, diversity and constancy of families from the order Hymenoptera, such as the seasonality of those through a survey on the insect population in a silvopastoral system. We installed a Malaise-type trap in a Brachiaria decumbens area managed by a silvopastoral system in Coronel Pacheco, MG, from ...
Alexander Machado Auad+3 more
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Mitochondrial phylogenomics of the Hymenoptera.
Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 2019P. Tang+6 more
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