Results 141 to 150 of about 553 (184)
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Long-term impact of orphaning on field colonies ofCoptotermes lacteus (Froggatt) (Isoptera: Rhinotermitidae)

Insectes Sociaux, 1993
Colonies ofCoptotermes lacteus (Froggatt) from a site in coastal south-eastern Australia were experimentally orphaned in early 1989. Sample colonies were examined 3, 6, 12, 18, 24 or 30 months later for their caste composition, the presence of replacement reproductives and brood. All replacement reproductives were nymphoid neotenics.
M. Lenz, S. Runko
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Variation in patriline reproductive success during queen production in orphaned colonies of the thelytokous antCataglyphis cursor

Molecular Ecology, 2011
AbstractIn genetically diverse insect societies (polygynous or polyandrous queens), the production of new queens can set the ground for competition among lineages. This competition can be very intense when workers can reproduce using thelytoky as worker lineages that manage to produce new queens gain a huge benefit.
Chéron, Blandine   +3 more
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Task allocation and alate production in monogynous, polygynous and orphan colonies of Myrmica kotokui

Ethology Ecology & Evolution, 2001
We compared alate production and the behaviour of workers and queens among polygynous, monogynous and orphan colonies of Myrmica kotokui, a member of the M. rubra complex. The level of inactivity of workers and queens was lower in polygynous colonies than in monogynous colonies. However, alate production per worker was not higher in polygynous colonies,
T. Kikuchi, S. Higashi
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Inconspicuous matured males of worker form are produced in orphaned colonies of Reticulitermes speratus (Isoptera: Rhinotermitidae) and participate in reproduction

Journal of Insect Physiology, 2010
Differentiation of neotenics is easily induced by orphaning the worker termites of Reticulitermes speratus (Kolbe). Although it has previously been reported that the sex ratio of neotenics is female-biased, the background of this phenomenon and the gonad developmental process of workers in artificially orphaned colonies are unknown.
Ai, Fujita, Hirofumi, Watanabe
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Worker reproductive parasitism in naturally orphaned colonies of the Asian red dwarf honey bee, Apis florea

Insectes Sociaux, 2009
The truce between honey bee (Apis spp.) workers over reproduction is broken in the absence of their queen. Queenright workers generally abstain from personal reproduction, raising only the queen’s offspring. Queenless workers activate their ovaries, produce eggs, and reduce the rate at which they destroy worker-laid eggs, so that some eggs are reared ...
N. C. Chapman   +4 more
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Frequent colony orphaning triggers the production of replacement queens via worker thelytoky in a desert-dwelling ant

Insectes Sociaux, 2017
Peer ...
Fernando Amor   +3 more
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Fostering procedures for orphaned infants in a breeding colony of African green monkeys.

Contemporary topics in laboratory animal science, 2004
We developed procedures to foster orphaned African green monkey infants to females with natural infants of a similar age to the foster infant (< 1 month). Our purpose was to assess the feasibility of fostering additional infants to females with natural infants.
M Babette, Fontenot   +2 more
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‘Orphan’ as a category of analysis: Historicizing ‘child rescue’ in colonial India, 1860s–1920s

Childhood
This article makes a case for using “orphan” as an analytical category in historicizing child rescue in nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries colonial India. It argues that child rescue efforts in the 19th century were tied to the concept of jati, and were therefore largely communitarian in nature.
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Worker reproduction and related behavior in orphan colonies of a Japanese paper wasp,Polistes jadwigae (Hymenoptera, Vespidae)

Journal of Ethology, 1991
Worker reproduction and related behavior in 2 orphan colonies ofPolistes jadwigae, one of which had been maintained by a queen and 5 artificially introduced alien workers, were observed. After the queen loss, a dominance hierarchy was established among workers, and several workers laid eggs without physical interference from other workers.
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Investing in "Civilized" Futures: Orphans and Colonial Caretaking in Saint-Louis, Senegal, 1930-49

Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History
Abstract: For nearly a century, the Sœurs de Saint Joseph de Cluny operated the Ndar Toute orphanage for mixed-race ( métis ) and African girls in the city of Saint-Louis, Senegal. By the 1940s, colonial reforms, evolving conceptions of citizenship, and even changes in the social and political culture of Saint-Louis itself, sparked questions about the
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