Results 81 to 90 of about 135 (99)
The evolution and loss of oil-offering flowers: new insights from dated phylogenies for angiosperms and bees. [PDF]
Renner SS, Schaefer H.
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Comprehensive phylogeny of apid bees reveals the evolutionary origins and antiquity of cleptoparasitism. [PDF]
Cardinal S, Straka J, Danforth BN.
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Bees diversified in the age of eudicots. [PDF]
Cardinal S, Danforth BN.
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Resolving issues in the genus Dioxys (Hymenoptera, Megachilidae, Dioxyini) in the West Palaearctic with a new identification key. [PDF]
Wood TJ.
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Grana, 2014
AbstractPollen analysis of the larval food supply is an important tool for identifying the plants that provide the floral resources used by bees. The present study documents the pollen sources consumed by larvae of the solitary bee Tetrapedia diversipes in a tropical agroecosystem.
Cynthia Maria De Lyra Neves +4 more
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AbstractPollen analysis of the larval food supply is an important tool for identifying the plants that provide the floral resources used by bees. The present study documents the pollen sources consumed by larvae of the solitary bee Tetrapedia diversipes in a tropical agroecosystem.
Cynthia Maria De Lyra Neves +4 more
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OMICS: A Journal of Integrative Biology, 2016
info:eu-repo/semantics ...
Araujo, Natalia de Souza +2 more
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info:eu-repo/semantics ...
Araujo, Natalia de Souza +2 more
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Notice of the Genus Tetrapedia (Reinsch) and of Two Kindred New Forms.
Journal of Cell Science, 1872ABSTRACT Amongst “Unicellular” Algæ (as well in the wider as in the most strict sense), falling under the class Chlorophyl -laceæ), forms with specially figured cells—that is, otherwise than globular, ellipsoidal, or cylindrical, with more or less abruptly or broadly rounded ends—are, as is well known, numerous.
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Journal of Phycology, 2013
The subfamily Crucigenioideae was traditionally classified within the well‐characterized family Scenedesmaceae (Chlorophyceae). Several morpho‐logical revisions and questionable taxonomic changes hampered the correct classification of crucigenoid species resulting in a high number of synonymous genera.
Christina, Bock +5 more
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The subfamily Crucigenioideae was traditionally classified within the well‐characterized family Scenedesmaceae (Chlorophyceae). Several morpho‐logical revisions and questionable taxonomic changes hampered the correct classification of crucigenoid species resulting in a high number of synonymous genera.
Christina, Bock +5 more
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Annals of the Entomological Society of America, 2015
Exotic plants can alter habitat composition and reduce the diversity of pollinators by competing with native species for resources. In a forest fragment surrounded by coffee crops, Coffea arabica L. (Rubiaceae), in southeastern Brazil, the life history of the oil-collecting bee Tetrapedia diversipes Klug (Apidae) was studied.
L. C. Rocha-Filho, C. A. Garófalo
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Exotic plants can alter habitat composition and reduce the diversity of pollinators by competing with native species for resources. In a forest fragment surrounded by coffee crops, Coffea arabica L. (Rubiaceae), in southeastern Brazil, the life history of the oil-collecting bee Tetrapedia diversipes Klug (Apidae) was studied.
L. C. Rocha-Filho, C. A. Garófalo
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Zootaxa
Three new species of Tetrapedia Klug, 1810 (Apidae) from Central Brazil are described and illustrated: Tetrapedia marina sp. nov., Tetrapedia tereza sp. nov., and Tetrapedia bruno sp. nov. Additionally, a key to the 22 species of Tetrapedia known from Brazil is provided. The lectotype of T. clypeata Friese is designated to establish the species name.
LÉO CORREIA DA ROCHA-FILHO +1 more
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Three new species of Tetrapedia Klug, 1810 (Apidae) from Central Brazil are described and illustrated: Tetrapedia marina sp. nov., Tetrapedia tereza sp. nov., and Tetrapedia bruno sp. nov. Additionally, a key to the 22 species of Tetrapedia known from Brazil is provided. The lectotype of T. clypeata Friese is designated to establish the species name.
LÉO CORREIA DA ROCHA-FILHO +1 more
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