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Book
Aggiornamento bibliografico sulle Termiti dal 1778 al 1991.
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Year: 1992 Publisher: Firenze : Istituto Agronomico per l'Oltremare,

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Book
Catalogo delle specie di termiti (Isoptera) dal 1758 al 1991 con distribuzione geografica.
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Year: 1992 Publisher: Firenze : Istituto Agronomico per l'Oltremare,

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Dissertation
Influence des termites sur le sol en Moyenne Guinée.
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Year: 1991

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Keywords

Isoptera --- Soil --- soil genesis --- Termitiere --- Guinea


Dissertation
On the ecology and evolution of microorganisms associated with fungus-growing termites
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ISBN: 9789085859147 Year: 2011 Publisher: Wageningen : Wageningen University,

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Book
[Invertebrates (minilivestock) farming] : Proceedings of a seminar held at La Union, Philippines, November 1992.
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Year: 1993 Publisher: Antwerpen : Institute of Tropical Medicine, Tropical Animal Production Unit,

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Dissertation
Etude du complexe enzymatique des symbiontes du termite Reticulitermes flavipes (Ex. santonensis)

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Book
Termites in the Canberra region
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ISBN: 1283157071 9786613157072 0643101403 9780643101401 0643048936 9780643048935 0643102825 Year: 1988 Publisher: Australia : Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation,

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This book is well illustrated with black and white photographs and the text carefully discusses control and precautions necessary for all buildings.


Book
Advances in Genomics and Epigenomics of Social Insects
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Year: 2017 Publisher: Frontiers Media SA

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Social insects are among the most successful and ecologically important animals on earth. The lifestyle of these insects has fascinated humans since prehistoric times. These species evolved a caste of workers that in most cases have no progeny. Some social insects have worker sub-castes that are morphologically specialized for discrete tasks. The organization of the social insect colony has been compared to the metazoan body. Males in the order Hymenoptera (bees, ants and wasps) are haploid, a situation which results in higher relatedness between female siblings. Sociality evolved many times within the Hymenoptera, perhaps spurred in part by increased relatedness that increases inclusive fitness benefits to workers cooperating to raise their sisters and brothers rather than reproducing themselves. But epigenetic processes may also have contributed to the evolution of sociality. The Hymenoptera provide opportunities for comparative study of species ranging from solitary to highly social. A more ancient clade of social insects, the termites (infraorder Isoptera) provide an opportunity to study alternative mechanisms of caste determination and lifestyles that are aided by an array of endosymbionts. This research topic explores the use of genome sequence data and genomic techniques to help us explore how sociality evolved in insects, how epigenetic processes enable phenotypic plasticity, and the mechanisms behind whether a female will become a queen or a worker.


Book
Termites, termitières et bioturbation en région de Cantanhez : Guinée-Bissau.
Authors: --- --- --- --- --- et al.
Year: 2005 Publisher: Bissau : Acçao para o Desenvolvimento,

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Book
Advances in Genomics and Epigenomics of Social Insects
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Year: 2017 Publisher: Frontiers Media SA

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Abstract

Social insects are among the most successful and ecologically important animals on earth. The lifestyle of these insects has fascinated humans since prehistoric times. These species evolved a caste of workers that in most cases have no progeny. Some social insects have worker sub-castes that are morphologically specialized for discrete tasks. The organization of the social insect colony has been compared to the metazoan body. Males in the order Hymenoptera (bees, ants and wasps) are haploid, a situation which results in higher relatedness between female siblings. Sociality evolved many times within the Hymenoptera, perhaps spurred in part by increased relatedness that increases inclusive fitness benefits to workers cooperating to raise their sisters and brothers rather than reproducing themselves. But epigenetic processes may also have contributed to the evolution of sociality. The Hymenoptera provide opportunities for comparative study of species ranging from solitary to highly social. A more ancient clade of social insects, the termites (infraorder Isoptera) provide an opportunity to study alternative mechanisms of caste determination and lifestyles that are aided by an array of endosymbionts. This research topic explores the use of genome sequence data and genomic techniques to help us explore how sociality evolved in insects, how epigenetic processes enable phenotypic plasticity, and the mechanisms behind whether a female will become a queen or a worker.

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