Ants, Bees, and Wasps: A Record of Observations on the Habits of the Social HymenopteraAppleton, 1913 - 448 pagini |
Din interiorul cărții
Rezultatele 1 - 5 din 71
Pagina
... half of young bred in the other half - Pupæ tended by ants from a different nest treated as friends in the nest from which they were taken , and as strangers if put into the nest of their nurses - Recognition neither per- sonal nor by ...
... half of young bred in the other half - Pupæ tended by ants from a different nest treated as friends in the nest from which they were taken , and as strangers if put into the nest of their nurses - Recognition neither per- sonal nor by ...
Pagina 2
... half of our British species of ants , as well as a considerable number of foreign forms , and for the last few years have generally had from thirty to forty communities under observation . After trying various plans , I found the most ...
... half of our British species of ants , as well as a considerable number of foreign forms , and for the last few years have generally had from thirty to forty communities under observation . After trying various plans , I found the most ...
Pagina 2
... half of our British species of ants , as well as a considerable number of foreign forms , and for the last few years have generally had from thirty to forty communities under observation . After trying various plans , I found the most ...
... half of our British species of ants , as well as a considerable number of foreign forms , and for the last few years have generally had from thirty to forty communities under observation . After trying various plans , I found the most ...
Pagina 25
... half a million . Ants also make for themselves roads . These are not merely worn by the continued passage of the ants , as was supposed by Christ , but are actually prepared by the ants , rather however by the removal of obstacles ...
... half a million . Ants also make for themselves roads . These are not merely worn by the continued passage of the ants , as was supposed by Christ , but are actually prepared by the ants , rather however by the removal of obstacles ...
Pagina 28
... half an hour's rest returned for another . Our countryman Gould noticed ' certain amuse- ments ' or ' sportive exercises , ' which he had observed among ants . Huber also mentions2 scenes which he had witnessed on the surface of ant ...
... half an hour's rest returned for another . Our countryman Gould noticed ' certain amuse- ments ' or ' sportive exercises , ' which he had observed among ants . Huber also mentions2 scenes which he had witnessed on the surface of ant ...
Alte ediții - Afișează-le pe toate
Ants, Bees, and Wasps: A Record of Observations on the Habits of the Social ... Sir John Lubbock Vizualizare completă - 1884 |
Ants, Bees, and Wasps: A Record of Observations on the Habits of the Social ... Sir John Lubbock Vizualizare completă - 1902 |
Ants, Bees, and Wasps: A Record of Observations on the Habits of the Social ... Sir John Lubbock Vizualizare completă - 1894 |
Termeni și expresii frecvente
૪ ૪ ૪ A.M. ditto abdomen Anergates antennæ aphides attacked August bees bisulphide of carbon blue paper carried cleaned compound eyes coxæ dragged Eciton eggs experiment feeding flew flowers following day Forel Formica fusca Formica rufa four Fourmis glass and bisulphide green paper half hive honey on blue honey on green hour inches insects instance journeys and brought larvæ Lasius flavus Lasius niger legs less males minutes moved Myrmica ruginodis nest of Formica nest of Lasius observations ocelli October once orange P.M. the friend paper bridge placed Polyergus pupa pupæ queen recognise result returned right pin round sanguinea seemed September slips of glass soon species specimens stranger Strongylognathus Tetramorium thorax three ants took a larva took no notice transposed the colours tried vermilion violet glass visits wasp watched window workers young دو وو وو
Pasaje populare
Pagina 79 - On the 17th of June, 1804, whilst walking in the environs of Geneva, between four and five in the evening, I observed close at my feet, traversing the road, a legion of rufescent ants. They moved in a body with considerable rapidity, and occupied a space of from eight to ten inches in length by three or four in breadth. In a few minutes they quitted the road, passed a thick hedge, and entered a pasture ground where I followed them.