2015
DOI: 10.7476/9788574554419
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As formigas poneromorfas do Brasil

Abstract: SciELO Books / SciELO Livros / SciELO Libros DELABIE, JHC., et al., orgs. As formigas poneromorfas do Brasil [online]. Ilhéus, BA: Editus, 2015, 477 p. ISBN 978-85-7455-441-9. Available from SciELO Books .All the contents of this work, except where otherwise noted, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license.Todo o conteúdo deste trabalho, exceto quando houver ressalva, é publicado sob a licença Creative Commons Atribição 4.0.Todo el contenido de esta ob… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…Most of Ponerinae are forest specialists and can be very abundant and diverse in tropical and subtropical regions; the Ponerinae appears as the second subfamily if we rank the species number per subfamily in conserved forests or agroforestry (Delabie et al 1999). For this and other reasons, these ants are frequently considered tropical biodiversity icons by myrmecologists (Baccaro et al 2015;Delabie et al 2015). The subfamily Formicinae presents a high diversity in its nesting and food habits (Ward 2010;Baccaro et al 2015), but is especially interesting at Bahia as it becomes the second most important subfamily (after the Myrmicinae and substituting the Ponerinae) in degraded or anthropized habitats (Delabie et al 1999).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Most of Ponerinae are forest specialists and can be very abundant and diverse in tropical and subtropical regions; the Ponerinae appears as the second subfamily if we rank the species number per subfamily in conserved forests or agroforestry (Delabie et al 1999). For this and other reasons, these ants are frequently considered tropical biodiversity icons by myrmecologists (Baccaro et al 2015;Delabie et al 2015). The subfamily Formicinae presents a high diversity in its nesting and food habits (Ward 2010;Baccaro et al 2015), but is especially interesting at Bahia as it becomes the second most important subfamily (after the Myrmicinae and substituting the Ponerinae) in degraded or anthropized habitats (Delabie et al 1999).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The species of Discothyrea are tiny and its eyes have only one ommatid (Brandão et al 2009, Delabie et al 2015. These characteristics and the presence of small legs (Brandão et al 2009) should limit mobility to small extensions (Yates & Andrew 2011).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is found mainly in the Neotropical Region, especially in tropical forest areas (Antweb 2020, Antwiki 2020). There are eight species recorded in the Neotropical Region (Sosa-Calvo & Longino 2007, Antmaps 2020, five in Brazil [Discothyrea denticulata Weber, 1939, D. horni Menozzi, 1927, D. humilis Weber, 1939, D. sexarticulata Borgmeier, 1954and D. neotropica Bruch, 1919, and two in the State of São Paulo [D. sexarticulata and D. neotropica (Delabie et al 2015, Antmaps 2020].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Em grande parte dos casos estudados em formigas até o momento, a identificação das companheiras de ninho e dos estágios larvais é feita por contato das antenas. Este fato por si só sugere a existência de quimiorrecepção (Hölldobler & Wilson, 1990 (Teseo et al, 2013;Delabie et al, 2015). A estrutura química dos hidrocarbonetos pode ser igual em algumas espécies, mas as quantidades relativas presentes na cutícula são diferentes de forma que elas sejam distinguíveis entre si (Nelson et al, 1980).…”
Section: Sinais Químicosunclassified