In eusocial insects, alarm signaling is used to inform nestmates about threats such as predators, competitors, and pathogens. Such behavior is important for the survival of colonies. However, studies evaluating the effect of insecticides on the alarm in termites have not yet been reported.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCentris analis (Fabricius, 1804) is a solitary, cavity-nesting bee that is often recorded in studies through the use of trap nests. This species is considered to be a good candidate as a manageable pollinator for some orchards. However, further studies are still needed to optimize its rational rearing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMost animals move intermittently, pausing or slowing down for short moments and short moves, and darting away towards a new location where to hover again. This pattern occurs at a range of spatial and temporal scales (thence, resembling 'scale-free'), from the quick inspection of local areas to the sum of all movements performed from birth to death. While this pattern has been extensively described, its proximate drivers remain open to debate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBehavioral lab bioassays involving termites must be promptly performed to allow intended observations prior to death from dissecation, typical of these soft-bodied insects. To this end, topic markers have been proposed as an alternative to histological stains which, while not always toxic are inevitably lengthy to apply. Among recommended topic markers, gouache is easy to apply, dries out quickly, but it is known affect termites in the long run, being suitable only to short-term bioassays.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAs the number or density of interacting individuals in a social group increases, a transition can develop from uncorrelated and disordered behavior of the individuals to a collective coherent pattern. We expand this observation by exploring the fine details of termite movement patterns to demonstrate that the value of the scaling exponent μ of a power law describing the Lévy walk of an individual is modified collectively as the density of animals in the group changes. This effect is absent when termites interact with inert obstacles.
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