Carpenter Ants of the United States and Canada

Forside
Cornell University Press, 2005 - 204 sider

The carpenter ant is one of the most common and destructive pests affecting homes and businesses. However, in natural areas, these ants also play an important role in forest ecology: they break down dead wood and are the principal food source of the pileated woodpecker. In the first book devoted entirely to carpenter ants, Laurel D. Hansen and John H. Klotz cover the ants' life history and foraging behavior, then turn to their economic importance. The authors provide a comprehensive overview of carpenter ant ecology, morphology, taxonomy, and distribution as well as a detailed chapter on control and management that will appeal especially to urban pest control programs and pest management officials. Carpenter Ants of the United States and Canada is illustrated with distribution maps, 94 halftones, 52 line drawings, and 24 color plates on a four-page insert.

 

Innhold

ECOLOGY
1
Myrmecophiles
7
Other Parasites
17
REFERENCES CITED
23
MORPHOLOGY
29
INTERNAL MORPHOLOGY
50
REFERENCES CITED
65
SPECIES IN AND AROUND STRUCTURES
73
INCIPIENT COLONIES
105
PARENT AND SATELLITE NESTS
117
POLYGYNY
123
FORAGING
129
FORAGING POPULATION
138
REFERENCES CITED
153
COSTS OF CONTROL
170
FOLLOWUP EVALUATION
192

DESCRIPTIONS ANd Distributions OF STRUCTURAL
81
REFERENCES CITED
100

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