Termite

Ant (394)
Bee (762)
Beetle (480)
Bug (573)
Butterfly (845)
Caddice fly (5)
Cockroach (395)
Dragonfly (27)
Earwig (1)
Flea (17)
Flies (872)
Grasshopper (168)
Insecta (2067)
Louse (2)
Mayfly (3)
Neuroptera (6)
Phasmid (4)
Sawfly (1)
Stone fly (1)
Termite (65)
Thrip (13)
Wasp (181)

Synopsis: 4.4. animals: Insecta: Termite:


BBC 00819.txt

According to the survey, the majority of pest control operators from Europe, Africa, Australia and North america said bed bugs were the most difficult insect pest to control, more so than ants, termites and even the formidable cockroach.


impactlab_2010 01395.txt

fried and salted Papua new guinea Sago grubs in banana leaves are a local delicacy Ghana Winged termites are collected and fried, roasted,


impactlab_2011 00873.txt

Crickets are said also to be high in calcium, termites rich in iron, and a helping of giant silkworm moth larvae apparently provides all the daily copper and riboflavin requirements.


Livescience_2013 00326.txt

Termites Want to get rid of the termites gnawing at your floorboards? Just do like they do in South america and Africa:

Take advantage of the rich nutritional quality of these insects by frying sun-drying smoking or steaming termites in banana leaves.

Termites generally consist of up to 38 percent protein and one particular Venezuelan species Syntermes aculeosus is 64 percent protein.

Termites are also rich in iron calcium essential fatty acids and amino acids such as tryptophan. African palm weevil A delicacy among many African tribes the palm weevil (Rhychophorus phoenicis) is collected off the trunks of palm trees.

As an added benefit the soaking water which absorbs the noxious secretions can then be used as a pesticide to keep termites away from houses.


Livescience_2013 02159.txt

and underground roots and even termites or small scavenged animals although the exact composition of the diet still remains a mystery.


Livescience_2013 03552.txt

These forest islands were thought typically of as natural in origin for instance as landforms cut away by shifting rivers or long-term termite mounds or bird rookeries.


Livescience_2013 04659.txt

#Mysterious'Fairy circles'in African Desert Get New Explanation The bizarre circular patches of bare land called fairy circles in the grasslands of Africa's Namib desert have defied explanation with hypotheses ranging from ants to termites

Earlier this year University of Hamburg biologist Norbert Juergens claimed to have found evidence for a termite theory of fairy circles.

Essentially he discovered colonies of the sand termite Psammotermes allocerus were nearly always found in the centers of fairy circles where he also found increased soil moisture.

He reasoned that the termites feed on the grasses'roots killing the plants which usually use up the soil's water

Michael Cramer a biologist at the University of Cape town in South africa and lead researcher of the current study which was published recently in the journal PLOS ONE also thinks the termite theory falls short.

There's no real reason why termites would produce such large circles that are spaced so evenly.

Experimental tests Cramer notes that termites may still be involved in fairy circles. What sets up the circles is the competition between plants he said Termites are a secondary phenomenon

and their role is to serve as a maintenance for the circles by killing off the grasses that spring up in the center of the circles.


Livescience_2013 06092.txt

They fed the peptide to termites and cotton bollworms and compared the effects with those of mealworms injected with the peptide.

The venom was more potent against cotton bollworms than against termites and mealworms which eat stored grains rather than crops results showed.


Livescience_2014 00666.txt

</p><p>Want to get rid of the<a href=http://www. livescience. com/38738-termite-distress-signal-head-banging. html>termites</a>gnawing at your floorboards?

Take advantage of the rich nutritional quality of these insects by frying sun-drying smoking or steaming termites in banana leaves.</

</p><p>Termites generally consist of up to 38 percent protein and one particular Venezuelan species<em>Syntermes aculeosus</em>is 64 percent protein.

Termites are also rich in<a href=http://www. livescience. com/29263-iron. html>iron</a>calcium essential fatty acids and amino acids such as tryptophan.</

can then be used as a pesticide to keep termites away from houses.</</p><p>The larvae of the mealworm beetle(<em>Tenebrio molitor</em>)is one of the only insects consumed in the Western world:


Livescience_2014 03211.txt

#Mysterious'Fairy circles'Not Explained by Termites, Study Suggests Fairy circles that form in the arid grasslands of Namibia have baffled scientists for decades.

which might rule out the popular theory that termites are the creators. The occurrence of such patterning in nature is rather unusual study researcher Stephan Getzin of the Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research (UFZ) in Leipzig Germany said in a statement.

Their explanations have ranged from grass-killing seeps of hydrocarbons to carnivorous ants to termite feeding patterns.

His results detailed in the journal Science last year revealed a species of sand termite Psammotermes allocerus lived at the majority of patches.

Getzin and his colleagues however say termites are distributed typically in irregular clusters in the wild;


Livescience_2014 03325.txt

and enjoy sleeping in hollow trees rock crevices burrows or empty termite mounds. These speedy serpents can move faster than most people can run a fact that partly explains why they are feared so.


Livescience_2014 03921.txt

Some species though lay their eggs in tree holesground tunnels rock cavities and termite mounds.


Livescience_2014 04896.txt

Termites are the primary food of sloth bears. Sloth bears have especially long noses that allow them to suck termites from their holes.

For the most part bears have their young in dens. Dens are made homes from hollowed-out trees caves and piles of brush.


Livescience_2014 04916.txt

and 3 percent comes from termites and caterpillars. The mountain gorilla eats a diet that is about 86 percent leaves shoots and stems;


popsci_2013 00313.txt

which controls populations of aphids whiteflies termites and more. Save the bees from disease and they can in turn save our food.


ScienceDaily_2013 04633.txt

Dieldrin was used extensively to kill crop pests termites and mosquitoes before it was banned in 1987 in the U s. Its use in the Midwest agricultural belt was pronounced particularly.


ScienceDaily_2013 06522.txt

Cotton bollworm a pest that attacks crop plants was more sensitive to OAIP-1 than termites and mealworms


ScienceDaily_2013 06771.txt

This is the unique adaption that has not been discovered in cockroaches termites ants or other insects.


ScienceDaily_2013 10845.txt

in addition to ants including certain species of termites and beetles which also act as gardeners in fungal communities.


ScienceDaily_2013 14165.txt

Cows horses and termites can digest the cellulose in grass hay and wood. Most cellulose consists of wood fibers and cell wall remains.


ScienceDaily_2014 01417.txt

and termite guts for microbes that can efficiently break down plant cell walls for the production of next-generation biofuels

and termite gut it looks like we can actually make some contributions ourselves he said. And our bugs seem to have some enzymes that are even better than those in the cow rumen.


ScienceDaily_2014 02365.txt

and termites) and about 60%comes from human activities like cattle breeding rice agriculture fossil fuel exploitation landfills and biomass burning.


ScienceDaily_2014 08305.txt

Termites, fungi play more important role in decomposition than temperatureclimate change models could have a thing

or two to learn from termites and fungi according to a new study released this week.

and termites which help break down wood may play a more significant role in the rate of decomposition than temperature alone.

and biology of fungi and termites is a key to understanding how the rate of decomposition will vary from place to place.

because they reflect the activity of fungi and termites. The team suggests that scientists need to embrace the variability found across data collected from many different sites instead of averaging it all together to create better models with more accurate predictions.

whether to the consumption of fungi growing on the wood or to termites consuming the wood.


ScienceDaily_2014 09477.txt

#Fairy circles apparently not created by termites after allfor several decades scientists have been trying to come up with an explanation for the formation of the enigmatic vegetation-free circles frequently found in certain African grassland regions.

of which hypothesises that these mysterious patches are the work of termites. The insects allegedly nibble away at the grassroots

However in his view this rather discredits the generally popular termite theory. In a study published in the scientific journal Science (2013) the sand termite species Psammotermes allocerus was presented indeed as most likely suspect for the creation of the enigmatic barren patches

--albeit primarily based on the argument that the occurrence of this particular species of termites has been common to all fairy circles investigated at the time.

No one has observed so far these creatures actually grazing holes into the Namibian grasslands--let alone in such consistent patterns.

and termite populations in arid territories predominantly rather attests to the occurrence of irregular clustered distribution patterns at large scales.


ScienceDaily_2014 13500.txt

They showed a smaller effect for small invertebrates such as termites that also contribute to decomposition of plant biomass.


Smart_Planet_10 00859.txt

LEARN FROM THE TERMITES The Eastgate Centre is a massive retail and office building that takes up half a city block in the sweltering confines of Harare,

Architect Mick Pearce looked at the way termites built their tower-like earthen mounds, which rise like crooked fingers from the country savannah,

The termites would otherwise die in the stifling desert heat. The construction of their mounds employs an architectural system that captures desert breezes from above ground

The design helps the termites regulate the temperature in a region with wild weather fluctuations.


Smart_Planet_12 00387.txt

making an incredibly strong and naturally termite resistant building that is 100%recyclable. Wall cladding and structural bracing is fitted in ECO-ply plywood,


WS_1452 00420.txt

and termites that can eat old cars. If regulation of biohacking is too tight, such innovations or, at least,


< Back - Next >


Overtext Web Module V3.0 Alpha
Copyright Semantic-Knowledge, 1994-2011