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         Ants:     more books (99)
  1. The Life Cycle of an Ant by Hadley Dyer, Bobbie Kalman, 2005-11
  2. Tarzan And The Ant Men by Edgar Rice Burroughs, 2009-01-22
  3. The Little Red Ant and the Great Big Crumb Book & Cassette: A Mexican Fable (Carry Along) by Shirley Climo, 2004-10-18
  4. Essential Ant Man, Vol. 1 (Marvel Essentials) by Stan Lee, 2001-01-01
  5. Ant Colony Optimization (Bradford Books) by Marco Dorigo, Thomas Stützle, 2004-07-01
  6. Marvel Adventures Thor Featuring Captain America, Dr. Strange & Ant-Man by Paul Tobin, Fred Van Lente, 2009-06-10
  7. Ant (Living Things) by Rebecca Stefoff, 1998-01
  8. Ant Farm 1968-1978 by Constance M. Lewallen, Steve Seid, et all 2004-03-01
  9. Bees, Wasps, and Ants: The Indispensable Role of Hymenoptera in Gardens by Eric Grissell, 2010-06-30
  10. Roaring Rockets (Amazing Machines) by Tony Mitton, Ant Parker, 2000-09-15
  11. If I Were an Ant (Rookie Readers) by Amy Moses, 1993-01
  12. Sing And Read: The Ants Go Marching by Mary Gruetzke, 2005-09-01
  13. Ants (Pebble Plus; Bugs, Bugs, Bugs) by Margaret Hall, 2004-08
  14. Do Ants Have Assholes?: And 106 of the World's Other Most Important Questions by Jon Butler, Bruno Vincent, 2009-04-01

61. UC IPM UC Management Guidelines For Ants On Citrus
UC Pest Management Guidelines Photo CITRUS ants Scientific Names Argentineant Iridomyrmex humilis Native gray ant Formica aerata Southern fire ant
http://www.ipm.ucdavis.edu/PMG/r107300211.html

62. Order Hymenoptera
Pictures and information of Hymenoptera in Brisbane, Australia.
http://www.geocities.com/brisbane_wasps/
Home Hymenoptera Sawflies
Parasitic Wasps
... Guest book
Sawflies, Wasps, Bees and Ants
Order Hymenoptera
This page contains pictures and information for Sawflies, Bees, Wasps and Ants that we found in the Brisbane area, Queensland, Australia. The insect order Hymenoptera includes sawflies, wasps, bees and ants. The name Hymenoptera means 'membrane wings'. Their adults have two pair of membranous wings with the forewings lager than the hind wings. The main defining characteristic of Hymenoptera is that the front and hind wings are held together by a series of little hooks called hamuli. The female insects have strings to inject venom to their enemy where the string is their modified ovipositor. Most insects in this order have a waist that separates the thorax and abdomen. On their head they have two large compound eyes and mandibulate mouthparts. Their antenna is medium in length and usually strongly elbowed. Most larvae in this order are maggot-like and with no legs. However, the Sawflies larvae look like caterpillars and sometimes mistaken as butterflies or moths larvae. The insects in this order developed in complete metamorphosis.

63. T E R M - O U T
Manufactures a insecticide used for termites and ants.
http://www.term-out.com
Welcome to the Term-Out web site. Term-Out is a truly unique product.
Click the can for more

64. Ants Of Costa Rica (Hymenoptera, Formicidae)
John Longino's article about Costa Rican ants, as well as information on how to interpret the names Category Science Biology Arthropoda Insecta Hymenoptera ants......ants of Costa Rica. John T. Longino, The Evergreen State College, Olympia, WA 98505. Howto mount ants for museum study. Ant Plant Relationships. Other links.
http://www.evergreen.edu/ants/AntsofCostaRica.html
Ants of Costa Rica
John T. Longino, The Evergreen State College, Olympia, WA 98505. longinoj@evergreen.edu. 25 November 2002 NEW Crematogaster of Costa Rica website, with fully illustrated key and 33 species accounts, is now posted: click here NEW : check out some examples of new automontage images on the Gnamptogenys banksi page. NEW Procryptocerus of Central America now on-line, with automontage images of all species. Click here NEW : Report of a high-elevation ant fauna from the Volcan Barva Transect. click here List of Genera by Subfamily Picture Guide to Costa Rican Ant Genera How to interpret names used in species accounts ... Ant Plant Relationships Other links American Museum Social Insects website William and Emma Mackay Ants of North America site Gordon and Roy Snelling New World Army Ants Notes from Underground ... Mike Kaspari's Ants of Barro Colorado Island
Introduction
This web resource provides species-level information on the ants of Costa Rica. The basic information unit is a species web page. The page for a particular species contains images, identification tips, geography, natural history, and recommendations on how to collect the species. Linked to these species pages are various synthetic documents, such as keys and species lists. There is a genus list, which contains all the ant genera known to occur in Costa Rica, and there is a picture guide to these genera. The picture guide is not a key; for technical keys to the ant genera of the world refer to Bolton (1994) or Holldobler and Wilson (1990).

65. The Antser Ant-Proof Barrier
It uses a hidden, internal moat to create a nontoxic barrier between ants and whatever you put on the antser.
http://theantser.com
What Antser users have to say... REVOLUTIONARY, PATENTED PESTICIDE-FREE ANT-PROOFING PLATFORM. GET RID OF ANTS SAFELY! CONCEALED WATER BARRIER SAFELY AND CONVENIENTLY PREVENTS ANT INFESTATION GENEROUS 9" BY 13" SURFACE HOLDS A WIDE VARIETY OF ITEMS AVAILABLE IN HUNTER GREEN, BEIGE, AND AQUA. FITS ANY DECOR! RUGGED LOW PROFILE CONSTRUCTION. 30 DAY MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE. CLICK HERE TO ENLARGE
READ TESTIMONIALS!
Stop solving your ant problem with pesticides! The Antser Ant-Proof Barrier is the safe way to get rid of ants. It's the pesticide-free, ant bait free alternative in ant control.

66. Ants In And Around The Home, HYG-2064-96
ants rank number one in inquiries at our Ohio State University Extension Entomologyoffice over all other household/structural pests.
http://ohioline.osu.edu/hyg-fact/2000/2064.html
Ohio State University Extension Fact Sheet
Entomology
1991 Kenny Road, Columbus, OH 43210-1000
Ants In and Around the Home
HYG-2064-96
Ants rank number one in inquiries at our Ohio State University Extension Entomology office over all other household/structural pests. It is very important to have an accurate ant identification in order to determine the best method of control if needed. When in doubt, collect several specimens in a watertight vial, add isopropyl or 70 percent alcohol (not water), and enclose in a crush proof box. Take to your county Extension office of Ohio State University Extension or mail to the C. Wayne Ellett Plant and Pest Diagnostic Clinic, 110 Kottman Hall, 2021 Coffey Road, Columbus, Ohio 43210-1087, phone (614)292-5006. A nominal fee is charged for specimen identification. Some ants are so small and similar in appearance when viewed by the naked eye, that it takes trained specialists to tell the difference between species. Common Name Scientific Name Carpenter Ant Camponotus spp.

67. Eight Ants V5
Offering web design, graphic designs for small to medium websites. Located Sydney, Australia.
http://rbeeston.idx.com.au
Niphal
A personal project, aiming to give Christian designers a networking facility online. The site uses PHP, CSS and MYSQL. More Info Site Trend Windows
Famous window and door manufacturer Trend Windows requested that their site be upgraded with an easy to follow business card style webpage. More Info Site Rocla Intranet (design only)
Australia's leading building and construction products company Rocla now has an intranet that has gone from a mish-mash of documents, links and hard to navigate pages, to a well crafted, time efficient and highly useable intranet. More Info Also
Ants @ 22
Boys' Brigade St. Philip's Eastwood Skills
Contact If you would like to get in touch with me to organise a quote for some web work or logo, please do not hesitate to send me your name and email address and I will get back to you as soon as possible.
Logos

68. Carpenter Ants, HYG-2063-94
Carpenter ants are a nuisance by their presence when found in parts of the homesuch as the kitchen, bathroom, living room and other quarters. Carpenter ants.
http://ohioline.osu.edu/hyg-fact/2000/2063.html
Ohio State University Extension Fact Sheet
Entomology
1991 Kenny Road, Columbus, OH 43210-1090
Carpenter Ants
HYG-2063-94
William F. Lyon Common Name Scientific Name Black Carpenter Ant Camponotus pennsylvanicus (DeGeer) Red Carpenter Ant Camponotus ferrugineus (Fab.) Smaller Carpenter Ant Camponotus nearcticus Emery Carpenter ants are a nuisance by their presence when found in parts of the home such as the kitchen, bathroom, living room and other quarters. When 20 or more large winged and/or wingless ants are found indoors, in the daytime near one location, it is possible that the colony is well established in the home and the nest may have been extended into sound wood, sometimes causing structural damage. They do not eat wood, but often remove quantities of it to expand their nest size. However, if only one to two large wingless ants are erratically crawling, they may simply be foraging for food with the nest located outside. Outdoors, they are frequently seen running over plants and tree trunks or living in moist, partly rotten wood stumps. Nevertheless, carpenter ant inquiries rank first over all other household/structural pests in Ohio.
Identification
Life Cycle and Habits
Queen Worker In later generations, workers of various sizes are produced (polymorphism) into major and minor workers, that are all sterile females. Males formed are winged swarmers. Larger "major" workers guard the nest, battle intruders, explore and forage for food while smaller "minor" workers expand the nest and care for the young. workers, when disturbed, carry off the larvae and pupa, which must be fed and tended or they die. In a mature colony, there is usually one queen with 200 to 400 winged individuals produced as swarmers. Workers have strong jaws and readily bite (sharp pinch) when contacted.

69. Stranger Than Fiction
Contains interesting facts about ant colonies and the job of each type of ant.
http://home.att.net/~B-P.TRUSCIO/STRANGER.htm
ANTS Surfing the Net with Kids has rated
this a 4 star web site
While there is much obsession with finding life in outer space, there are about one million different kinds of denizens of the animal world that breathe without lungs or gills, yet all have the same three body sections, six legs and antennae. I'm sure that up close, their appearance will out do any special effect space alien. Ants are just one kind of these. Webster's Dictionary states that King Solomon was noted for his wisdom. Thousands of years ago, Solomon wrote: "Go to the ant, consider its ways and be wise".
A Typical Ant Nest Worker ant scouts
returning to nest
Worker ant
digging
Egg laying Queen Larvae The ant eggs hatch into larvae. The larvae latter grow to become full grown ants. The typical ant colony is usually centered around one or more egg-laying "queens". The smaller worker ants care for the queen and her eggs. The smaller male ants and the larger queen ants all have wings. The male's life-span ends shortly after its nuptial flight.

70. Converted Document
ants. This module is intended to serve as a source of basic information needed toimplement an Integrated Pest Management program for structureinfesting ants.
http://www.colostate.edu/Depts/IPM/natparks/ants.html
ANTS
This module is intended to serve as a source of basic information needed to implement an Integrated Pest Management program for structure-infesting ants. Any pest management plan or activity must be formulated within the framework of the management zones where it will be implemented. Full consideration must be given to threatened and endangered species, natural and cultural resources, human health and safety, and the legal mandates of the individual parks. Recommendations in this module must be evaluated and applied in relation to these broader considerations.
Ants are among the most successful insects. Experts estimate that there could be 20,000 or more species of ants in the world. They have evolved to fill a variety of different ecological niches as predators, herbivores, leaf-cutters, seed-harvesters, aphid- tenders, and fungus-growers. They are found in deserts and rainforests, mountains and valleys, from the Arctic Circle to the tip of South America. They are interesting organisms that should be studied to better understand their unique behaviors and their roles in the earth's ecosystems.
They can also be pests, however. Fire ants and others may sting or bite people and animals. Pharaoh ants get into wounds and dressings in hospitals. House-infesting ants can become pests by their presence in kitchens and living areas. Carpenter ants tunnel into structural wood. Mound-building ants mar the appearance of lawns and landscaped areas. Sometimes ants must be managed to suppress a pest problem.

71. Converted Document
Fireants. This module is intended to serve as a source of basic informationneeded to implement an integrated pest management program for fire ants.
http://www.colostate.edu/Depts/IPM/natparks/fireants.html
Fireants
This module is intended to serve as a source of basic information needed to implement an integrated pest management program for fire ants. Any pest management plan or activity must be formulated within the framework of the management zones where it will be implemented. Full consideration must be given to threatened and endangered species, natural and cultural resources, human health and safety, and the legal mandates of the individual parks. Recommendations in this module must be evaluated and applied in relation to these broader considerations.
Fire ants are so called because their venom, injected by a stinger like a wasp's, creates a burning sensation. They are also active and aggressive, swarming over anyone or anything that disturbs their nest, be it wild animals, domestic animals, pets or people. An encounter with a fire ant nest can leave a lasting memory of burning pain, followed by tiny, itching pustules.
Because of this, and occasional stories of animals or people killed by multiple stings, people fear fire ants. In some areas infested with certain species of fire ants, playgrounds, parks, and picnic areas lie abandoned, unused because of the presence of fire ants. In campsites of state and national parks in fire ant infested areas, it is often difficult to put up or take down a tent without being stung by angry fire ants.
Fire ants are pests in other ways besides their stinging. They damage crops such as soybeans, eggplant, corn, okra, strawberries, and potatoes by feeding directly on the plants or by protecting other insects that damage the crops. They chew the bark and growing tips of citrus trees and feed on the fruit. Fire ant mounds interfere with farming and mowing operations and turn recreational fields into disfigured moonscapes. Fire ants have caused sections of roads to collapse by removing soil from under the asphalt.

72. Adam-ant.net
Where the official news service is based. Message-board, history, pictures, and multimedia are among Category Arts Music Bands and Artists A Ant, Adam......adamant.net Official News Service mainpage, Features, About adam-ant.net, News,Interactive Media, Photo Galleries, Fetish for Antz 1970s series, The ants, Home,
http://www.adam-ant.net/
adam-ant.net was created in 1996 and is maintained by: webmistress@adam-ant.net.
This is an officially approved website. Many thanks to Mario Rendon for his design concepts and assistance.

73. Lockley: Imported Fire Ants
History, biology and control of the Red Imported Fire Ant , an IPM pest fact sheet.Category Science Biology Arthropoda Insecta Hymenoptera ants......Four species of fire ants are currently found within the contiguous southeasternUS Fire ants are omonivorous, feeding on almost any plant or animal material
http://ipmworld.umn.edu/chapters/lockley.htm
Imported Fire Ants
Timothy C. Lockley
Imported Fire Ant Station
USDA/APHIS/PPQ
Gulfport, MS 39501
Apunte aquí para versión en Español X
HISTORY:
Map: APHIS Quarantine map showing fire ant distribution in U.S . Four species of fire ants are currently found within the contiguous southeastern United States. The tropical fire ant, Solenopsis geminata Fabricius, and the southern fire ant, S. xyloni McCook, are considered species "native" to the area. The two imported species of fire ants were introduced into the United States from South America at the port of Mobile, Alabama. The black imported fire ant, Solenopsis richteri Forel, arrived sometime around 1918 and the red imported fire ant, Solenopsis invicta Buren, in the late 1930's. The presence of imported fire ants in the United States was first reported in 1929 by Loding. Both species probably came to the port in soil used as ballast in cargo ships. In the years preceding the arrival of the red imported fire ant, the black imported fire ant slowly spread into adjacent counties in Alabama and Florida. Since its introduction, the red imported fire ant, a much more aggressive species than the black imported fire ant, has spread quickly. By the time of the first official survey carried out by the USDA in 1953, imported fire ants had invaded 102 counties in 10 states (Culpepper 1953). Today, the red imported fire ant has spread throughout the southeastern United States and Puerto Rico (Fig. 1)

74. ANTS NEST
The summary for this Japanese page contains characters that cannot be correctly displayed in this language/character set.
http://www.ants-nest.com/
ƒAƒgƒŠƒGŠT—v ‚¨–â‚¢‡‚킹ƒtƒH[ƒ€ http://www.ants-nest.com

75. Active Networks
Software. ants, an Active Networking Toolkit. ants A Toolkit for Buildingand Dynamically Deploying Network Protocols, IEEE OPENARCH'98.
http://nms.lcs.mit.edu/activeware/
Active Networks
Active networks allow individual user, or groups of users, to inject customized programs into the nodes of the network. "Active" architectures enable a massive increase in the complexity and customization of the computation that is performed within the network, e.g., that is interposed between the communicating end points. The Active Networks Project at MIT was funded by a contract from DARPA from September 1996 through August 2000.
People
Software
  • ANTS , an Active Networking Toolkit. Currently maintained by David Wetherall at the University of Washington.
  • PAN , a prototype high performance Practical Active Network.
Papers

76. Imported Fire Ant - FAQ
Frequently asked questions about Fire ants from University of Texas.Category Science Biology Arthropoda Insecta Hymenoptera ants......
http://uts.cc.utexas.edu/~gilbert/research/fireants/faq.html
http://uts.cc.utexas.edu/~gilbert/research/fireants/faq.html
Fire Ants, Armadillos, and Phorid Flies -
Answers to Frequently Asked Questions*
Larry Gilbert, Director
Brackenridge Field Laboratory
The University of Texas at Austin
*If you have a question about fire ants and phorid flies that does not appear below, please submit it to lgilbert@mail.utexas.edu. When your question or similar questions appear on a regular basis, we will answer it on this web page. 1. What is the correct scientific name for the red imported fire ant (RIFA)? 2. How, when, and why were fire ants imported to the U.S. and where do they occur at the moment? 3. I'm not sure I have fire ants. How can I be sure? 4. Which fire ants are the native species and how can I identify them? ... b. What causes the pustules? Return to: Gilbert Lab Conservation/Fireant Research 12 Nov 01
Return to UT Austin home page
For further information, contact: lgilbert@mail.utexas.edu

77. Insecta Inspecta World - Argentine Ants
Discover the role of ants in ecosystems through information on their feeding and communication systems, Category Kids and Teens School Time Invertebrates Insects ants......Argentine ants. This is called budding. UNIQUE ROLES IN THE ARGENTINEants' COLONY. Some roles of the Argentine ant colony are unique.
http://www.insecta-inspecta.com/ants/argentine/

Home
Ants
Bees

Beetles
...
Home
Argentine Ants
Although ants seem little and insignificant to us, once we look into their world they become important. The way Argentine ants build their homes and the way they communicate are unique. In addition, the social structure of the Argentine ant is different from other ants. To get into their world, it's necessary to learn more about them. Are you ready? Let's march into the underground world of the Argentine ant. Left . . . left . . . left, right, left . . .
HABITATS
The Argentine ants can usually be found in the top six feet of soil. They can live in moist soil underneath buildings and by sidewalks. Boards can also be used as shelter. Sometimes colonies develop in potted plant soil. Nests can be made of rocks, twigs, dirt, and so forth. Argentine ants relocate their nests often. Food sources and temperature affect where nests are built. Other types of ants live in anthills that look simple on the outside but contain a labyrinth of specialized chambers.
WELCOME TO THE COLONY!

78. Main Dissections Keys Links Map Index Methods Terminology Photo
A review of army ants of the new world. Includes maps and keys.Category Science Biology Arthropoda Insecta Hymenoptera ants......SUBFAMILY ECITONINAE. The New World Ecitoninae, together with the OldWorld Dorylinae, are the legionary ants, par excellence. Their
http://www.armyants.org/
Main Dissections Keys Links Map Index ... Guestbook
!!! This Site is under construction !!!
SUBFAMILY ECITONINAE
The New World Ecitoninae, together with the Old World Dorylinae, are the legionary ants, par excellence . Their colonies may reach enormous size (up to 2.2xl0 for Old World Dorylus and up to 10 for Eciton ; Brian, 1965). Colonies are nomadic. The bizarre queens lay enormous numbers of eggs at regular intervals and when the brood reach a certain level of development, the entire colony relocates to a new site. There is never a true nest, as such, but only a temporary bivouac. The available information on army ant life has been summarized by Gotwald (1982).
The Ecitoninae were, until recently included within the Dorylinae, a group now considered to be restricted to the Old World tropics and subtropics (Snelling, 1981b; Gotwald, 1982). Wheeler and Wheeler (1985) have argued in favor of lumping all the legionary ants back into the single subfamily Dorylinae partly because that "... at least is well supported by larval evidence," even though they had earlier stated that larval characters (or their lack) should not take precedence over adult characters. As additional evidence they cited Kistner's (1972) conclusion that

79. You Want Http://www.math.sunysb.edu/~scott/ants/
You want http//www.math.sunysb.edu/~scott/ants/ instead
http://math.math.sunysb.edu/~scott/ants/
You want http://www.math.sunysb.edu/~scott/ants/ instead

80. CNN.com - Ants Tunneling 'like Crazy' In Shuttle - Jan. 25, 2003
AIRS Saturdays 3 pm ET / Sundays 4 pm ET. ants tunneling 'like crazy' inshuttle. A colony of harvester ants in space are not behaving as expected.
http://www.cnn.com/2003/TECH/science/01/25/coolsc.spaceants/
The Web CNN.com Home Page World U.S. Weather ... Special Reports SERVICES Video Newswatch E-Mail Services CNN To Go SEARCH Web CNN.com
Ants tunneling 'like crazy' in shuttle
By Marsha Walton
CNN
A colony of harvester ants in space are not behaving as expected. Story Tools SHUTTLE MISSION GUIDE Gallery: Mission intro, timeline and crew biographies
GLOBAL CREWS Interactive: International shuttle astronauts
RELATED NASA Human Spaceflight Harvester Ant Experiment (CNN) Average high school science class: read textbook, answer questions at the end of the chapter, take test on Friday. Repeat. Fowler High School science class, Syracuse, New York: Design experiment using harvester ants to be part of a space shuttle flight. Take field trips to Colorado for testing, and the Kennedy Space Center to watch launch. Enjoy international media attention during mission of shuttle Columbia. It was a long time coming, but students from this math and science magnet school now are watching their idea, their design and their ants tunneling like crazy in space. "We did this for a lot of different reasons," said 17-year old Abby Golash, now a senior at Fowler High. "It's not applied science. We're not going to find a cure for cancer, but there may be a lot of indirect results," she said.

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