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Subfamily Formicinae
Revision taxonomique des especes nearctiques du group fusca, genre Formica By Andre Francoeur Memoires de la Societe Entomologique du Quebec, No.. 3, pp 1-316, 1973
Andre Francoeur, Revision taxonomique des especes nearctiques du group fusca, genre Formica, Memoires de la Societe Entomologique du Quebec, No. 3, pp. 1-316, 1973.
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A revision of the genus Paratrechina (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) of the continental United States By Trager, J.C. 1984. Sociobiology, 1984
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Paratrechina jr. syn. of Nylanderia
Trager, James C. 1984. A revision of the genus Paratrechina (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) of the continental United States. Sociobiology 9: 51-162.
Contributed by Mike Quinn on 21 June, 2012 - 8:26am |
A monographic revision of the ant genus Lasius By E. O. Wilson Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool. 113: 1-201, 1955
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New World Carpenter Ants of the Hyperdiverse Genus Camponotus, Vol. 1 By William P. Mackay Lambert Academic Publishing , 2019
William P. Mackay, New World Carpenter Ants of the Hyperdiverse Genus Camponotus, Vol. 1, Introduction, Keys to the Subgenera and Species Complexes and the Subgenus Camponotus, Lambert Academic Publishing, 2019.
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publisher webpage
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 Carpenter Ants Of The United States And Canada By LAUREL DIANNE HANSEN, JOHN H. KLOTZ, Laurel D. Hansen Cornell University Press, 2005
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The ants of Texas, New Mexico and Arizona. (Part I.). By Wheeler, W.M. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 24(21): 399-485., 1908
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Wheeler, W.M. 1908. The ants of Texas, New Mexico and Arizona. (Part I.), Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 24(21): 399-485.
Although the ant-fauna of Texas, New Mexico and Arizona comprises a greater number of species than that of the whole remaining portion of America north of Mexico, it has never been made the subject of systematic investigation. In the following study I have brought together the scattered and rather meager materials published by previous authors and have added several new forms, especially of Pheidole, a cosmopolitan genus represented by a great number of species in tropical and subtropical America. A residence of four years (1899-1903) in central Texas, several excursions to the Trans Pecos deserts of that State, and a journey through New Mexico and Arizona during the spring of 1905, have enabled me not only to secure the large series of specimens now deposited in the American Museum of Natural History, but also to observe the living ants in their natural environment. This, as every myrmecologist knows, is often of the greatest importance in determining the status of species, subspecies and varieties.
Contributed by Mike Quinn on 28 February, 2019 - 8:57pm |
The distribution of ants in Texas. By O’Keefe, S.T., J.L. Cook, T. Dudek, D.F. Wunneburger, M.D. Guzman, R.N. Coulson, and S.B. Vinson. Southwestern Entomologist, Supplemental Issue No. 22. 92 pp., 2000
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O’Keefe, S.T., J.L. Cook, T. Dudek, D.F. Wunneburger, M.D. Guzman, R.N. Coulson, and S.B. Vinson. 2000. The distribution of ants in Texas. Southwestern Entomologist, Supplemental Issue No. 22. 92 pp.
Abstract
The distribution of 291 known species of Texas ants was recorded from published literature and examination of identified museum specimens. For each species, all counties of known occurrence are given as well as a distribution map...
Contributed by Mike Quinn on 25 February, 2019 - 2:41pm |
Ants of Florida: Identification and Natural History By Mark Deyrup CRC Press , 2016
Contributed by Steven Wang on 18 January, 2019 - 2:57pm |
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