The study of animal diets has benefited from the rise of high-throughput DNA sequencing applied to stomach content or faecal samples. The latter can be fresh samples used to describe recent meals or older samples, which can provide information about past feeding activities. For most invertebrates, however, it is difficult to access 'historical' samples, due to the small size of the animals and the absence of permanent defecation sites. Therefore, sampling must be repeated to account for seasonal variation and to capture the overall diet of a species. This study develops a method to describe the overall diet of nest-building Hymenoptera, based on a single sampling event, by analysing prey DNA from faeces accumulated in brood cells. We...
Despite the mitochondrion's long recognised role in energy production, mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) var...
Recent advancements in genomics provide new tools for evolutionary ecological research. The paper wa...
Urbanization is affecting arthropod communities worldwide, for example by changing the availability ...
The study of animal diets has benefited from the rise of high-throughput DNA sequencing applied to s...
In newly invaded communities, interspecific competition is thought to play an important role in dete...
A presentation on a study looking into the utility of molecular methods for characterising the prey ...
The cavity-nesting solitary bees, wasps, and their natural enemies compose the community of insects ...
Polybia scutellaris (White, 1841) is a social wasp of biological interest for its role as pollinator...
Metamorphosing insects often have complex and poorly known life-histories. In particular, what they ...
Metamorphosing insects often have complex and poorly known life histories. In particular, what they ...
Published by University of Notre DameThe food web of Symmorphus cristatus wasps, leaf beetle larvae ...
Abstract Here, we present a detailed ethogram for the foraging behavior of the eusocial paper wasp, ...
The cavity-nesting solitary bees, wasps, and their natural enemies compose the community of insects ...
Social insects are among the most ecologically and economically damaging, and abundant invasive spec...
The cuticle of insects is covered by a layer of hydrocarbons (CHCs), whose original function is the ...
Despite the mitochondrion's long recognised role in energy production, mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) var...
Recent advancements in genomics provide new tools for evolutionary ecological research. The paper wa...
Urbanization is affecting arthropod communities worldwide, for example by changing the availability ...
The study of animal diets has benefited from the rise of high-throughput DNA sequencing applied to s...
In newly invaded communities, interspecific competition is thought to play an important role in dete...
A presentation on a study looking into the utility of molecular methods for characterising the prey ...
The cavity-nesting solitary bees, wasps, and their natural enemies compose the community of insects ...
Polybia scutellaris (White, 1841) is a social wasp of biological interest for its role as pollinator...
Metamorphosing insects often have complex and poorly known life-histories. In particular, what they ...
Metamorphosing insects often have complex and poorly known life histories. In particular, what they ...
Published by University of Notre DameThe food web of Symmorphus cristatus wasps, leaf beetle larvae ...
Abstract Here, we present a detailed ethogram for the foraging behavior of the eusocial paper wasp, ...
The cavity-nesting solitary bees, wasps, and their natural enemies compose the community of insects ...
Social insects are among the most ecologically and economically damaging, and abundant invasive spec...
The cuticle of insects is covered by a layer of hydrocarbons (CHCs), whose original function is the ...
Despite the mitochondrion's long recognised role in energy production, mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) var...
Recent advancements in genomics provide new tools for evolutionary ecological research. The paper wa...
Urbanization is affecting arthropod communities worldwide, for example by changing the availability ...