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Sample 85-90% Biology Lab Report on UNBC CTLT website
Sample 85-90% Biology Lab Report on UNBC CTLT website

... 1905; Galen 1999). Ant preference for sugary foods may have resulted in avoidance of other food sources until sugar was completely consumed. Future studies could test this by extending the duration of the experiment to determine what is selected after sugar is depleted. Culver and Beattie (1978) and ...
Richard Wrangham
Richard Wrangham

... baboon and Vervet monkeys but his work on the ecological and behavior comparisons of chimpanzees and humans has been his greatest contribution to the animal behavior literature. His insights into the cultural similarities between humans and chimpanzees—including our unique tendencies to form murdero ...
Predation of Ants and Termites by Army Ants - PPBio
Predation of Ants and Termites by Army Ants - PPBio

... Another raid, with many more ants in comparison to the first one, and this time carrying termite immatures, came from inside the adjacent primary forest, situated at a distance of about 5-6 m. This raid also disappeared into the second soil opening. This column was observed for about 40 minutes and ...
Brother, Can You Spare a Species?
Brother, Can You Spare a Species?

... Jeffrey K. McKee has been a member of Population Connection since 1999. He is an associate professor in the department of anthropology as well as the department of evolution, ecology, and organismal ...
doc
doc

... A massive swarm-raid by an army ant colony is one of the most impressive behaviors by social insects. Thousands of ants advance in a swarm, scouring the forest for food. Foraging workers carry off small insects and gang up on and overwhelm larger animals by sheer numbers. Many insects and other anim ...
Insect Order ID: Hymenoptera (Ants)
Insect Order ID: Hymenoptera (Ants)

... this is very difficult to see. Most ants are workers, and all workers are wingless and female. Some species have workers of different sizes. Only males and queens have wings. A queen loses her wings once her colony is established. All forms have elbowed antennae, and a wasp waist (cinched-in) giving ...
Case Studies of Arthropod Diversity and Distribution
Case Studies of Arthropod Diversity and Distribution

... other insects, birds, and mammals (Buxton 1952; Davenport, Howard, and Dickinson 1996). This was the first time that a fixed tower was used as a long-term research platform in a tropical forest. When it was built, the tower represented the same kind of leap forward in the application of technology a ...
Ant Anatomy
Ant Anatomy

... itself to death; often carrying 50 times their body weight. • An umbrella ant carrying a leaf is like a man carrying 1,000 pounds. ...
Is altruism encoded in our genes
Is altruism encoded in our genes

... “[Recent] studies seemed to indicate that helping behaviors in general were totally human-specific,” Warneken said. “Now it seems the question is open again. The roots of altruistic behavior seem not to originate in humans only but go further back in evolutionary time.” Is selflessness even possible ...
TIEE - Ecological Society of America
TIEE - Ecological Society of America

... Astronomy Education Research group: "Scientific Abilities" Project (sponsored by the National Science Foundation "Assessing Student Achievement" program).’ (http://paer.rutgers.edu/ScientificAbilities/Downloads/Rubrics/C_TestExpRub.pdf) Student Science Laboratory Report Rubric. Beloit College's Biol ...
as a PDF
as a PDF

... Del-Claro 2005). Small variations in biotic or abiotic factors can completely change the direction of a mutualistic relationship, from positive to negative and vice-versa (e.g. Oliveira & Del-Claro 2005). However, the conservative relationship between E. brasiliensis with the guild of tending-ant sp ...
Animal Behavior - CCRI Faculty Web
Animal Behavior - CCRI Faculty Web

... Predatory lifestyle likely encouraged the evolution of intelligence and the development of language ...
In order to understand a scientific theory, we should not only look at
In order to understand a scientific theory, we should not only look at

... superorganisms, such as the lichens, the termites and their symbionts, the symbiotic system Azolla-Anabaena-bacteria4, and the animal bodies, including human’s, with their microbiota.5 In his work, Jan Sapp refers that: every eukaryote is a superorganism, a symbiome composed of chromosomal genes, or ...
Hunting, Gathering and Co-operating
Hunting, Gathering and Co-operating

... contribution to these issues is the theory of evolutionary psychology, which attempts to apply Darwin's way of explaining biological evolution to human behaviour and psychology. Darwin's theory of natural selection explains how organisms change by adapting to their environment and so becoming more f ...
14_Foraging
14_Foraging

... poisons and indigestible tannins ...
(Word:79K)
(Word:79K)

here
here

... Research Initiative (UQBFRI) wishes to convey to the 19 million people of Borneo, the world’s third largest island and home to at least 1600 animal and 14,400 plant species. And through careful documenting of the impact of forest and wildlife management – spanning the fields of taxonomy, genetics, e ...


... opposite end of the spectrum (”lumpers”; of which we have a long tradition on this continent). Such perception bias towards Australian and away from northern richness could severely confound the analyses. In this case, the authors reached the same result both with and without Australia, so I’m proba ...
Is socialism against human nature?
Is socialism against human nature?

... Published on The Socialist Party of Great Britain (http://www.worldsocialism.org/spgb) experience that can be passed down through the generations. The development of tools, from the flint-working technique during the paleolithic period to the computers and space vehicles of today is central to unde ...
Social Behavior: From Cooperation to Language - Infoscience
Social Behavior: From Cooperation to Language - Infoscience

... to Maynard Smith and Szathmáry (1997), it encompasses the last two major transitions in the evolution of life: the transition from solitary to social organisms, giving rise to the formation of social groups, and the transition from primate societies to human societies, enabling the emergence of lan ...
The Science of Biogeography
The Science of Biogeography

... and predictable manner.” ...
Ants as ecological status indicators at Suikerbosrand Nature
Ants as ecological status indicators at Suikerbosrand Nature

... assess the impacts of their interventions on the ecosystems they manage. Invertebrates are often excluded from these monitoring programmes because of a lack of the skills needed or because of a lack of understanding of the importance of invertebrates in ecosystems. Ants have been shown to be good in ...
Anthropology (ANT)
Anthropology (ANT)

... and dating techniques used to establish chronologies, the beginnings of human culture, the development of “stone age” societies, the peopling of the New World, and the formation of early cities. ANT 202 America’s Diverse Cultures IAI – S1 904D 3 Hours Prerequisites: None 3 hours weekly (3-0) With ov ...
Lecture 2
Lecture 2

... Critique of the SSSM 1. A blank slate could not respond to experience because it would have no rules for responding. 2. The nature/nurture (genes/environment, innate/learned) dichotomy is false with respect to ontogeny (development). 3. General-purpose learning mechanisms cannot explain behavior. ...
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E. O. Wilson



Edward Osborne Wilson (born June 10, 1929) is an American biologist, researcher (sociobiology, biodiversity, island biogeography), theorist (consilience, biophilia), naturalist (conservationist) and author. His biological specialty is myrmecology, the study of ants, on which he is considered to be the world's leading expert.Wilson is known for his scientific career, his role as ""the father of sociobiology"" and ""the father of biodiversity"", his environmental advocacy, and his secular-humanist and deist ideas pertaining to religious and ethical matters. Among his greatest contributions to ecological theory is the theory of island biogeography, which he developed in collaboration with the mathematical ecologist Robert MacArthur, and which is seen as the foundation of the development of conservation area design, as well as the unified neutral theory of biodiversity of Stephen Hubbell.Wilson is (2014) the Pellegrino University Research Professor, Emeritus in Entomology for the Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology at Harvard University, a lecturer at Duke University, and a Fellow of the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry. He is a Humanist Laureate of the International Academy of Humanism. He is a two-time winner of the Pulitzer Prize for General Non-Fiction and a New York Times bestseller for The Social Conquest of Earth, Letters to a Young Scientist, and The Meaning of Human Existence.
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