|
NEW! |
All the latest news in the worlds of
computer gaming,
entertainment,
the environment,
finance,
health,
politics,
science,
stocks & shares,
technology
and much,
much,
more.
|
Everything about Lasius totally explainedLasius Latr. is a genus of boreal formicine ants.
Included within this genus is the common black garden ant, Lasius niger, and its close relatives from dry heathland, L. alienus and L. neoniger.
Other species include the temporary social parasites of the L. mixtus group and the hyper-social parasite Lasius fuliginosus.
Lasius flavus is also a commonly seen species, building grassy hillocks in undisturbed pasture. In the Alps, these mounds - always aligned east to catch the first rays of the rising sun - have been traditionally used by goatherds as natural compasses.
The genus was renamed by Horace St. John Kelly Donisthorpe, the eccentric British myrmecologist and coleopterist, after himself Donisthorpea.
Synonyms: Donisthorpea Donisthorpe
Species » Source: Catalogue of Life: 2005 Annual Checklist
- Lasius alienoflavus Bingham, 1903
- L. alienus (Foerster, 1850)
- L. atopus Cole, 1958
- L. balcanicus Seifert, 1988
- L. bicornis (Foerster, 1850)
- L. breviscapus Seifert, 1992
- L. brunneus (Latreille, 1798)
- L. buccatus Staercke, 1942
- L. capitatus (Kuznetsov-Ugamsky, 1927)
- L. carniolicus Mayr, 1861
- L. chambonensis Theobald, 1935
- L. cinereus Seifert, 1992
- L. citrinus Emery, 1922
- L. coloratus Santschi, 1937
- L. crinitus (Smith, 1858)
- L. crispus Theobald, 1935
- L. crypticus Wilson, 1955
- L. distinguendus (Emery, 1916)
- L. draco Collingwood, 1982
- L. emarginatus (Olivier, 1792)
- L. epicentrus Theobald, 1937
- L. escamole Reza, 1925
- L. exulans Fabricius, 1804
- L. fallax Wilson, 1955
- L. flavescens Forel, 1904
- L. flavoniger Seifert, 1992
- L. flavus (Fabricius, 1782)
- L. fuliginosus (Latreille, 1798)
- L. gebaueri Seifert, 1992
- L. globularis (Heer, 1850)
- L. grandis Forel, 1909
- L. hayashi Yamauchi & Hayashida, 1970
- L. hikosanus Yamauchi, 1979
- L. himalayanus Bingham, 1903
- L. hirsutus Seifert, 1992
- L. humilis Wheeler, 1917
- L. japonicus Santschi, 1941
- L. jensi Seifert, 1982
- L. karpinisi Seifert, 1992
- L. koreanus Seifert, 1992
- L. lasioides (Emery, 1869)
- L. lawarai Seifert, 1992
- L. longaevus (Heer, 1850)
- L. longipennis (Heer, 1850)
- L. magnus Seifert, 1992
- L. meridionalis (Bondroit, 1920)
- L. mikir Collingwood, 1982
- L. minutulus (Heer, 1850)
- L. minutus Emery, 1893
- L. mixtus (Nylander, 1846)
- L. monticola (Buckley, 1866)
- L. morisitai Yamauchi, 1979
- L. myops Forel, 1894
- L. nearcticus Wheeler, 1906
- L. nemorivagus Wheeler, 1915
- L. neoniger Emery, 1893
- L. nevadensis Cole, 1956
- L. niger (Linnaeus, 1758)
- L. nigrescens Stitz, 1930
- L. obliteratus (Heer, 1850)
- L. oblongus Assmann, 1870
- L. obscuratus Stitz, 1930
- L. obscurus (Heer, 1850)
- L. occultatus (Heer, 1850)
- L. pallitarsis (Provancher, 1881)
- L. paralienus Seifert, 1992
- L. peritulus (Cockerell, 1927)
- L. piliferus Seifert, 1992
- L. platythorax Seifert, 1991
- L. productus Wilson, 1955
- L. przewalskii Ruzsky, 1915
- L. psammophilus Seifert, 1992
- L. pumilus Mayr, 1868
- L. rabaudi (Bondroit, 1917)
- L. redtenbacheri (Heer, 1850)
- L. reginae Faber, 1967
- L. rubiginosus (Latreille, 1802)
- L. sabularum (Bondroit, 1918)
- L. sakagamii Yamauchi & Hayashida, 1970
- L. schaeferi Seifert, 1992
- L. schiefferdeckeri Mayr, 1868
- L. schulzi Seifert, 1992
- L. sitiens Wilson, 1955
- L. sonobei Yamauchi, 1979
- L. spathepus Wheeler, 1910
- L. speculiventris Emery, 1893
- L. subumbratus Viereck, 1903
- L. talpa Wilson, 1955
- L. tebessae Seifert, 1992
- L. teranishii Wheeler, 1928
- L. terreus Scudder, 1878
- L. tertiarius Zalessky, 1949
- L. turcicus Santschi, 1921
- L. umbratus (Nylander, 1846)
- L. uzbeki Seifert, 1992
- L. vestitus Wheeler, 1910
- L. vetulus Dlussky, 1981
- L. viehmeyeri Emery, 1922
- L. wittmeri Seifert, 1992
- L. xerophilus MacKay & MacKay, 1994
Further Information
Get more info on 'Lasius'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://lasius.totallyexplained.com">Lasius Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |
|
|