513 results
- Archives and manuscripts
Insects
Date: 1903-1904Reference: MS.2264Part of: Dutton, Joseph Everett (1877-1905), and Todd, John Lancelot (1876-1949), tropical medicine specialists- Books
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Natural history of birds, fish, insects, and reptiles / [Georges Louis Leclerc Buffon].
Buffon, Georges Louis Leclerc, comte de, 1707-1788.Date: 1798- Books
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The natural history of British insects. Explaining them in their several states, with the periods of their transformations, their food, oeconomy, &c. together with the history of such minute insects as require investigation by the microscope : the whole illustrated by coloured figures, designed and executed from living specimens / by E. Donovan.
Donovan, E. (Edward), 1768-1837.Date: 1792-1813- Books
Chemical attractants for insect control / by John D. Munro.
Munro, John D.Date: [1963?]- Books
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Observations on marine vermes, insects, etc. Fasciculus I[-II] / With notes and quotations from different authors.
Martin, Matthew, 1748-1838Date: 1786[-1787]- Archives and manuscripts
Injurious Insects
Date: c.1905-1927Reference: MS.2885Part of: Holmes, Edward Morell (1843-1930), botanist and lecturer in materia medica- Books
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On the history and natural arrangement of insects / By William Swainson and W.E. Shuckard.
Swainson, William, 1789-1855.Date: 1840- Books
Manual of fumigation for insect control / [Hector Alexander Urquhart Monro].
Monro, H. A. U. (Hector Alexander Urquhart), 1906-1970.Date: 1961- Books
Directions for collecting and preserving insects / by C.V. Riley.
Riley, Charles V. (Charles Valentine), 1843-1895.Date: 1892- Pictures
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Above, a bird, a cricket, an insect, a branch and fruit of the guaiacum tree, an eel and a sea-pie; below, a sprig of a flower, three molluscs, two insects and a piece of a ferric oxide ore. Engraving by Heath.
Reference: 40519i- Archives and manuscripts
ICIPE: Vision and Strategic Framework for the 1990s
Date: September 1992Reference: PP/MIA/G/1/4/2/6Part of: Professor Michael Ashburner: archives- Books
Natural history of birds, fish, insects, and reptiles / Embellished with upwards of two hundred engravings.
Buffon, Georges Louis Leclerc, comte de, 1707-1788.Date: 1808- Books
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On the compound vision and the morphology of the eye in insects / by B. Thompson Lowne.
Lowne, B. Thompson (Benjamin Thompson), 1839-1925.Date: 1884- Journals
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Insect systematics & evolution
Date: 2000-- Pictures
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Above, two perches, two insects and a hairy spider. Engraving by Heath.llitory of the wall, a peacock, a limpet, the stalk of a flower, a fish (pegasus), two insects, a pelican and a bird; below, a pe.
Date: 1 June 1806Reference: 40528i- Archives and manuscripts
Sketofax (Insect Repellant)
Date: c.1946-1963Reference: WF/M/PL/286Part of: Wellcome Foundation Ltd- Archives and manuscripts
"Using Nature's Tools. Sustainable Methods of Pest Control." A strategy for development
Date: June 2000Reference: PP/MIA/G/1/4/2/13Part of: Professor Michael Ashburner: archives- Digital Images
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Trachymyrmex septentrionalis is the northernmost fungus growing ant, and is abundant in pine flat forests throughout the Eastern USA, ranging as far north as Long Island, New York. In this symbiosis, T. septentrionalis ants collect plant material and insect feces, which they feed to a specific "cultivar" fungus that they farm in underground gardens. Once the fungus has digested this food, it forms nutrient-rich swellings that the ants feed upon. The ants also protect their cultivar fungus from disease using antibiotic-producing Pseudonocardia bacteria that reside on the ants' proplueral plates (i.e., "chest"). The ants therefore both farm the cultivar fungus as their food source and protect it by "crop spraying" antibiotics produced by their symbiotic Pseudonocardia bacteria.
Macroscopic Solutions- Digital Images
- Online
Trachymyrmex septentrionalis is the northernmost fungus growing ant, and is abundant in pine flat forests throughout the Eastern USA, ranging as far north as Long Island, New York. In this symbiosis, T. septentrionalis ants collect plant material and insect feces, which they feed to a specific "cultivar" fungus that they farm in underground gardens. Once the fungus has digested this food, it forms nutrient-rich swellings that the ants feed upon. The ants also protect their cultivar fungus from disease using antibiotic-producing Pseudonocardia bacteria that reside on the ants' proplueral plates (i.e., "chest"). The ants therefore both farm the cultivar fungus as their food source and protect it by "crop spraying" antibiotics produced by their symbiotic Pseudonocardia bacteria.
Macroscopic Solutions- Archives and manuscripts
Insect Cytogenetics proofs
Date: 1980Reference: PP/MIA/E/4/54Part of: Professor Michael Ashburner: archives- Archives and manuscripts
Report of the Review Team for the 3rd external period review of the ICIPE
Date: June 1990Reference: PP/MIA/G/1/4/2/2Part of: Professor Michael Ashburner: archives- Archives and manuscripts
Insect Development chapter
Date: 1975-1976Reference: PP/MIA/E/4/36Part of: Professor Michael Ashburner: archives- Archives and manuscripts
Insect Control
Date: October 1991-January 1998Reference: PP/MIA/G/1/14Part of: Professor Michael Ashburner: archives- Books
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Essays on the microscope; containing a practical description of the most improved microscope; a general history of insects, etc / [George Adams].
Adams, George, 1750-1795.Date: 1787- Books
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An introduction to entomology. Or Elements of the natural history of insects: with plates / By William Kirby and William Spence.
Kirby, William, 1759-1850.Date: 1815-1826