In addition, flies, butterflies, wasps, moths, beetles, and other invertebrates and, in some cases vertebrates (such as bats, squirrels, birds and some primates), are also known to pollinate natural plants and crops (Buchmann 1997; Klein et al. 2007; De Luca and Vallejo-Marín 2013; ...
In invertebrates, species discovery often starts with obtaining specimens via bulk sampling methods. In insects, one of the most widely used methods is Malaise trapping. Such traps routinely collect thousands, or even tens of thousands, of specimens per site and week; i.e., sorting all specimens...
W. (eds) The Social Biology of Wasps. Cornell University Press, Ithaca, NY. ROSS, K. G. AND FLETCHER, D. J. C. 1985. Comparative study of genetic and social structure in two forms of the fire ant Solenopsis invicta (Hymenoptera: Formicidae). Behav. Ecol. Sociobiol., 17, 349—356....