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Theclinesthes Miskini
''Theclinesthes miskini'', the wattle blue, is a butterfly of the family Lycaenidae. It is found in Australia and New Guinea. Description The wingspan is about 20 mm. Adults have a pale blue upperside with chequered margins, but females also have a broad black band around the margins. They also have an arc of white scalloped markings on the hindwings. The underside of the wings is fawn with several white markings. The larvae are dark green or brown with a dark dorsal band and pale diagonal streaks. Ecology The larvae generally feed on plants in the family Fabaceae including ''Paraserianthes lophantha'', '' Sesbania cannabina'', '' Acacia anceps'', '' A. auriculiformis'', '' A. flavescens'', '' A. pycnantha'', '' A. salicina'', '' A. saligna'', '' A. tetragonophylla'', '' A. harpophylla'', '' A. holosericea'', '' A. neriifolia'' and '' A. victoriae'', but also on '' Alectryon diversifolius'', '' Atalaya variifolia'', ''Hakea vittata'' and '' Eucalyptus polycarpa''. Young ...
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Thomas Pennington Lucas
Thomas Pennington Lucas (13 April 1843 – 15 November 1917), also known as T.P. Lucas, was a Scotland, Scottish-born Australian medical practitioner, Natural history, naturalist, author, philosopher and utopianist. Early life Lucas was born in Dunbar, Scotland to Samuel Lucas, a Wesleyan Methodist minister, and Elizabeth Broadhurst. Lucas inherited from his father a love of natural history and a lifelong determination to reconcile his strong religious beliefs with his scientific convictions, as evidenced in many of his books. Because his father was often on the move to new postings, taking his family with him, Thomas was educated at King Edward VI School, Stratford-upon-Avon, King Edward VI Grammar School at Stratford-on-Avon, Helston Grammar School, Cornwall, and Kingswood School, New Kingswood School in Bath. Move to Australia Having developed tuberculosis, in 1876 Thomas Lucas migrated to Melbourne, Australia where he set up a medical practice. His three living childre ...
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Acacia Harpophylla
''Acacia harpophylla'', commonly known as brigalow, brigalow spearwood or orkor, is an endemic tree of Australia. The Aboriginal Australian group the Gamilaraay peoples know the tree as Barranbaa or Burrii. It is found in central and coastal Queensland to northern New South Wales. It can reach up to tall and forms extensive open-forest communities on clay soils. Description The tree is root-suckering and has hard, furrowed and almost black coloured bark. The glabrous or hairy branchlets are angular at extremities. Like most species of ''Acacia'' it has phyllodes rather than true leaves. The coriaceous, sericeous and evergreen phyllodes have a falcate shape with a length of and a width of and have many closely parallel nerves with three to seven of the nerves are more prominent than the others. When it blooms, between July and October, it produces condensed inflorescences in groups of two to eight on racemes, usually appearing as axillary clusters. The spherical flower-hea ...
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Paratrechina
''Paratrechina'' is one of seven ant Genus, genera (alongside ''Euprenolepis, Nylanderia, Paraparatrechina, Prenolepis, Pseudolasius,'' and ''Zatania'') in the Prenolepis genus-group, ''Prenolepis'' genus-group from the subfamily Formicinae (Tribe (biology), tribe Lasiini). Six species are included in ''Paratrechina''; one of which, the longhorn crazy ant (''Longhorn crazy ant, Paratrechina longicornis''), is a widespread, pantropical Pest (organism), pest. Species * ''Paratrechina ankarana'' LaPolla & Fisher, 2014 * ''Paratrechina antsingy'' LaPolla & Fisher, 2014 * ''Paratrechina kohli'' (Forel, 1916) * ''Paratrechina longicornis'' (Latreille, 1802) * ''Paratrechina umbra'' (Zhou & Zheng, 1998) * ''Paratrechina zanjensis'' LaPolla, Hawkes & Fisher, 2013 Distribution Most ''Paratrechina'' species are native to Sub-Saharan Africa and Madagascar, but one species, ''Paratrechina umbra'', has only been found in southern China and is native to Southeast Asia. The only species foun ...
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Notoncus
''Notoncus'' is an Australian genus of ants in the subfamily Formicinae. The genus is known from Australia (one species is also known from Papua New Guinea), where the ants nest in the soil or on the ground under stones and logs in forested areas. The ants are also common in gardens and parks. Species The genus includes the following six species: * ''Notoncus capitatus'' Forel, 1915 * ''Notoncus ectatommoides'' (Forel, 1892) * ''Notoncus enormis'' Szabo, 1910 * ''Notoncus gilberti'' Forel, 1895 * ''Notoncus hickmani'' Clark, 1930 * ''Notoncus spinisquamis ''Notoncus'' is an Australian genus of ants in the subfamily Formicinae. The genus is known from Australia (one species is also known from Papua New Guinea), where the ants nest in the soil or on the ground under stones and logs in forested ar ...'' (Andre, 1896) References Formicinae Ant genera Hymenoptera of Australia {{formicinae-stub ...
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Calomyrmex
''Calomyrmex'' is a genus of ants in the subfamily Formicinae. The genus is known from Indonesia, New Guinea and Australia Australia, officially the Commonwealth of Australia, is a Sovereign state, sovereign country comprising the mainland of the Australia (continent), Australian continent, the island of Tasmania, and numerous List of islands of Australia, sma .... Calomyrmex has a mandibular gland that secrets red droplets on the sides of its head that have a strong and unpleasant odor when disturbed. Species *'' Calomyrmex albertisi'' (Emery, 1887) *'' Calomyrmex albopilosus'' (Mayr, 1876) *'' Calomyrmex glauerti'' Clark, 1930 *'' Calomyrmex impavidus'' (Forel, 1893) *'' Calomyrmex laevissimus'' (Smith, 1859) *'' Calomyrmex purpureus'' (Mayr, 1876) *'' Calomyrmex similis'' (Mayr, 1876) *'' Calomyrmex splendidus'' (Mayr, 1876) *'' Calomyrmex tropicus'' (Smith, 1861) References External links * Formicinae Ant genera Hymenoptera of Asia Hymenoptera of Australia ...
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Ochetellus
''Ochetellus'' is a genus of ants first described by Steve Shattuck in 1992. He placed it in the subfamily Dolichoderinae of the family Formicidae. The ants in this genus are small and black in colour; workers measure in length, the males at around are smaller, and the queens are the largest, reaching . There are seven described species and three described subspecies that mostly live in Australia in a wide variety of habitats, but some species are found in Asia. One species, ''Ochetellus glaber'', has been introduced into New Zealand and the United States. The colonies are found in rotten wood, in the ground, under rocks or stones and in urban areas. The ants are both diurnal and nocturnal and forage on trees, in low vegetation and into human homes, where they are regarded as pests. These ants eat a variety of foods, including fruits, insects, sucrose, nectar and bird feces. They visit various flowers and attend to a variety of butterfly larvae. The thorny devil, an Austral ...
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Iridomyrmex
''Iridomyrmex'' is a genus of ants called rainbow ants (referring to their blue-green iridescent sheen) first described by Austrian entomologist Gustav Mayr in 1862. He placed the genus in the subfamily Dolichoderinae of the family Formicidae. It has 79 described species and five fossil species. Most of these ants are native to Australia; others are found in Asia and Oceania, and they have been introduced to Brazil, New Zealand, and the United Arab Emirates. Fossil species are known from China, France, and the United States. These ants are known to be an ecologically dominant and important group of ants, but they are sometimes regarded as pests because they disturb soil and enter human houses. Farmers in rural Australia place animal carcasses on meat ant ('' I. purpureus'') mounds as a method of disposing of them; meat ants consume the carcass and reduce it to bones in a matter of weeks. Meat ants also engage in ritualised fighting, which helps prevent casualties and solve te ...
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Eucalyptus Polycarpa
''Corymbia polycarpa'', also known as long-fruited bloodwood or small-flowered bloodwood, is a species of tree that is endemic to northern Australia. Indigenous Australians of different language groups have different names for the tree. The Nungali peoples know the tree as or , the Mulluk-Mulluk know it as , the Yangman know it as , the Gurindji peoples as and the Wagiman as . It is a medium-sized tree with rough, tessellated bark on the trunk and branches, lance-shaped to curved adult leaves, flower buds in groups of seven or nine, white or cream-coloured flowers and barrel-shaped fruit. Description ''Corymbia polycarpa'' is a tree that typically grows to a height of , sometimes , and forms a lignotuber. It has rough, tessellated, flaky and brownish bark on the trunk and branches. Older bark is grey brown and newer bark is red-brown in colour. Young plants and coppice regrowth have elliptic to lance-shaped leaves that are up to long, wide and petiolate. Adult leaves are usu ...
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Hakea Vittata
''Hakea vittata'', commonly known as the striped hakea, hooked needlewood, is a shrub of the family Proteaceae. Restricted to an area on the Eyre Peninsula and the Gawler Range in South Australia and small areas in eastern Victoria. Description ''Hakea vittata'' is a prostrate or straggly shrub typically growing to a height of that forms a lignotuber. White smooth branchlets are covered with short soft hairs. Needle-like leaves long and wide are smooth and straight ending in a point long. An inflorescence of 8-14 reddish-white flowers appear in leaf axils. The red-brown main flower stalk is long and covered in short soft hairs that lie flat. The hairs continue onto the individual flower stems that are long. Sepals and petals are white and the style long. Woody brown fruit may be smooth, wrinkled or warty, egg-shaped long and wide ending with a small blister-like beak topped by short prominent horns. ''Hakea vittata'' has two characteristics that distinguish it from ...
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Atalaya Variifolia
Atalaya (Spanish for watchtower) may refer to: Places Spain * Atalaya, Badajoz, a municipality in the province of Badajoz, Extremadura * Atalaya (Madrid), a ward in Madrid * Atalaya del Cañavate, a municipality in the province of Cuenca, Castile-La Mancha * La Atalaya, Salamanca, a municipality in the province of Salamanca, Castile and León * Atalaya Castle (Spain), a Moorish structure in Villena, province of Alicante * La Atalaya, a former village that was destroyed to expand the Corta Atalaya open-pit mine * Atalayas de Alcalá, ''(Talaies d'Alcalà)'', a mountain range in the Valencian Community Puerto Rico * Atalaya, Aguada, Puerto Rico, a barrio * Atalaya, Rincón, Puerto Rico, a barrio Elsewhere * Atalaya, Buenos Aires, a settlement in Magdalena Partido, Argentina * Atalaya, a part of the Guatemalan archaeological site Q'umarkaj * Atalaya District, Veraguas Province, Panama * Atalaya, Veraguas, capital of Atalaya District, Panama * Atalaya Province, Peru * Atalaya, Ucay ...
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Alectryon Diversifolius
''Alectryon diversifolius'' , commonly named scrub boonaree or holly bush, is a species of Australian small trees of the plant family Sapindaceae. Description ''Alectryon diversifolius'' grows as a shrub up to 4 m high, with simple leaves often clustered on short branchlets. Leaf shape is highly variable even on individual plants, ranging from oval to lanceolate to strongly serrated and holly-like. Distribution and habitat The species occurs in central and south-eastern Qld and north-eastern N.S.W. Usually growing in Brigalow scrub in dark clay. Taxonomy It was first described by Ferdinand von Mueller in 1858 as ''Heterodendrum diversifolius'',Mueller, F.J.H. von (1858), Fragmenta Phytographiae Australiae 1(3): 46 but was moved to the genus, '' Alectryon'' by Sally T. Reynolds Sally T. Reynolds (born 1932) is an Australian botanist. She worked at the Queensland Herbarium as principal botanist and as a specialist on Australian Sapindaceae. Paul Irwin Forster, Paul Forster n ...
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