Jacques H. C. Delabie mainly investigates Ecology, Species richness, Biodiversity, Habitat and Wasmannia. His works in Species diversity, Range, Hymenoptera, Rainforest and Litter are all subjects of inquiry into Ecology. His Species richness research incorporates themes from Fauna and Arboreal locomotion.
The Biodiversity study combines topics in areas such as Taxon, Canopy, Tropics, Genus and Taxonomy. His work deals with themes such as Agroforestry, Ecosystem and Introduced species, which intersect with Habitat. Jacques H. C. Delabie focuses mostly in the field of Wasmannia, narrowing it down to matters related to Invasive species and, in some cases, Eco evolutionary.
His primary areas of study are Ecology, Hymenoptera, Species richness, ANT and Biodiversity. His work blends Ecology and Azteca studies together. He interconnects Taxonomy and Genus in the investigation of issues within Hymenoptera.
The study incorporates disciplines such as Old-growth forest, Vegetation, Species diversity and Litter in addition to Species richness. His ANT research is multidisciplinary, incorporating elements of Nest and Anatomy. His research integrates issues of Agroforestry, Forestry, Secondary forest and Ecosystem, Plant litter in his study of Biodiversity.
His main research concerns Ecology, Species richness, Hymenoptera, Biodiversity and ANT. His Ecology study focuses mostly on Rainforest, Taxonomy, Arboreal locomotion, Biome and Plant litter. His Species richness research is multidisciplinary, relying on both Habitat fragmentation, Habitat, Abundance, Fauna and Vegetation.
His Hymenoptera study which covers Forestry that intersects with Metropolitan area. His work in Biodiversity covers topics such as Agroforestry which are related to areas like Community structure. The concepts of his ANT study are interwoven with issues in Evolutionary biology and Myrmecophyte.
His primary areas of investigation include Ecology, Species richness, Arboreal locomotion, Rainforest and Biodiversity. Jacques H. C. Delabie merges many fields, such as Ecology and Animal species, in his writings. His Species richness research integrates issues from Swamp and Understory.
His Arboreal locomotion research incorporates themes from Taxon and Treefall gap. His study in Rainforest is interdisciplinary in nature, drawing from both Global biodiversity and ANT. His studies deal with areas such as Agroforestry and Epiphyte as well as Biodiversity.
This overview was generated by a machine learning system which analysed the scientist’s body of work. If you have any feedback, you can contact us here.
Arthropod diversity in a tropical forest
Yves Basset;Yves Basset;Yves Basset;Lukas Cizek;Lukas Cizek;Philippe Cuenoud;Raphael K. Didham.
Science (2012)
Trophobiosis Between Formicidae and Hemiptera (Sternorrhyncha and Auchenorrhyncha): an Overview
Jacques H.C. Delabie.
Neotropical Entomology (2001)
Arboreal ant community patterns in brazilian cocoa farms
Jonathan D. Majer;Jacques H. C. Delabie;Martha R. B. Smith.
Biotropica (1994)
Sampling Effort and Choice of Methods
Jonathan Majer;J. Delabie;B. L. Fisher;I. W. Wright.
(2000)
Examining Fragmentation and Loss of Primary Forest in the Southern Bahian Atlantic Forest of Brazil with Radar Imagery
S. Saatchi;D. Agosti;K. Alger;J. Delabie.
Conservation Biology (2001)
Introducción a las hormigas de la región Neotropical
Fernando Fernández;E. E. Palacio;D. Agosti;N. F. Johnson.
(2003)
Landscape and farm scale management to enhance biodiversity conservation in the cocoa producing region of southern Bahia, Brazil
Camila R. Cassano;Camila R. Cassano;Goetz Schroth;Deborah Faria;Jacques H. C. Delabie.
Biodiversity and Conservation (2009)
Comparison of the ant communities of annually inundated and terra firme forests at Trombetas in the Brazilian Amazon
Jonathan Majer;J. Delabie.
Insectes Sociaux (1994)
Diversidade de formigas (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) da serapilheira em eucaliptais (Myrtaceae) e área de cerrado de Minas Gerais
Cidália G.S. Marinho;Ronald Zanetti;Jacques H.C. Delabie;Marcelo N. Schlindwein.
Neotropical Entomology (2002)
Further Alkaloids Common to Ants and Frogs: Decahydroquinolines and a Quinolizidine
Tappey H. Jones;Jeffrey S. T. Gorman;Roy R. Snelling;Jacques H. C. Delabie.
Journal of Chemical Ecology (1999)
If you think any of the details on this page are incorrect, let us know.
We appreciate your kind effort to assist us to improve this page, it would be helpful providing us with as much detail as possible in the text box below:
Federal University of Toulouse Midi-Pyrénées
Centre national de la recherche scientifique, CNRS
Université Libre de Bruxelles
Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute
Curtin University
Federal University of Toulouse Midi-Pyrénées
Czech Academy of Sciences
University of Western Australia
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Griffith University
Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin
École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne
Institut d'Estudis Catalans
Linköping University
University of Edinburgh
Goethe University Frankfurt
Wageningen University & Research
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
University of Milano-Bicocca
University of Manitoba
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
Leiden University
Yale University
The Open University
Spanish National Research Council