Edilberto Giannotti
Sao Paulo State University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Edilberto Giannotti.
Journal of Medical Entomology | 2011
Thiago de Carvalho Moretti; Edilberto Giannotti; Patricia Jacqueline Thyssen; Daniel Russ Solis; Wesley Augusto Conde Godoy
ABSTRACT In addition to feeding on carrion tissues and fluids, social wasps can also prey on immature and adult carrion flies, thereby reducing their populations and retarding the decomposition process of carcasses. In this study, we report on the occurrence and behavior of social wasps attracted to vertebrate carrion. The collections were made monthly from September 2006 to October 2007 in three environments (rural, urban, and forest) in six municipalities of southeast Brazil, using baited bottle traps. We collected Agelaia pallipes (Olivier, 1791) (n = 143), Agelaia vicina (Saussure, 1854) (n = 106), Agelaia multipicta (Haliday, 1836) (n = 18), and Polybia paulista Ihering, 1896 (n = 3). The wasps were observed feeding directly on the baits and preying on adult insects collected in the traps. Bait and habitat associations, temporal variability of social wasps, and possible forensic implications of their actions are discussed.
Revista Brasileira De Entomologia | 2007
Leonardo Gomes; Guilherme Gomes; Helena G. Oliveira; José Jordan Morlin Junior; Ivan Cesar Desuó; Margareth Maria de Carvalho Queiroz; Edilberto Giannotti; Claudio José Von Zuben
Considerable importance has been given to nest construction and larval food transport to the nest as a precondition for the eusociality of insects. Most adult hymenopterans feed on liquids, although bees and a few wasps may also feed on pollen. Carrion represents an additional source of protein for some species and they will scavenge for dead animals in the wild. This paper aims at analyzing Hymenoptera visitors on a pig carcass during the process of decomposition, in the summer of 2005 and the winter of 2006 in Brazil, and comparing the results with other studies in the Neotropical region. To our knowledge, this is the first study which described the occurence of Agelaia pallipes, Polybia paulista and Scaptotrigona depilis on decomposing carcasses in southeastern Brazil. It also raises the hypothesis of possible applications of Hymenoptera to achieve more precise PMI estimations, apart from other insects already known as having great importance in such estimates.
Anais da Sociedade Entomológica do Brasil | 1997
Edilberto Giannotti
Saussure apresentaram correlacao entre o tamanho do favo e a largurado pedunculo, bem como com a altura das celulas e numero de geracoes pro-duzidas. Foi verificado o tempo de duracao do ciclo biologico das colonias (199,3dias), numero de celulas construidas (102,9) e de adultos produzidos (94,2), alemdas taxas: 0,5 celulas/dia, 0,3 adultos/dia e 0,8 adultos/celula, da percentagem decelulas produtivas/ninho (55,2 %) e do numero de geracoes/colonia (ate 4). Onumero de instares larvais foi 5, a taxa de crescimento 1,3, o tempo de duracaodos estagios imaturos foi: ovos = 13,0 dias, larvas = 23,7, pupas - 22,2 e a duracaototal = 58,6 dias. A longevidade dos adultos foi 38,3 dias.PALAVRAS-CHAVE: Insecta, ciclo colonial, estagios imaturos, longevidade, tabela de vida.ABSTRACT - Studies on nests of the social wasp
Insectes Sociaux | 2010
A. da Silva-Melo; Edilberto Giannotti
Nine nests of Pachycondyla striata Fr. Smith, 1858 were excavated between 2006 and 2007 at the UNESP university campus in Rio Claro, SP, southeastern Brazil. The P. striata population was larger in the two nests excavated in the months of August and November, 2006. The nests of this species are simple and poorly elaborated, with chambers and tunnels close to the ground surface. P. striata places the pupae in chambers isolated from the other individuals. The lack of chambers with the specific purpose of conditioning food and garbage underscores the simplicity of these nests.
Acta Ethologica | 2008
Olga Coutinho Togni; Edilberto Giannotti
The primitive eusocial wasp Mischocyttarus cerberus forms colonies of independent foundation, without morphological differentiation among castes. Ants are natural enemies of the social wasps and defending the wasps’ nests involves chemical and active defense strategies. The aims of this work were to verify the kind of defense the wasps use most frequently in post-emergent colonies of M. cerberus. We also observed whether the nest was abandoned during the ant attack and whether any relationship existed between the forms that colony defense took and the number of adults, the number of cells, and the number of immature wasps. The study was carried out on the campus of Universidade Estadual Paulista of Rio Claro, São Paulo, Brazil. The 23 nests under study were mapped weekly, and 68 bioassays were performed by simulating ant attacks against the nests. The results showed that wasps used both active and chemical strategies for nest defense, and the PCA analysis showed that the aggressive behaviors of biting the ant, wings vibrating, gaster hitting, and abdomen pumping were the dominant terms; the PCA correlation values were 2.70, 2.54, 1.64, and 1.63, respectively. The colonies in pre- and post-male substages with few immature wasps and the nests in post-male substage with one adult were more correlated with the nonaggressive behaviors of hiding, staying immobile, and flying; their PCA correlation values were 3.12, 2.56, and 1.77, respectively. These results show that the number of immature wasps is an important factor in the kind and in the intensity of the defense behavior against ant attacks.
Check List | 2014
Olga Coutinho Togni; Gabriela de Almeida Locher; Edilberto Giannotti; Orlando Tobias Silveira
The Brazilian Atlantic Forest is of great relevance to biological conservation, and is among the areas in South America with the highest levels of diversity and endemism. The aim of this study was to survey the social wasp species in the subfamily Polistinae in Ubatuba, Sao Paulo state, in southwestern Brazil. Collecting work was conducted from May 2007 to May 2008 using attractive PET bottle traps and active searching. Twenty-one species belonging to eight genera were found, among which some may be considered rare in southeastern Brazil such as Mischocyttarus parallelogrammus and Polybia catillifex. The most abundant species were Agelaia angulata (64.31%), Agelaia nr. centralis (10.08%) and Angiopolybia pallens (8.49%). A correlation between species richness and relative humidity (r = 0.6435; p = 0.0176) was observed. Values of species richness were a little higher in the super humid (Sm = 11) than in the less humid (Sm = 9) season. This suggests that this season may have more favorable environmental conditions for a greater richness of species to found colonies. Despite not having a very high species richness compared with other surveys, the collected species in this study can be considered rare in southeastern Brazil, emphasizing the complexity of the Atlantic Forest biome and its relation to the diversity of wasps.
Journal of Insect Science | 2010
Olga Coutinho Togni; Edilberto Giannotti
Abstract The colony defense behavior of the wasp Mischocyttarus cerberus Richards (Hymenoptera, Vespidae) was studied to verify whether there were different reactions of wasps of different ages and hierarchical positions during attacks of ants. Detailed nest mapping was first performed, then the wasps were marked and were divided in four distinct categories: queens, older workers, younger workers and males. Tests were made simulating attacks of ants in the nests. The main results showed that the M. cerberus behaviors against ant attacks is more related to the age of the wasps than to their hierarchical position. The oldest wasps (queens and older workers) defend the nest more than the younger workers and males, representing a form of temporal polyethism.
Psyche: A Journal of Entomology | 2012
Adolfo da Silva-Melo; Edilberto Giannotti
Four colonies of the ant Pachycondyla striata were used to analyze the specie behavioral repertoire. Forty-six behavioral acts were recorded in laboratory. Here, we present the record the division of labor between the castes and the temporal polyethism of monomorphic workers. The queens carried out many of the behavioral traits recorded in this work however; they performed them less frequently compared to the worker. The workers activity involved chasing and feeding on fresh insects and usingthem to nourish larvae besides laying eggs in the C-posture, an activity also performed by queens, which is similar to that of wasps of the subfamily Stenogastrinae. The young workers were involved in activities of brood care, sexuate care, and nest maintenance, and the older workers were involved in defense, exploration, and foraging.
Journal of Insect Science | 2014
Viviane Cristina Tofolo; Edilberto Giannotti; Erika Fernandes Neves; Luis H.C. Andrade; Sandro M. Lima; Yzel Rondon Súarez; William Fernando Antonialli-Junior
Abstract Tropical ants commonly exhibit a hyper-dispersed pattern of spatial distribution of nests. In polydomous species, nests may be satellites, that is, secondary structures of the main nest, where the queen is found. In order to evaluate whether the ant Ectatomma opaciventre Roger (Formicidae: Ectatomminae) uses the strategy of building polydomous nests, the spatial distribution pattern of 33 nests in a 1,800 m 2 degraded area located in Rio Claro, SP, Brazil, were investigated using the nearest neighbor method. To complement the results of this investigation, the cuticular chemical profile of eight colonies was analyzed using Fourier transform infrared photoacoustic spectrosco-py (FTIR-PAS). The nests of E. opaciventre presented a hyper-dispersed or regular distribution, which is the most common in ants. The analysis of the cuticular hydrocarbons apparently con-firmed the hypothesis that this species is polydomous, since the chemical profiles of all studied colonies with nests at different sites were very similar to the chemical signature of the single found queen and were also different from those of colonies used as control.
Neotropical Entomology | 2016
M R Simoes; Edilberto Giannotti; V C Tofolo; M A Pizano; E L B Firmino; William Fernando Antonialli-Junior; Luis H.C. Andrade; Sandro M. Lima
Apiculture in Brazil is quite profitable and has great potential for expansion because of the favorable climate and abundancy of plant diversity. However, the occurrence of pests, diseases, and parasites hinders the growth and profitability of beekeeping. In the interior of the state of São Paulo, apiaries are attacked by ants, especially the species Camponotus atriceps (Smith) (Hymenoptera: Formicidae), which use the substances produced by Apis mellifera scutellata (Lepeletier) (Hymenoptera: Apidae), like honey, wax, pollen, and offspring as a source of nourishment for the adult and immature ants, and kill or expel the adult bees during the invasion. This study aimed to understand the invasion of C. atriceps in hives of A. m. scutellata. The individuals were classified into castes and subcastes according to morphometric analyses, and their cuticular chemical compounds were identified using Photoacoustic Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR-PAS). The morphometric analyses were able to classify the individuals into reproductive castes (queen and gynes), workers (minor and small ants), and the soldier subcaste (medium and major ants). Identification of cuticular hydrocarbons of these individuals revealed that the eight beehives were invaded by only three colonies of C. atriceps; one of the colonies invaded only one beehive, and the other two colonies underwent a process called sociotomy and were responsible for the invasion of the other seven beehives. The lack of preventive measures and the nocturnal behavior of the ants favored the invasion and attack on the bees.
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William Fernando Antonialli-Junior
European Union of Medical Specialists
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