View allAll Photos Tagged termite
We saw a few trees in Weetootla Crrek which had suffered termite damage. While active they made channels up tthe tree, eating out it's heart and eventually killing their host.
Notes: Cazneaux children - Jean (left front), Carmen (right front), Rainbow (left), Beryl (behind). Identification from donor.
Harold Cazneaux (1878-1953)
Format: gelatin silver photograph, 22 cm x 17 cm
Date Range: 1915, more accurate date from NLA see link below.
Location: Wentworth Falls, general area
Licensing: Attribution, share alike, creative commons.
Repository: Blue Mountains Library library.bmcc.nsw.gov.au
Part of: Local Studies, Cazneaux collection PF 2987-1
Provenance: gift of Anne Christoffersen in memory of Carmen Field, daughter of the artist. Thanks to Gael Newton.
Links: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harold_Cazneaux
same as - nla.gov.au/nla.obj-144143495/view
Termites i found under some bark. You can see workers, soldiers, and a reproductive alate here.
Up Close with Nature: orionmystery.blogspot.com/
Termites i found under some bark. You can see nymphs of various stages, workers, soldiers here. Eggs too (not in this image).
Up Close with Nature: orionmystery.blogspot.com/
This is what you see within seconds if you poke a small hole in a termite nest. Within 2 hours the hole was completely repaired.
Kabalebo, Suriname
Termites i found under some bark. You can see nymphs of various stages, workers, and soldiers here. Eggs too (not in this image).
Up Close with Nature: orionmystery.blogspot.com/
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Termite
From Wikipedia
The termites are a group of social insects usually classified at the taxonomic rank of order Isoptera (but see also taxonomy below). As truly social animals, they are termed eusocial along with the ants and some bees and wasps which are all placed in the separate order Hymenoptera. Termites mostly feed on dead plant material, generally in the form of wood, leaf litter, soil, or animal dung, and about 10% of the estimated 4,000 species (about 2,600 taxonomically known) are economically significant as pests that can cause serious structural damage to buildings, crops or plantation forests. Termites are major detrivores, particularly in the subtropical and tropical regions, and their recycling of wood and other plant matter is of considerable ecological importance.
As eusocial insects, termites live in colonies that, at maturity, number from several hundred to several million individuals. They are a prime example of decentralised, self-organised systems using swarm intelligence and use this cooperation to exploit food sources and environments that could not be available to any single insect acting alone. A typical colony contains nymphs (semi-mature young), workers, soldiers, and reproductive individuals of both genders, sometimes containing several egg-laying queens.
Termites are sometimes called "white ants", though they are unrelated to true ants.
### ........must view as slide show.......##
...in morning light, Barren Grounds Nature Reserve.
Chamonix 045F1, Rodenstock Apo-Sironar-S 150mm, Shanghai 100, PMK
Using #sonya7riii
lens: 10X Spencer objective lens with Canon FD bellow
Flash : 4 Led lights
NA: 0.25
Number of pictures : 205
Step size : 15 um
stacked: Wemacro using #affinityphoto
edited by Adobe lightroom
Drepanotermes rubriceps
ID Tony Postle on BowerBird 26 Sept 2016
I found a hole with antennae showing. I wasn't sure what they were but the insects backed down the hole quickly when I touched the hole with a straw.
I came past later and there was a stream of termites running for the hole. It didn't take long for them all to disappear down the hole. I was hoping they would come out later but didn't see them again.
I didn't see/take notice of any evidence of termite mounds but thought many of the sticks on the ground had been eaten by termites and covered in sand.
From Yalgoo area. September 2016
Photos: Jean
"The universe speaks, You just need to listen"
Pattern created by winged termites.
Bandarban, April 2013
Look at the mandibles! Scary, yet fascinating. I was on my knees and elbows, photographing one when all of a sudden I felt a sharp pain on my left wrist - one of the soldiers got its mandibles locked into my flesh! Ouch.
Macrotermes carbonarius (ID suggested by Stephane De Greef)
The Magnetic Mounds in Litchfield may be more famous but this field of Termite Mounds in Djukbinj National Park is far more extensive.
Litchfield National Park, close to Darwin, is an excellent place to view the two different types of Termite mounds in large numbers. The robust Cathedral mounds can attain a height of 7 metres, while the smaller blade-like Magnetic mounds are constructed on an East-West axis so that the Sun's rays throughout the day are concentrated along the thicker "sharp" edge of the structure.