Diversity and ecology of the Family Orussidae (Insecta: Hymenoptera)

Carlos Henrique Marchiori *

Department of Biological Science, Instituto Federal Goiano, Goias, Brazil.
 
Review
World Journal of Advanced Science and Technology, 2023, 03(01), 014–031.
Article DOI: 10.53346/wjast.2023.3.1.0050
Publication history: 
Received on 16 March 2023; revised on 25 April 2023; accepted on 28 April 2023
 
Abstract: 
The biology of the Siricoidea superfamily, a sister group of the Symphyta and the family Orussidae (Parasitica: Woodwasps), can be imagined as the evolution of parasitoids would have been. The larvae of the Siricoidea wasps generally feed on dead wood that has been previously digested by a fungal symbiont. For this reason, many species carry spores of the fungus that they leave on the wood during oviposition. Diversity and ecology of parasitoid insects of the Family Orussidae (Insecta: Hymenoptera). In summary, basically, the following steps of analysis were covered:
  • Exhaustive reading of each national and international article aiming at a global understanding and discovery of the approach used by its authors;
  • Identification of the central ideas of each article;
  • Classification of ideas around nuclei of meaning;
  • Comparison between the different nuclei of meaning present in the studied articles;
  • Classification of the nuclei of meaning in broader axes (themes) around which the authors' discussions revolved and (e) writing of the interpretative syntheses of the theme.
Book scientific chapters, theses banks, university dissertations, national and international scientific articles, scientific journals book scientific chapters, theses banks, university dissertations, scientific journals and https://www.researchgate.net/post/How_to_increase_the_research_results_v... were also used. https://goo.gl/gLTTTs), HAL (https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/submit/index, SSRN (https://hq.ssrn.com/login/pubsigninjoin.cfm and ResearchGate (https ://www.researchgate.net/signup.SignUp.html).
 
Keywords: 
Coleoptera; Ectoparasites; Hosts: Larvae; Wood
 
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