Anna Himler
Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology
ahimler@email.arizona.edu
Phone: (520) 626-7009
Fax: (520) 621-9190
Office: BioSciences West 236
Mailing address: P.O. Box 210088, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721-0088
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Curriculum Vitae (pdf)
Research Interests
Publications
Publications
Peer-reviewed publications
Wetterer, J. K., A. G. Himler, and M. M. Yospin. 2000. Foraging ecology of the desert leaf-cutting ant, Acromyrmex versicolor, in Arizona (Hymenoptera: Formicidae). Sociobiology 37 (3B).
J. K. Wetterer, S. E. Miller, D. E. Wheeler, C. A. Olsen, D. A. Polhemus, M. Pitts, I. W. Ashton, A. G. Himler, M. M. Yospin, K. R. Helms, E. L. Harkin, J. Gallaher, C. E. Dunning, M. Nelson, J. Litsinger, A. Southern, and T. Burgess. 1999. Ecological dominance by Paratrechina longicornis (Hymenoptera: Formicidae), an invasive tramp ant, in Biosphere 2. Florida Entomologist 82(3): 381-388.
E. P. Glenn, D. Moore, M. Akutagawa, A. G. Himler, T. Walsh, and S. Nelson. 1999. Correlation between Gracilaria parvispora (Rhodophyta) biomass production and water quality factors on a tropical reef in Hawaii. Aquaculture 178: 323-331.
Publications in review, submitted, or in preparation
Himler, A. G., Caldera, E., Baer, B., Fernández-Marín, H. and U. G. Mueller. No sex in fungus-farming ants or their crops. Submitted to Proceedings of the Royal Society B.
Himler, A. G. and U. G. Mueller. Natural history, morphology, and nesting biology of the fungus-growing ant Mycetosoritis hartmanni (Attini, Formicidae). To be submitted to Insectes Sociaux.
Wetterer, J. K., A. G. Himler, M. M. Yospin, and A. L. Wetterer. Forager size and resource use in a desert harvester ant, Aphaenogaster albisetosa Mayr. To be submitted to Behavioral Ecology.
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