Polistes canadensis

Polistes canadensis
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Hymenoptera
Family: Vespidae
Subfamily: Polistinae
Tribe: Polistini
Genus: Polistes
Species:
P. canadensis
Binomial name
Polistes canadensis
Synonyms[1]

Polistes canadensis is a species of red paper wasp found in the Neotropical realm. It is a primitively eusocial wasp as a member of the subfamily Polistinae. A largely predatory species, it hunts for caterpillar meat to supply its colony, often supplementing its developing larvae with nectar.[2] The most widely distributed American species of the genus Polistes, it colonizes multiple combs, which it rears year-round.[3]

Emerging from hibernation in the spring, the females found nests built from plant material such as dry grass and dead wood. These nests are not covered with an envelope and feature hexagonal cells in which eggs are laid and larvae develop.[2] The Polistes canadensis colony divides its colony among several combs and does not reuse these combs as a defense mechanism against parasites such as the tineid moth. On average, a single female queen with 9.1 foundresses usually initiates the construction of new combs and cells to form nests. The more foundresses in a colony, the more combs produced. On average, combs grow for 15.4 days and achieve a size of 30.8 cells.[4] One female queen exercises absolute dominance over all other females, often using lateral abdominal vibrations and stroking to suppress the aggressive behavior of her nestmates.[5]

While the queen handles all the nest reproduction, the subordinates work to care for, defend, and feed the nest instead. The divisions of labor within the nest correlate with the ages of Polistes canadensis.[6] Aside from the female division of labor, male Polistes canadensis engage in two alternative mating tactics: the role of the territorial male (who chases away intruding patrollers) and the role of the patroller (who flies from tree to tree and does not chase other males).[2] The study of the dominance relations within the Polistes canadensis has provided insight into the social organization that characterizes many social invertebrates.[5]

Taxonomy and phylogeny

The Swedish zoologist Carl Linnaeus described this species in 1758. The species epithet is a New Latin term canadensis used to refer to organisms associated with Canada. Linnaeus was misinformed about the origin of his specimen, because although it has an extensive range throughout North America, Polistes canadensis only occurs as far north as southern Arizona.[3][7]

Part of the social Vespidae, Polistes (the true paper wasps) marks the transition between solitary and highly social behavior among wasps. Polistes canadensis is a member of the New World Polistes subgenus Aphanilopterus, and closely related to Polistes annularis (from the Eastern US to Texas), Polistes erythrocephalus (Nicaragua through Brazil), and Polistes infuscatus (northern South America).[8]

Description and identification

Both male and female Polistes canadensis have a uniformly light to dark mahogany-brown body, sometimes with the head and thorax of a lighter shade.[9] Some feature a yellow apical margin of the first tergum as well. The wings are purplish black, and the veins and stigma are either black or reddish brown.[3] Polistes canadensis is a large-bodied wasp with a wing length ranging from 17.0 to 24.5 mm.[9]

Nests are constructed from plant fibers such as dry grass and dead wood, which, as with other paper wasps, are mixed with saliva to create water-resistant nests made out of papery material. These nests are not covered with an outer envelope and feature hexagonal cells in which eggs are laid and larvae develop. A growing Polistes canadensis colony often engages in fission into several combs, with an average size of 30.8 cells per comb. A large, mature but still growing colony may have over 800 cells distributed among over 30 combs.[2] Combs on vertical (walls and tree trunks) and sloping surfaces (tree limbs) hang with the petiole at the upper end. Colonies on tree trunks tend to add secondary combs above or below the first comb resulting in a linear arrangement. In contrast, nests on horizontal surfaces away from edges (i.e. ceilings) feature eccentric petioles with secondary combs bordering the central primary comb in a semicircular perimeter. No comb has more than one petiole. Petioles average 9.9 mm in length. When combs reach their final size, adult wasps can often step directly from one comb to another; the average distance between petioles of nearby combs is 2.9 cm. Although rare, adjacent combs sometimes fuse if they make contact.[4]

Distribution and habitat

Polistes canadensis is widely distributed over most of the Neotropical region, ranging from Arizona to Argentina. Some locations include, but are not limited to, Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, Colombia, Ecuador, Venezuela, British Guiana, Trinidad, Brazil, Peru, Bolivia and Paraguay.[3][10][7] Nests can often be found on human constructions such as buildings, in open habitats on trunks and large limbs of trees, and in sheltered sites such as in caves, sheds, or under peeling bark.[4]

Colony cycle

On average, a single female queen with 9.1 foundresses usually initiates the construction of new combs and cells to form nests. The more foundresses in a colony, the more combs produced. The preemergence period of comb development lasts from initiation of the first comb until the first adult offspring emerges, when the postemergence period begins. On average, combs grow for 15.4 days and achieve a size of 30.8 cells. Although comb enlargement tends to stop when the oldest brood in that comb had pupated, in many cases, the brood is still in the egg stage, so the stage of brood development in the comb does not seem to provide the cue that causes the queen to cease comb development. The egg to adult development period takes around 40 days, during which time the first helpers emerge in the nest. Unlike other species of Polistes, no more than one generation of broods is housed in a comb. Therefore, as older combs are abandoned, brood rearing moves into new combs, with most colonies having about 38 combs. This multiple comb-building tactic is thought to be a defense mechanism against brood loss to moth infestations. Broods are reared year round and two or three generations of offspring are reared during the colony cycle of several months.[4] Polistes canadensis is an asynchronous species, meaning that there appears to be no relationship between the time of the year and the colony’s development. Colonies are observed to be founded or abandoned at any time of the year, but the mean duration of the brood development stages differ between cold-dry and warm-rainy seasons.[11]

Behavior

Dominance hierarchy

One female queen exercises absolute dominance over all other females. The queen can only effectively control her subordinates if they are within her physical reach. She often suppresses the aggressive behavior of her nestmates through lateral abdominal vibrations and stroking. In contrast to the aggressive actions of the queen, the unmated females are unaggressive and often workers, even if they possess developed ovaries. Even the non-queen female with the most developed ovaries—the queen’s greatest potential challenger—will await the despotic queen’s demise without being aggressive. Because non-queens' interactions are rarely aggressive, if there is a queen, no other hierarchy amongst the subordinates will be seen. Only when no queen reigns does the frequency of aggressive interactions amongst the foundresses become significant; the level of aggressiveness and position within the nest often mirrors the reproductive state of the wasp. As the despotic queen ages and her dominance wanes, the colony cycle will gradually end as the nest is abandoned and the younger females of the nest, with the most developed ovaries, form new colonies.[5]

Reproductive suppression

While queen control in other Polistes species involves more non-confrontational behavior, Polistes canadensis is characterized by confrontational dominance—the queen will face aggressors and subordinates with a physical action that can sometimes escalate into fatal battles. This aggressiveness can especially be seen in the queen’s territorial defense of the egg-laying region of the nest. In the absence of the dominant queen, most of the subordinates within the nest would be capable of laying eggs if given access to empty cells. The queen is able to inhibit the ovary development and reproduction of her subordinates through physical attacks on any subordinates who approach the empty cells and newly laid eggs that she guards.[5] This is similar to the behavior of queens in Polistes instabilis, who suppress ovary development in workers by performing aggressive dominance interactions.[12]

Mating behavior

Male Polistes canadensis engage in two alternative mating tactics: the role of the territorial male (who chases away intruding patrollers) and the role of the patroller (who flies from tree to tree and does not chase other males). Patrollers have a smaller body size than territorial males. Because of their inability to successfully compete against the larger territorial males for territories, these smaller males resort to patrolling. While physical altercations between territorial males and intruding patrollers are rare (<5% of the time) as the intruders typically quickly depart, there is still significant competition over the possession of territories. Owning a territory tends to lead to more copulations, although the territory itself does not hold any resources or nests. The defense of these territories represents a lek polygyny mating system that is not based on resources. But rather, females perhaps incentivize males to compete for territories by restricting mating to these territories; this way, females know that the territorial males they choose to mate with are strong, healthy males. To attract females to the territories, males can rub their abdomens across the territories to apply pheromones. The patrollers do not just wait around for territories to be vacated; they will sneak matings with females in territories when the territorial males are temporarily away or distracted.[2]

Kin selection

As they work to feed, rear, and defend the nest, helper Polistes canadensis forgo personal reproduction in order to care for the nest. These workers are closely related to their female nestmates (r = 0.47 ± 0.049; n = 28 nests, 145 wasps) and may not only obtain high indirect fitness by helping their nestmates, but also may gain direct fitness (in terms of personal reproduction) by taking over the reproductive role of the queen if the queen dies. Many female workers choose to care for their nestmates while waiting to become breeders in their original nests. But for younger female workers, the benefits of direct fitness may be greater than the benefits of indirect fitness. These younger females can choose to leave their original nests for a more uncertain future (in terms of indirect and direct payoffs) to co-found a new nest. For older females who are more limited reproductively, however, the best and perhaps only option would be engage in risky foraging tasks to take care of others within their nests, thereby maximizing their own indirect fitness.[13]

Costs and benefits of sociality

Because new nests are often founded near the parent nest by a group of sisters, wasps in neighboring nests tend to be closely related (Mantel test, r=-0.138, p<0.05). Therefore, workers are able to best maximize their indirect fitness by not just taking care of their home nest, but by helping out several related nests nearby. Within Polistes canadensis, 56% of females have drifted to nearby nests. While workers share the most genetic similarity with their home nestmates, these genetic benefits are outweighed by the high predation risk associated with only investing in one nest. An egg in a nest has a 40% chance of being eaten by a predator before reaching adulthood. Therefore, drifting to invest in nearby nests increases the chances that at least some of the workers’ investments survive in the face of whole-nest predation. In addition, the presence of nestmates in high nest density can also reduce predation risk—with large number of nestmates, while some workers forage, significant numbers of nestmates can remain to defend the nest.[14]

Defense

Appropriate visual stimuli, such as the movements of nearby large or dark-colored objects, can elicit attacks by Polistes canadensis, which will fly at the object in alarm, attempting to sting it. An alarmed Polistes canadensis can release venom onto its nest; the odor of venom will prompt alarm responses in its nestmates, lower their thresholds for attack, and even attract more nestmates to the alarm. Through this chemical means of communicating alarm, the colony is able to rise quickly with its sting chambers open to defend its nest against predators. Because Polistes canadensis uniquely occupy multiple combs unattached to each other, the chemical alarm substance may have arisen as a necessary adaptation for a more efficient alarm for a sparsely dispersed nest.[15] It is not known whether Polistes canadensis can release venom at the nest independent of stinging behavior in order to communicate alarm to nestmates. While these wasps have been seen to open the sting chamber independently of venom release on the nest, the solo release of venom has not been observed. The Polistes canadensis may open its sting chambers as part of a defensive display (involves bending of the gaster toward the source of alarm) or in preparation for stinging.[16]

Parasites

Present in a majority of colonies, the tineid moth (belongs to an undescribed genus) is the most common pest of Polistes canadensis. The moth lays its eggs and then these eggs hatch into larvae that can burrow from cell to cell and prey on meconia and wasp pupae. While only 0.47% of the brood is lost to predation, the wasps perform many defense mechanisms to protect their nests from these infestations. Adult wasps attempt to remove and kill moth eggs and larvae by chewing down the edges of cells, coating the cells with an oral secretion that gives the nest a dark brownish appearance. The colonies then do not reuse these infested combs to raise another brood. The wasps also clip disused combs, reducing the rate of reinfestation by moths. In some instances, though, the comb clipping is also used to provide room for the construction of new combs. One of the key reasons the Polistes canadensis nests across multiple combs rather than building a single comb like much of the rest of its genus is as a defense mechanism against the infestation of these moths. The average amount of nesting material required to build a new cell in a comb decreases as the number of cells in the comb increases. Therefore, many inefficiencies are associated with constructing several smaller combs rather than single larger combs like much of the rest of the Polistes. For example, the need to build a separate petiole for each comb comes with the construction of multiple combs. By building multiple combs and failing to reutilize them, the costs Polistes canadensis pay to defend its nests are significant and quite large in terms of energy expended in nest construction per brood reared.[4] Other common parasites include three species of the obligate hymenopterous parasitoid: Seminota, Toechorychus albimaculatus and the Pachysomides iheringi. 4.4% of Polistes canadensis pupae are lost to these Hymenoptera.[4]

References

  1. ^ "Polistes canadensis (Linnaeus, 1758)". GBIF.org. Retrieved 1 May 2017.
  2. ^ a b c d e Polak, Michal (1993). "Competition for Landmark Territories among Male Polistes canadensis (L.) (Hymenoptera: Vespidae): Large-size Advantage and Alternative Mate-acquisition Tactics". Behavioral Ecology. 4 (4): 325–31. doi:10.1093/beheco/4.4.325.
  3. ^ a b c d Bequaert, Joseph C (1940). "An Introductory Study of Polistes in the United States and Canada with Descriptions of Some New North and South American Forms (Hymenoptera; Vespidæ)". Journal of the New York Entomological Society. 48 (1): 1–31.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Jeanne, Robert L (1979). "Construction and Utilization of Multiple Combs in Polistes canadensis in Relation to the Biology of a Predaceous Moth". Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology. 4 (3): 293–310. doi:10.1007/bf00297649. S2CID 36132488.
  5. ^ a b c d West-Eberhard, Mary Jane (1986). "Dominance Relations in Polistes canadensis (L.), a Tropical Social Wasp" (PDF). Monitore Zoologico Italiano. 20 (3): 263–81.
  6. ^ Giray, T; Giovanetti, M; West-Eberhard MJ (March 2005). "Juvenile hormone, reproduction, and worker behavior in the neotropical social wasp Polistes canadensis". Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 102 (9): 3330–5. Bibcode:2005PNAS..102.3330G. doi:10.1073/pnas.0409560102. PMC 552932. PMID 15728373.
  7. ^ a b Buck, Matthias; Cobb, Tyler P.; Stahlhut, Julie K.; Hanner, Robert H. (2008), "Unravelling cryptic species diversity in eastern Nearctic paper wasps, Polistes (Fuscopolistes), using male genitalia, morphometrics and DNA barcoding, with descriptions of two new species (Hymenoptera: Vespidae)", Zootaxa, 3502: 1–48
  8. ^ Pickett, Kurt M.; Wenzel, John W. (2004). "Phylogenetic analysis of the New World Polistes (Hymenoptera: Vespidae: Polistinae) using morphology and molecules". Journal of the Kansas Entomological Society. 77 (4): 742–60. doi:10.2317/e-18.1. S2CID 85737989.
  9. ^ a b O'Donnell, Sean; Jeanne, Robert L. (1991). "Interspecific occupation of a tropical social wasp colony (Hymenoptera: Vespidae:Polistes)". Journal of Insect Behavior. 4 (3): 397–400. doi:10.1007/bf01048286. S2CID 37783976.
  10. ^ Carpenter, James M. (1996). "Distributional Checklist of Species of the Genus Polistes (Hymenoptera: Vespidae; Polistinae, Polistini)". American Museum Novitates (3188): 1–39. Retrieved 2022-02-03.
  11. ^ Torres, Viviana De Oliveira. (2008). Bionomics Aspects of the Neotropical Social Wasp Polistes Canadensis Canadensis (Linnaeus) (Hymenoptera, Vespidae)." Revista Brasileira De Entomologia 53(1): 134–8.
  12. ^ Molina, Yamile (2006). "Mushroom Body Volume is Related to Social Aggression and Ovary Development in the Paper Wasp Polistes instabilis". Brain, Behavior and Evolution.
  13. ^ Sumner, S.; Kelstrup, H.; Fanelli, D. (2010). "Reproductive Constraints, Direct Fitness and Indirect Fitness Benefits Explain Helping Behaviour in the Primitively Eusocial Wasp, Polistes canadensis". Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 277 (1688): 1721–8. doi:10.1098/rspb.2009.2289. PMC 2871861. PMID 20129991.
  14. ^ Sumner, Seirian; Lucas, Eric; Barker, Jessie; Isaac, Nick (2007). "Radio-Tagging Technology Reveals Extreme Nest-Drifting Behavior in a Eusocial Insect". Current Biology. 17 (2): 140–5. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2006.11.064. PMID 17240339.
  15. ^ Jeanne, R.L. (1982). "Evidence for an Alarm Substance In Polistes canadensis". Experientia. 38 (3): 329–30. doi:10.1007/bf01949373. S2CID 20427046.
  16. ^ Ross, Kenneth G., and Robert W. Matthews. The Social Biology of Wasps. Ithaca: Comstock Pub. Associates, 1991.

Read other articles:

أفرام هيرشكو   معلومات شخصية الميلاد 31 ديسمبر 1937 (87 سنة)[1]  مواطنة المجر إسرائيل  عضو في الأكاديمية الوطنية للعلوم،  وأكاديمية إسرائيل للعلوم والإنسانيات،  والأكاديمية المجرية للعلوم،  والأكاديمية الصينية للعلوم،  والأكاديمية الأمريكية للفنون والع�...

 

 

Wade BarrettBarrett pada tahun 2016Nama lahirStuart Alexander BennettLahir10 Agustus 1980 (umur 43)Penwortham, Lancashire, InggrisKarier gulat profesionalNama ringBad News BarrettKing BarrettLawrence KnightPinnacle[1]Stu BennettStu SandersWade BarrettTinggi6 ft 7 in (201 cm)[2]Berat246 pon (112 kg)[2]Asal dariManchester, EnglandPreston, England[2]Dilatih olehAl Snow[3][4]Jon Richie[3][4]Debut2004[...

 

 

RinascitaStato Italia LinguaItaliano Periodicitàmensile (1944-1962) settimanale (dal 1962) GenereSettimanale politico-culturale FondatorePalmiro Togliatti Fondazione1944 Chiusura18 febbraio 1991 SedeRoma EditoreSocietà Rinascita editoriale srl   Modifica dati su Wikidata · ManualeRinascita è stata una rivista italiana, in origine un mensile politico-culturale del Partito Comunista Italiano. Fu fondata da Palmiro Togliatti nel 1944. Indice 1 Storia del periodico 2 Direttori ...

Questa voce sull'argomento stagioni delle società calcistiche italiane è solo un abbozzo. Contribuisci a migliorarla secondo le convenzioni di Wikipedia. Segui i suggerimenti del progetto di riferimento. Associazione Sportiva RegginaStagione 1951-1952Sport calcio Squadra Reggina Allenatore Pietro Piselli Serie C12º posto girone D 1950-1951 1952-1953 Si invita a seguire il modello di voce Questa pagina raccoglie i dati riguardanti l'Associazione Sportiva Reggina nelle competizion...

 

 

2021 book about Donald Trump's presidency I Alone Can Fix It: Donald J. Trump's Catastrophic Final Year AuthorCarol D. Leonnig and Philip RuckerCountryUnited StatesSubjectsPresidency of Donald TrumpCOVID-19 pandemic in the United StatesGenreNon-fictionPublishedJuly 20, 2021PublisherPenguin PressMedia typePrint, e-book, audiobookPages592ISBN9780593298947 I Alone Can Fix It: Donald J. Trump's Catastrophic Final Year is a nonfiction book written by Washington Post reporters Carol D. Leonnig...

 

 

Giovanna Paleologa del Monferrato (Casale Monferrato, dicembre 1467[1] – Saluzzo, 29 dicembre 1490[2]) è stata una nobildonna italiana, marchesa consorte di Saluzzo. Indice 1 Biografia 2 Discendenza 3 Ascendenza 4 Note 5 Bibliografia 6 Altri progetti Biografia Marchesato del MonferratoPaleologi Teodoro I Figli Giovanni II Violante Giovanni II Figli Ottone III Giovanni III Teodoro II Margherita Ottone III Giovanni III Teodoro II Figli Giovanni Giacomo Sofia Giovanni Giacomo ...

State park in Michigan, United States Straits State ParkView of Mackinac Bridge from the state parkLocation within the state of MichiganShow map of MichiganStraits State Park (the United States)Show map of the United StatesLocationMoran Township and St. IgnaceMackinac County, MichiganNearest citySt. Ignace, MichiganCoordinates45°51′10″N 84°43′10″W / 45.85278°N 84.71944°W / 45.85278; -84.71944Area181 acres (0.73 km2)Established1924Governing bo...

 

 

This article relies excessively on references to primary sources. Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources. Find sources: Theosophical Society Point Loma - Blavatskyhouse – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (January 2024) (Learn how and when to remove this message) Part of a series onTheosophy Founders Helena Blavatsky William Quan Judge Henry Steel Olcott Theosophists Annie Besant Isabel Cooper-Oakley Robert Crosb...

 

 

This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these template messages) This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Scottish Solicitors' Discipline Tribunal – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (January 2014) (Lear...

Russian self-propelled tank destroyer 2S25 Sprut-SD 2S25 Sprut-SD at the 2008 Moscow Victory Day paradeTypeLight tankSelf-propelled amphibious tank destroyerPlace of originRussiaService historyIn service2005−present[1]Used byRussiaProduction historyDesigned1984–2001[1]ManufacturerVolgograd Tractor PlantProduced2001–2010, 2018–presentSpecificationsMass18 t (20 short tons; 18 long tons)Length9.77 m (32 ft 1 in) (gun forward)7.08...

 

 

2020年夏季奥林匹克运动会波兰代表團波兰国旗IOC編碼POLNOC波蘭奧林匹克委員會網站olimpijski.pl(英文)(波兰文)2020年夏季奥林匹克运动会(東京)2021年7月23日至8月8日(受2019冠状病毒病疫情影响推迟,但仍保留原定名称)運動員206參賽項目24个大项旗手开幕式:帕维尔·科热尼奥夫斯基(游泳)和马娅·沃什乔夫斯卡(自行车)[1]闭幕式:卡罗利娜·纳亚(皮划艇)&#...

 

 

Logo baru Asia News Network (ANN)[1] yang diluncurkan pada 28 Mei 2016 dalam ANN Board Meeting di Beijing, Tiongkok. Logo baru tersebut dirancang oleh perancang grafis Steven Cruz 「スティーブン」 pada Februari 2016. Asia News Network (ANN) adalah sebuah jaringan dari 22 grup media di kota-kota Asia, yang dibentuk untuk menyediakan pendapatan perusahaan dan menyoroti peristiwa-peristiwa besar di kawasan tersebut. ANN bermarkas besar di kantor Nation Multimedia Group, Bangkok. ...

国家国际发展合作署 1999年规定:印章直径4.5厘米,中央刊国徽,由国务院制发。 国家国际发展合作署标识 中华人民共和国对外援助标识 主要领导 署长 罗照辉 副署长(4) 赵峰涛、钟海东、刘俊峰、杨伟群 机构概况 上级机构 中华人民共和国国务院 机构类型 国务院直属机构 行政级别 副部级 统一社会信用代码 11100000MB0187100G 本级中共组织 中国共产党国家国际发展合作署�...

 

 

Former museum in Southwark, London, England The Cuming Museum The Cuming Museum in Walworth Road in Elephant and Castle, within the London Borough of Southwark, London, England, was a museum housing the collection of the Cuming family and later collections on Southwark's history.[1] As of 2021, its collections have been rehoused in a new Southwark Heritage Centre.[2] Richard Cuming (1777–1870) started his collecting life when he was only five years old, with some fossils and...

 

 

Forest in New Jersey, United States This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Ramapo Mountain State Forest – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (December 2021) (Learn how and when to remove this message) Ramapo Mountain State ForestStream along the MacEvoy Trail in Ramapo Mountain State Forest...

English antiquarian Anthony WoodPortrait of Wood by Michael BurghersBorn(1632-12-17)17 December 1632Oxford, EnglandDied28 November 1695(1695-11-28) (aged 62)Oxford, EnglandResting placeMerton College, OxfordNationalityEnglishOther namesAnthony à WoodEducationNew College School, Oxford; Lord Williams's School, Thame; Merton College, OxfordOccupationAntiquaryEmployerUniversity of OxfordAwardsMA (Oxford, 1655) Anthony Wood (17 December 1632 – 28 November 1695), who styled himself An...

 

 

French chemist and apothecary (1703–1770) Guillaume-François RouelleBorn15 September 1703Mathieu, Kingdom of FranceDied3 August 1770 (aged 66)Paris, Kingdom of FranceNationalityFrenchKnown forBaseScientific careerFieldsChemistry Guillaume François Rouelle (French pronunciation: [ɡijom fʁɑ̃swa ʁwɛl]; 15 September 1703 – 3 August 1770)[1] was a French chemist and apothecary. In 1754 he introduced the concept of a base into chemistry as a substance which reacts w...

 

 

تعتمد هذه المقالة اعتماداً كاملاً أو شبه كامل على مصدر وحيد. فضلاً، ساهم في تحسين هذه المقالة بإضافة مصادر إضافية لضمان وجهة النظر المحايدة.   ميّز عن محمد طوسون باشا. سمو الأمير محمد طوسون بن محمد علي پاشا معلومات شخصية الميلاد 1794مألبانيا الوفاة 1816م مصر سبب الوفاة الإ...

Questa voce o sezione sull'argomento cucine nazionali non cita le fonti necessarie o quelle presenti sono insufficienti. Puoi migliorare questa voce aggiungendo citazioni da fonti attendibili secondo le linee guida sull'uso delle fonti. La svíčková na smetaně Il vepřo-knedlo-zelo La cucina ceca (česká kuchyně) è l'espressione dell'arte culinaria sviluppata nella Repubblica Ceca. Questo tipo di cucina, in particolare quella regionale boema, è strettamente imparentata con quella...

 

 

Business process improvement technique Not to be confused with Sigma 6 (disambiguation) or 5S (methodology). Part of a series of articles onMachine industry Manufacturing methods Batch production Job production Flow production Lean manufacturing Agile manufacturing Industrial technologies PLM RCM TPM VDM QRM TOC Six Sigma TQM ZD Information and communication ISA-88 ISA-95 ERP IEC 62264 B2MML Process control PLC DCS SCADA vte Six Sigma (6σ) is a set of techniques and tools for process improve...