In addition to their pollinators, Ficus species are exploited by a group of non-pollinating chalcidoid wasps whose larvae develop in its figs.
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Both Aublet and Linnaeus published descriptions of this species in 1775, basing them on an illustration of Charles Plumier's published posthumously in Plantarum americanarum, quas olim Carolus Plumierus detexit(Amsterdam, 1755–1760).
Americana | Ficus | Tilia americana | Americana (music) | Ficus religiosa | Encyclopedia Americana | Ficus elastica | Ficus aurea | Ulmus americana | Ficus benghalensis | Americana, São Paulo | Americana Music Association | Ximenia americana | Vallisneria americana | Pax Americana and the Weaponization of Space | Pax Americana | Opuntia ficus-indica | Ficus microcarpa | Ficus macrophylla | Ficus citrifolia | Americana (game show) | Americana at Brand | americana | Ulmus americana 'Patmore' | Prunus americana | Pollinating fig wasp (''Ceratosolen'' sp.) collected on ''Ficus septica | Pilularia americana | Ovipositing non-pollinating fig ''Apocrypta'' on Ficus sur | Justicia americana | Genipa americana |