Search results for "010607 zoology"

showing 10 items of 109 documents

Rediscovery and identity of Pumilomyia protrahenda De Stefani (Diptera, Cecidomyiidae) in Sicily with redescription and reassessment of its taxonomic…

2016

Abstract A population of the gall midge Pumilomyia protrahenda De Stefani, 1919 causing galls on Artemisia arborescens (Asteraceae) was discovered near Palermo (Sicily) in 2008. This species had not been found since 1918. Detailed study of morphological characters of adults, larvae and pupae revealed that Pumilomyia protrahenda belongs to the genus Rhopalomyia Rübsaamen, 1892, tribe Rhopalomyiini. The monotypic genus Pumilomyia De Stefani, 1919 is therefore synonymized under Rhopalomyia Rübsaamen, 1892. Rhopalomyia protrahenda comb. n. is redescribed, with important morphological characters illustrated. Adults have one-segmented palpi, antennae with 12–13 short flagellomeres and long legs w…

0106 biological sciencesArtemisia arborescensPopulation010607 zoologyCecidomyiidaegall midgeRhopalomyia protrahenda01 natural sciencesRhopalomyia protrahenda gall midge Artemisia arborescens Italylcsh:ZoologyBotanyAnimaliaGalllcsh:QL1-991educationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsLarvaeducation.field_of_studybiologyDipteraarborescensAsteraceaebiology.organism_classificationprotrahendaPupa010602 entomologySettore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E ApplicataArtemisiaItalyCecidomyiidaeMidgeAnimal Science and ZoologyTaxonomy (biology)RhopalomyiaResearch ArticleZooKeys
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Diplurans of subsurface terrestrial habitats in the Iberian Peninsula, with a new species description (Diplura: Campodeidae)

2017

Although Iberian subsurface terrestrial habitats have been sampled for a half century, they remain poorly known. During the last five years much more sampling of these subsurface habitats has been made, mainly in scree slopes (also called colluvial Mesovoid Shallow Substratum habitats, MSS) but also in alluvial debris of temporal watercourses (alluvial MSS). In our study, diplurans, a basal hexapod group, were extracted from two hundred traps installed in 69 locations in the mountain ranges of six different regions of the Iberian Peninsula, from north to south: Cantabrian, Pyrenees, Iberic System, Central System, Prebaetic and Penibaetic Mountains. A total of 1251 specimens in fifteen diplu…

0106 biological sciencesArthropodaAlluvial MSS habitatsEcology010607 zoologyHexapodaBiologybiology.organism_classificationDiplura010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesHexapodaSpecies descriptionColluvial MSS habitatsMesovoid Shallow SubstratumHabitatCampodeidaeCampodeaScreeAnimal Science and ZoologyAlluviumDipluraScree slope faunaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsTaxonomy
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Standardised spider (Arachnida, Araneae) inventory of Kilpisjarvi, Finland

2020

Abstract Background A spider taxonomy and ecology field course was organised in Kilpisjarvi Biological Station, northern Finland, in July 2019. During the course, four 50 × 50 m plots in mountain birch forest habitat were sampled following a standardised protocol. In addition to teaching and learning about spider identification, behaviour, ecology and sampling, the main aim of the course was to collect comparable data from the Kilpisjarvi area as part of a global project, with the purpose of uncovering global spider diversity patterns. New information A total of 2613 spiders were collected, of which 892 (34%) were adults. Due to uncertainty of juvenile identification, only adults are includ…

0106 biological sciencesArthropodaBiogeographyNephrozoa010607 zoologyProtostomiaZoologyTheridiidaeCircumscriptional names of the taxon under010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesArachnidaThelyphonidaAnimaliaBilateriaJuvenileSubarcticlcsh:QH301-705.5Ecology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPardosaSpiderSpider taxonomyEcologybiologyCephalornisbiology.organism_classificationLinyphiidaeGeographylcsh:Biology (General)BiogeographyLaplandNotchia1181 Ecology evolutionary biologyAraneaeEcdysozoaChasmataspididaThomisidaeCoelenterata
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Review of the genusiLanchnophorus/i(Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Rhyparochromidae) with description of three new species and other nomenclatural changes.

2017

The generic name Lanchnophorus Reuter, 1887, deemed for a long time to be unavailable as incorrect original spelling of Lachnophorus (in fact Lachnophorus Distant, 1903 is an unjustified emendation of the former), is restored as a valid name of the genus. Lachnesthus Bergroth, 1915, syn. nov. (new name for the preoccupied Lachnophorus Distant, 1903) is considered junior synonym of Lanchnophorus. The following nomenclatural changes are proposed: Lanchnophorus flavus (Scudder, 1971) comb. nov. = Lachnesthus chinai Scudder, nomen nudum; Lanchnophorus guttulatus Reuter, 1887, comb. restit. = Lachnophorus albidomaculatus Distant, 1913, syn. nov. = Lachnesthus rodriguezensis China, 1925, syn. nov…

0106 biological sciencesAsia010607 zoologyBiologybiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural scienceslanguage.human_languageSierra leoneHeteropteraValid nameGenusTamilAfricaRhyparochromidaelanguageEthnologyAnimalsAnimal Science and ZoologyNomen nudumChinaNomenclatureAnimal DistributionEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsZootaxa
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Another alien bug in Europe: the first case of transcontinental introduction <br />of the Asiatic burrower bug Macroscytus subaeneus (Dallas, 1…

2019

The Oriental burrower bug Macroscytus subaeneus (Dallas, 1851) (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Cydnidae: Cydninae), presently known only from single localities in Flores (Indonesia), the Philippines and Thailand, is recorded from the United Kingdom (hereafter U.K.). A single female specimen was collected on the semi-rural edge of Bath city by a Starling (Sturnus vulgaris L.) and taken to its nest from which it was retrieved during 2015. The specimen is illustrated and its diagnostic characters are provided. We hypothesize that this specimen could have been imported with a shipping container from Thailand. 

0106 biological sciencesAsiaPhilippinesMacroscytus subaeneus010607 zoologyZoologyalien speciesAlien010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesHemipteraHeteropteraNestAnimalsburrower bugCydnidaetranscontinental dispersalmaritime transportEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsbiologyHeteropteraStarlingThailandbiology.organism_classificationHemipteraUnited KingdomEuropeSturnusIndonesiaFemaleAnimal Science and ZoologyZootaxa
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DNA-Based Identification of Larvae Offers Insights into the Elusive Lifestyles of Native Olive Seed Wasps in South Africa

2020

Wild and cultivated olives in the Western Cape of South Africa are direct or indirect hosts to a high diversity of Braconidae and Chalcidoidea wasps. Olive-associated Braconidae are known to parasitise the larvae of Bactrocera oleae (Rossi), and probably also Bactrocera biguttula (Bezzi). The lifestyle of olive-associated Chalcidoidea is not fully understood, and may include phytophagous, parasitoid and hyperparasitoid species. Some chalcids could represent olive seed wasps (OSW), a generic term that designates the seed feeders responsible for losses in commercial olive production. In order to obtain direct DNA-based evidence for the lifestyle of four putative OSW – Eupelmus spermophilus Si…

0106 biological sciencesBactrocera biguttulaLarvabiologySpermophilus010607 zoologyZoologybiology.organism_classification01 natural sciencesChalcidoidea Eupelmus spermophilus Eurytoma oleae Eurytoma varicolor Neochrysocharis formosus Olea europaea PCR multiplex Sycophila aethiopicaParasitoid010602 entomologyNeochrysocharisSettore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E ApplicataInsect ScienceBactroceraIdentification (biology)Agronomy and Crop ScienceBraconidaeEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsAfrican Entomology
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Redescription of the forgotten New Caledonian weevil genus Callistomorphus Perroud, 1865 (Coleoptera, Curculionidae, Eugnomini) with descriptions of …

2019

Callistomorphusis one of the “forgotten” genera of the tribe Eugnomini inhabiting rain forest in New Caledonia. In this paper, the genusCallistomorphusand the type speciesC.farinosusare redescribed. Eight new species,Callistomorphusfundatussp. n.,C.gibbussp. n.,C.malleussp. n.,C.minimussp. n.,C.rutaisp. n.,C.szoltysisp. n.,C.torosussp. n.andC.turbidussp. n., are described, originating from the main island of New Caledonia. Illustrations and SEM photographs of the external morphology and the male and female terminalia are provided, as well as dorsal habitus colour photographs of the adults, a key to the species, a distribution map, and a discussion of the systematic position ofCallistomorphu…

0106 biological sciencesCallistomorphusInsectaArthropoda010607 zoologyBiodiversityZoology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesnew taxaCurculionidaetaxonomyBeetlesNew CaledoniaGenuslcsh:ZoologyAnimalialcsh:QL1-991EndemismEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsbiodiversityweevilsbiologyWeevilTerminaliaendemic speciesbiology.organism_classificationCurculionoideaColeopteraType speciesGeographyCurculionidaeAnimal Science and ZoologyTaxonomy (biology)
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Revision of the Afrotropical genus Leiodontocercus (Orthoptera, Tettigoniidae, Phaneropterinae) with a description of four new species

2020

Specimens belonging to the genus Leiodontocercus are rare or even absent in natural history museum collections; this is likely due to at least two reasons, notably, their relatively small size, and, the sheer difficulty in finding them in dense Afrotropical forests. Until recently, three species from less than fifteen specimens were known from this genus, whose identification relied on a singular diagnostic character, that is, the shape of the male cerci. The present contribution is based on the examination of thirty specimens collected from various countries, ranging from central to west Africa; apart from the male cerci, a second diagnostic character – the stridulatory file – is used to d…

0106 biological sciencesCentral and West AfricaInsectaPleistoceneArthropodaOrthopteraTettigoniidae010607 zoologyZoology010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencestaxonomyAdaptive radiationlcsh:ZoologyTettigoniidaeIce ageAnimaliaLeiodontocercuslcsh:QL1-991Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsnew speciesbiologyCentral and West Africa leaf katydids new species speciation taxonomyCentral africabiology.organism_classificationTettigonioidealeaf katydidsGeographyspeciationOrthopteraAnimal Science and ZoologyTaxonomy (biology)PhaneropterinaeResearch Article
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Palaearctic species of Charipinae (Hymenoptera, Figitidae): two new species, synthesis and identification key

2018

The Charipinae Dalla Torre & Kieffer, 1910 present in the Palaearctic region are revised; 2410 specimens have been identified, belonging to 75 species: 52 to Alloxysta, one to Apocharips, six to Dilyta and 16 to Phaenoglyphis. For 33 species, new country-level distribution records are provided. Two new species are here described: Alloxysta palearctica Ferrer-Suay & Pujade-Villar sp. nov. and Alloxysta pascuali Ferrer-Suay sp. nov. A diagnosis for these species is included and their diagnostic features are shown in different figures. A key to identify all the species of Charipinae in the Palaearctic region is also given.

0106 biological sciencesCharipinaePhaenoglyphisInsectaFigitidaeArthropoda010607 zoologyCharipidaeZoologyIdentification keyHymenopteraPhaenoglyphisBiology01 natural sciencesCharipinaekeylcsh:Botanylcsh:ZoologyAnimalialcsh:QL1-991Ecology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsApocharipsTaxonomyFigitidaeBiodiversitybiology.organism_classificationHymenopteralcsh:QK1-989010602 entomologyPalaearcticDilytaKey (lock)Taxonomy (biology)Alloxysta
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Charipinae (Hymenoptera: Cynipoidea: Figitidae) present in the Museum of Natural History of the University of Wroclaw, with an identification key for…

2020

Charipinae (Cynipoidea: Figitidae) deposited in the Museum of Natural History of Wroclaw University (Poland) have been studied. Seven species are recorded for the first time from Poland: Alloxysta brachyptera (Hartig, 1840), A. castanea (Hartig, 1841), A. citripes (Thomson, 1862), A. consobrina (Zetterstedt, 1838), A. mullensis (Cameron, 1883), A. nottoni Ferrer-Suay & Pujade-Villar, 2015 and Phaenoglyphis heterocera (Hartig, 1841). The presence of previously recorded species is confirmed and new records are specified. A key to all Charipinae species ever recorded in Poland is given.

0106 biological sciencesCharipinaebiologyCynipoideaEcology010607 zoologyIdentification keyFigitidaeHymenopterabiology.organism_classification010603 evolutionary biology01 natural sciencesNatural historyInsect ScienceEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPolish Journal of Entomology
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