Search results for "hexapoda"

showing 7 items of 17 documents

High-speed duetting - latency times of the female acoustic response within the bush-cricket genera

2018

Abstract To find a mate, male and female bush-crickets of the family Phaneropteridae typically engage in duets. The male sings and the female responds. For mutual recognition, the amplitude pattern of the male song and the species-specific timing of the female response have been shown to be very important. In the seven studied species, belonging to the genera Leptophyes and Andreiniimon, these duets are extremely fast and nearly completely in the ultrasonic range. The females produce very short sounds by fast closing movements of the tegmina. They respond with species-specific delays of 20 to 150 ms after the beginning of the male song. The different latency times are probably not important…

Evolutionary BiologyInsectaArthropodaHexapodaduetTettigoniideafemale acoustic signalsEuropeEnsiferakatydidPhaneropterinaeAnimaliaOrthopteraNeogenePhaneropteridaeInvertebrataResearch Articlestridulatory movementZooKeys
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Fauna Europaea: Diptera – Brachycera

2015

Fauna Europaea provides a public web-service with an index of scientific names (including important synonyms) of all extant multicellular European terrestrial and freshwater animals and their geographical distribution at the level of countries and major islands (east of the Urals and excluding the Caucasus region). The Fauna Europaea project comprises about 230,000 taxonomic names, including 130,000 accepted species and 14,000 accepted subspecies, which is much more than the originally projected number of 100,000 species. Fauna Europaea represents a huge effort by more than 400 contributing taxonomic specialists throughout Europe and is a unique (standard) reference suitable for many user c…

Fauna EuropaeaParaphylyFauna EuropaeaInsectaArthropodaQH301-705.5BioinformaticsFaunaZoologyBiodiversity: Species Ecosystems & ConservationMonophylytaxonomySystematicsBiodiversity Informatics Fauna Europaea Taxonomic indexing zoology biodiversity taxonomy Diptera BrachyceraAnimaliaBiology (General)Calyptrataelcsh:QH301-705.5Ecology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsInvertebrataData ManagementbiodiversityEcologybiologyBrachyceraEcologyCenozoiczoologyDipteraHexapodabiology.organism_classificationEuropeEmpidoidealcsh:Biology (General)BrachyceraBiodiversity InformaticsTaxonomic indexingTaxonomy (biology)Neogene[SDE.BE]Environmental Sciences/Biodiversity and EcologyData Paper
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Xanastur (brachiopoda, stringocephalacea) nomen novum pro Xana García-Alcalde, 1972 (non Xana kurdjumov, 1917, hymenoptera, hexapoda)

2021

Garcia-Alcalde (1972) proposed the new genus Xana (type species Xana bubo Garcia-Alcalde, 1972) for a terebratulid brachiopod included in the superfamily Stringocephalacea from the Lower Devonian of the Cantabrian Mountains (Northwestern Spain). In an email message sent on April 3, 2018, the entomologist Dr. Eduardo I. Faundez, from the Patagonia Institute, Magallanes University, Chile, warned the author that Xana was a name previously used by Kurdjumov (1917) for a hymenopteran genus. Xana Garcia-Alcalde, 1972 would be so a later homonym of Xana Kurdjumov, 1917. In accordance with articles 52.3, 52.4, 53.2, 60.3 of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature (ICZN) (2000), it is prop…

HexapodaType speciesGeographybiologyInvalid nameGenusNomen novumGarciaInternational Code of Zoological NomenclaturePaleontologybiology.organism_classificationHomonym (biology)Genealogy
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World revision of the genus Encyrtoscelio Dodd (Hymenoptera: Scelionidae)

1995

The genus Encyrtoscelio Dodd is revised. E. apterus (Szelényi), E. mirissimus Dodd, E. turneri Waterston are redescribed, and six new species are described: E. cydni Caleca, E. japonicus Caleca, E. mediterraneus Caleca, E. miroides Caleca, E. spuratus Caleca and E. undecim Caleca. A key to separate females is presented, and is based on the number of antennomeres and claval sensillar formula, mandibular spurs and teeth, palpal formula and clypeus, and some cephalic characters. Morphological adaptations of the head and mandibles are discussed in relation to host habitat and oviposition site. Information on host associations, habitat preference, seasonal and daily occurrence of some species a…

SystematicsbiologyArthropodaEcologySystematic EntomologyClypeusPlatygastroideaHexapodaScelioninaePlatygastroideaArachnologybiology.organism_classificationHymenopteraCladisticstaxonomySettore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E ApplicataPlatygastridaeEgg parasitoid Hemiptera Cydnidae claval sensillar formula micropterous tooth in mandiblesAnimaliaTaxonomy (biology)insectsEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsScelionidaebiodiversity
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Evolutionary history and diversity of arthropod hemocyanins

2004

Hemocyanins are copper-containing, multi-subunit proteins that transport oxygen in the hemolymph of many molluscs and arthropods [Markl and Decher, Adv. Comp. Environ. Physiol. 13 (1992) 325; van Holde et al., J. Biol. Chem. 276 (2001) 15563]. Arthropod hemocyanins originated more than 550 million years ago from oxygen-consuming phenoloxidases. Hemocyanins are present in various Onychophora, Chelicerata, Myriapoda, Crustacea, and Hexapoda, but subunit evolution differs striking in these arthropod subphyla. Hemocyanins also gave rise to non-respiratory proteins (crustacean pseudo-hemocyanins, insect hexamerins, and hexamerin receptors), which most likely have storage functions.

biologymedia_common.quotation_subjectMyriapodaGeneral Physics and AstronomyCell BiologyAnatomyInsectbiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionCrustaceanHexapodaStructural BiologyEvolutionary biologyHemocyaninsHemolymphAnimalsGeneral Materials ScienceOnychophoraChelicerataArthropodArthropodsmedia_commonMicron
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Responses and adaptations of collembolan communities (Hexapoda: Collembola) to flooding and hypoxic conditions

2009

Standard ecological methods (pitfall traps, trunk eclectors and soil cores) were used to evaluate collembolan community responses to different flooding intensities. Three sites of a floodplain habitat near Mainz, Germany, with different flooding regimes were investigated. The structures of collembolan communities are markedly different depending on flooding intensity. Sites more affected by flooding are dominated by hygrophilic and hygrotolerant species, whereas the hardwood floodplain is dominated by mesophilic species. The survival strategies of the hygrophilic and hygrotolerant species include egg diapause and passive drifting. The physiological adaptations to hypoxic conditions of sever…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categorybiologyFloodplainEcologyHypoxia (environmental)Diapausebiology.organism_classificationmorphological adaptationAnoxic watersHexapodaSoil coreecological adaptationHabitatinundationbehavioral adaptationMetabolic rateegg diapauseAnimal Science and ZoologyAgronomy and Crop Sciencephysiological adaptation
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Chemical Ecology of Egg Parasitoids Associated with True Bugs

2012

Parasitoids representing some 15 families of Hymenoptera develop in insect eggs; three of these families, Platygastridae (= Scelionidae), Mymaridae, and Encyrtidae, are associated with Heteroptera. Several species of heteropteran egg parasitoids are or may be important for biological pest control. Successful parasitism of insect herbivores by insect parasitoids arises through several phases of host searching, which lead female wasps to the vicinity of, or in contact with, their hosts. During the host location process, females encounter and explore a variety of stimuli, among which chemical cues (i.e., semiochemicals or infochemicals) play a pivotal role. Female parasitoids are under selecti…

media_common.quotation_subjectBiological pest controlParasitismInsectHymenopterahost selectionHeteropteraMymaridaeEncyrtidaePlatygastridaelcsh:Zoologylcsh:QL1-991Ecology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commonScelionidaebiologyEcologyHeteropterafungiHexapodabiology.organism_classificationHymenopteraChemical ecologyVespoideaSettore AGR/11 - Entomologia Generale E ApplicataInsect Scienceegg parasitoidEncyrtidaeHymenoptera; Heteroptera; egg parasitoid; host selectionScelionidaePsyche: A Journal of Entomology
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