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  • 2005-2009  (3)
  • 1940-1944  (23,777)
  • 1941  (23,777)
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Year
  • 1
    Series available for loan
    Series available for loan
    Karlsruhe : Braun ; 1.1941(1940) - 59.1999(1997); 2000(1999) -
    Call number: S 91.0710 ; S 91.0710 (2020) ; S 91.0710 (2021) ; S 91.0710 (2022) ; S 91.0710 (2023)
    Type of Medium: Series available for loan
    ISSN: 0174-254X
    Location: Archive - must be ordered
    Location: Archive - must be ordered
    Location: Archive - must be ordered
    Location: Archive - must be ordered
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
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  • 2
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    Unknown
    Diesterweg
    Publication Date: 2024-04-22
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 3
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    In:  Blumea: Biodiversity, Evolution and Biogeography of Plants vol. 4 no. 2, pp. 320-321
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Korthalsella Dacrydii (RIDLEY) DANSER, the only species of its genus that is parasitic on Conifers, was, up to the present, only known from two mountains, viz., Mt. Tahan in the Malay Peninsula, and Mt. Gede in Java. For the latter mountain it was, for the first time, not discovered in the living state, but, by Dr VAN STEENIS, on herbarium specimens of Podocarpus imbricata, collected by KOORDERS and VAN DER HOEVEN in 1890. Later it was collected several times on Mt. Gede in the living state.\nWhile examining the materials of Podocarpus and Dacrydium of the Leiden, Buitenzorg, and Groningen Herbaria, I was so fortunate as to discover, in the same way as Dr VAN STEENIS did, several new localities of Korthalsella Dacrydii, and these not only in Java, but also in Sumatra, Borneo, and Timor. The localities now known are the following.
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
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  • 4
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    In:  Blumea: Biodiversity, Evolution and Biogeography of Plants vol. 4 no. 3, pp. 493-495
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Anthericum Rouwenortii De Gorter, a species not occurring in the Index Kewensis, was described by De Gorter in his Catalogus Plantarum Horti Ulenpassiani, 1783, p. 51 and 52 as follows: p. 51 : AUTHERICUM. 2. Rouwenortii. foliis planis carinatis, scapo ramoso, corollis patentibus. Tab. I. Habitat in Zeylona? Planta e seminibus e Zeylona, si bene meminit III. Baro De ROUWENOORT missis, ante multos annos enata colitur adhuc in Caldario Horti Uilenpassiani, ubi quotannis floret. Descriptio. Badix crassa, tuberosa, subtranslucida. Folia radicalia, ensiformia, carinata, glabra, sesquipedalia, extremitate subulata. p. 52: Scapus ramosus, fere tripedalis, ramis alternis, inferioribus brevioribus, superioribus longioribus. Bracteis lanceolato-subulatis bifidis. Fedunculis simplicibus. Flores magnitudine Antherici ramosi, albi, apicibus petalorum viridibus. Filamenta alba, laevia. Antherae flavae. staminibus longior.\nThe Catalogus Plantarum Horti Ulenpassiani is a catalogue of plants cultivated in the gardens and greenhouses of Ulenpas, the estate of H.A.W. Baron van Rouwenoort and situated near Hummelo in the Netherlands\xe2\x80\x99 province of Gelderland. It contains lists of plant-names and the only species of which a description and a plate are given is the above mentioned Anthericum Rouwenortii.
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
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  • 5
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    In:  Blumea: Biodiversity, Evolution and Biogeography of Plants vol. 4 no. 2, pp. 259-260
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Macrosolen urceolatus DANSER, n. sp. \xe2\x80\x94 Omnis glabra. Caules (2 suppetunt) graciles, ad 55 cm longi et ultra (supra basin decerpti), internodiis teretibus, inferioribus 2.5\xe2\x80\x946 cm longis, ad 4 mm diametro, superioribus plerumque paulo brevioribus, gradatim tenuioribus, ad 1.5 mm diametro, nodis vetustioribus incrassatis nonnihil applanatis, ad sesquiplo crassioribus quam internodia, iunioribus applanatis et dilatatis. Folia opposita vel subopposita; petiolus 3\xe2\x80\x948 mm longus, basi subteres, 1.5\xe2\x80\x941.75 mm latus, versus laminam paulum dilalatus et applanatus, subtus rotundatus, supra fere planus; lamina ovato-lanceolata, 5\xe2\x80\x9412 cm longa, 1.5\xe2\x80\x944 cm lata, sub basi cuneata in petiolum contracta, apicem obtusum vel subobtusum versus leviter acuminata, margine saepe irregularis, nonnihil flavida (in herbario), utrinque opaca vel facie superiore nonnihil lucida, inferiore punctulis minimis atris numerosis, nervatura pinnata, costa facie superiore distincta usque ad apicem, plana sed saepe nonnihil prominula, facie inferiore a basi ad apicem gradatim minus prominens, saepe subcarinata, nervis lateralibus et venis utrinque visibilibus, facie inferiore distinctioribus quam superiore. Inflorescentiae racemosae pedunculatae, singulae vel binae vel ternae in axillis foliorum adultorum (nunquam in axillis foliorum rudimentariorum quae passim inveniuntur inter folia normalia); axes in scrobiculis corticis inserti, involucris nullis, basi nonnihil incrassati, caeterum subteretes, a basi circiter 1 mm crassa ad apicem c. 0.3 mm crassum sensim attenuati, 10\xe2\x80\x9425 mm longi, pedunculo 3\xe2\x80\x9410 mm longo, saepe nonnullis insertionibus et bractea singula sterilibus, parte florifera paribus florum 2 ad 5, nodis paulum dilatatis; pedicelli teretes, plerumque 2\xe2\x80\x943 mm longi, 0.25 mm crassi, basi in annulum incrassati; bracteae, ut bracteolae paulo minores, ellipticae, 0.75\xe2\x80\x941 mm longae, obtusae vel acutae, basi paulum connatae vel liberae, leviter concavae. Calyx urceolatus, supra partem inferiorem ellipsoidem circiter 1.5 mm longam 1 mm latam distincte contractus, deinde in partem superiorem infundibuliformem circiter 0.5 mm longam integerrimam ampliatus, parte libera autem brevissima. Corolla statu alabastri adulti ad 33 mm longa, supra basin rotundatam partibus 2/3 inferioribus late tubulosa vel magis inflata, ad 4 mm lata, ad apicem partis ampliatae alis 6, deinde contracta in collum 6-angulum lateribus cavis, 1.5 mm diametro, apice incrassata in clavam obovatam 6-angulam lateribus cavis costisque obtusis; denique divisa in lacinias 6 recurvas usque ad medias alas. Filamenta circiter 7 mm longa, antherae c. 2 mm longae, obtusae. Stylus corollae subaequilongus, circiter 1 mm supra basin articulatus, parte basali persistente versus basin cum disco 6-tuberculato connata supra 6-angula, deinde teres usque ad partem in collum inclusam ibique ad dimidiam crassitudinem attenuatus, in 2 mm superioribus iterum incrassatus, apice stigmate subgloboso, c. 0.8 mm diametro. Fructus ignotus.\nThis Macrosolen is perhaps conspecific with M. tenuiflorus DANSER, which is likewise from East Borneo (Kong Kemoel), but the specimen described here differs by longer corollas and stamens, non-oviformous style-base, and narrow leaves. According to the description it is ap parently also very near M. javanus, but it is distinct by different shape, colour, and consistency of the leaves, the lack of black parts on the corolla, smaller bracts, and urceolate calyx.
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
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  • 6
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    In:  Blumea: Biodiversity, Evolution and Biogeography of Plants vol. 4 no. 3, pp. 496-538
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: In a former article 1) many new combinations and critical observations were published on various grasses all over the world. New investigations in critical genera together with the study of the existing literature made it necessary to accept various other arrangements in this important family. The old system of Bentham, once the basis for a total review, is now more and more modified and many tribes are purified and more exactly limited. The most recent system we have at the moment, is Hubbard\xe2\x80\x99s treatment of this family in the work of Hutchinson: The families of flowering plants. Vol. II. Monocotyledons. The grasses are divided there into 26 tribes. We have here the great advantage that aberrant genera, which are not easy to place into one of the formerly accepted tribes, are given as representatives of distinct new tribes. The curious tropical genus Streptochaeta f.i. constitutes the tribe of the Streptochaeteae. It is quite acceptable that tribes may consist of but one genus, especially when such a genus is a totally deviating one and cannot be inserted into one of the already existing ones. Such tribes are f.i. the Nardeae with the only northern genus Nardus, and the Mediterranean tribe of the Lygeeae with the only genus Lygeum, one of the Esparto grasses. It is therefore no wonder that Hubbard creates a new tribe, the Anomochloeae, for one of the most curious tropical grasses of the world. This tribe is represented by only one species, the Anomochloa marantoidea Brongn., with a very curious habit and no evident affinities with any other grass. The same can be said of the aberrant genus Pariana, the only member of the tribe of the Parianeae. The most valuable advance is the creation by Hubbard of the tribe of the Thysanolaeneae with as the only member our well-known tropical and subtropical East-Asiatic genus Thysanolaena.\nAlthough this new subdivision of the family of the grasses gives us a great satisfaction, it does not mean that the system is complete and certainly many changes are to be given before we will have a totally correct and acceptable classification of the grasses.
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  • 7
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    In:  Zoologische Mededelingen vol. 23 no. 6, pp. 107-108
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Some time ago Mr. J. van Rijn van Alkemade, the Hague, presented to the Rijksmuseum van Natuurlijke Historie a most remarkable double tusk of a Sumatran elephant. Mr. Van Rijn van Alkemade could provide us with the following particulars about the specimen. It was shot in the residency of Palembang before 1906 and the above mentioned double tusk was presented to his father at that time Resident of Palembang. The elephant was a four tusker, the other double tusk, which was of a corresponding shape as the one presented to the Museum, came into the hands of a Chinese dealer. Double tusks in elephants are reported in more than one occasion and it is also a known fact that sometimes twisted tusks in elephants can occur (cf. Colyer: Variations and diseases of the teeth of animals, 1936, pp. 548\xe2\x80\x94551). As far as I am aware a double tusk of which one is about straight, the other twisted around the first has never been reported till now. The tusks have been cut off and, unfortunate enough, the skull has not been preserved, therefore the situtation "in facto" is unknown and every comment upon how these teeth originated must remain speculative. As the first winding of the spiral tusk passes on the right side of the normal one and the tip of the former is damaged on the same side it is not unlikely that we have the rightsided pair before us. As said above one of the tusks is nearly straight, though it shows at its basal part a slightly upwards directed curve as to give place to the twisted tusk to pass underneath of it. The distal part bends slightly upwards as in normal tusks. The length measured in straight line is 87 cm, height at base 5.5 cm, breadth at base 6.5 cm. The spiral tusk has a length in straight
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  • 8
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    In:  Zoologische Mededelingen vol. 23 no. 7, pp. 109-113
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Porphyrio porphyrio plessenorum nov. subspec. \xe2\x99\x82 und \xe2\x99\x80 in der F\xc3\xa4rbung des Gefieders vollkommen mit P. p. indicus L. von Java \xc3\xbcbereinstimmend, aber durch die Farbe des Schnabels und der Beine unterschieden. Der Schnabel ist mehr rot, so dass bei den meisten St\xc3\xbccken der ganze Schnabel korallrot bis ziegelrot erscheint. Dagegen sind die Beine nie so rein korallrot wie bei P. p. indicus, sondern ziehen mehr oder weniger ins br\xc3\xa4unliche.\nBei Porphyrio porphyrio indicus L. (jedenfalls bei Exemplaren von Java) ist der First des Schnabels stets schwarz oder schw\xc3\xa4rzlich, so dass der Schnabel von oben gesehen schwarz erscheint. Auch die Basis des Unterschnabels ist schwarzlich. Dagegen sind die Beine des P. p. indicus (Javast\xc3\xbccke) heller und reiner korallrot. Nur die Gelenke der Beine und der Zehen sind dunkel, br\xc3\xa4unlich oder schw\xc3\xa4rzlich.\nFl\xc3\xbcgel von P. p. plessenorum: 10 \xe2\x99\x82 224\xe2\x80\x94239mm, 2 \xe2\x99\x80 225 und 231 mm.\nFl\xc3\xbcgel von P. p. indicus: 2 \xe2\x99\x82 229 und 231 mm, 3 \xe2\x99\x80 212\xe2\x80\x94221mm.\nAnscheinend besteht also kein Gr\xc3\xb6ssenunterscheid.\nTypus: \xe2\x99\x82 ad., Bratan See, Nord Bali in 1200 m, 19.1.1938, Baron und Baronin von Plessen leg., im Museum Leiden.\nVerbreitung: Insel Bali.\nBemerkung. Die 5 zum Vergleich herangezogenen Exemplare von P. p. indicus wurden von J. J. Menden im M\xc3\xa4rz 1938 bei Cheribon, West Java, gesammelt.\nChalcophaps indica nana nov. subspec. \xe2\x99\x82 \xe2\x99\x80 in der F\xc3\xa4rbung vollkommen der Nominatform gleichend, aber erheblich kleiner. Fl\xc3\xbcgel \xe2\x99\x82 130\xe2\x80\x94142 mm, meist 130\xe2\x80\x94138 mm, \xe2\x99\x80 122\xe2\x80\x94
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
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  • 9
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    In:  Blumea: Biodiversity, Evolution and Biogeography of Plants vol. 4 no. 2, pp. 323-358
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Manilkara ADANSON, Fam. II, 1763, 166; PIERRE & URBAN, Symb. Antill. 51, 1904, 162 (as a subgenus); DUBARD, Ann. Mus. Col. Mars. 23, 1915, 6; LECOMTE, Bull. du Museum, 1917, 35 and in Notul. Syst. 3, 1918, 340; BRITTON & WILSON, Scient. Surv. Porto Rico & Virg. Isl. VI, 1, 1925, 72; H.J. LAM, Bull. Jard. Bot. Buitenz., Ser. III, 7, 1925, 238 and 8, 1927, 481; BENOIST, Arch. Bot. 5, Mem. 1, 1931, 241; HUTCHINSON & DALZIEL, Fl. W. Trop. Afr. II, 1, 1931, 14; CHEVALIER, Rev. Bot. appl. & Agric. tropic. 12, 1932, 261, 350; STANDLEY, Trop. Woods 31, 1932, 45; LEMEE, Dictionn. Pl. Phan\xc3\xa9r. IV, 1932, 291; EYMA, Rec. Trav. Bot. n\xc3\xa9erl. 33, 1936, 205 \xe2\x80\x94 Manyl-kara RHEEDE, Hort. Mal. IV, 1673, 53, t. 25 \xe2\x80\x94 Mimusops L., sect. Ternaria DC., Prodr. 8, 1844, 203; as a subgenus in ENGLER, Monogr. Afr. Pfl. fam. und Gatt. 8, Sap., 1904, 55 \xe2\x80\x94 Delastrea A. DC. in DC., Prodr. VIII, 1844, 195 \xe2\x80\x94 Labramia A. DC., l.c. 672 \xe2\x80\x94 Mimusops L., sect. Euternaria ENGL., l.c. p.p. (except \xc2\xa7 Muriea) \xe2\x80\x94 Northia (not of HOOK, f.) sensu H. J. LAM, 1.c. 1925, 241 and 1927, 481, pro parte; H.J. LAM, Bern. P. Bish. Mus. Bull. 141, 1936, 163.\nTrees with hard and often reddish wood and sympodial branchlets; stipules caducous or none; leaves more or less coriaceous, often obovate with rounded apex, lower side often lighter coloured than upper one, with selereids (f. LECOMTE); tertiary nerves very slender and numerous, in general parallel to the secondary ones which are hardly more conspicuous, often with a minute reticulation between; inflorescences axillary, fasciculate; sepals in two rows of 3 each; petals 6, with narrowed base inserted on a corolla-tube as long as or shorter than the petals, each of them with two dorsal appendages which are mostly about as long as the petals and of the same shape but often narrower and more acute, rarely much shorter (about \xc2\xbd or less in M. kanosiensis and M. vitiensis); stamens 6, epipetalous; staminodes 6 alternipetalous and in the same row as the stamens, differently shaped, broadly ovate, acuminate to small or subulate, irregularly dentate or fimbriate, trifid or bifid, sometimes scalelike, very rarely reduced to none (M. fasciculata, vitiensis) ovary 15\xe2\x80\x946-celled, pubescent, but sometimes surrounded by a glabrous adnate disc; cells 1-ovuled, ovules ventrally or basiventrally attached; fruit drupaceous, but pericarp often rather dry, 6\xe2\x80\x941-seeded; scar of the seed ventral or basiventral, long and narrow or rarely larger and ovate (fasciculata) or circular (M. Bojeri, dissecta, Eickii) albumen abundant, the cotyledons thin. About 74 species in all tropical countries, of which about 25 in Central America, about 34 in the African region and some 15 in Asia-Polynesia.
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  • 10
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    In:  Zoologische Mededelingen vol. 23 no. 4, pp. 44-46
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Die zahlreiche Bildung von Rassen innerhalb der Gattung Parnassius beruht darauf, dass die Flugpl\xc3\xa4tze dieses Schmetterlings vereinzelt liegen und stets eng begrenzt sind; sie erstrecken sich bei einigen species wie P. mnemosyne L. und P. phoebus F. meist auf einen Umkreis von nur wenigen hundert Metern. Da die Parnassier haupts\xc3\xa4chlich im Gebirge fliegen, wo ihre Futterpflanzen, die Sedumarten, bevorzugt anzutreffen sind, ist es ohne weiteres verst\xc3\xa4ndlich, dass die \xc3\xb6kologischen Bedingungen selbst f\xc3\xbcr nahe aneinander liegende Flugpl\xc3\xa4tze recht verschieden sein k\xc3\xb6nnen. (Der eine Flugplatz liegt beispielsweise in einem feuchten OstWest-Tal, der n\xc3\xa4chstgelegene in einem trockenen S\xc3\xbcd-Nord-Tal). Daraus erkl\xc3\xa4ren sich die vielen subspecies, \xc3\xbcber deren Aufstellung von Entomologen, die zu wenig von der Gattung Parnassius wissen, mit Unrecht gespottet wird. Die Parnassier sind aber auch interessant durch ihre individuellen Erscheinungsformen. Diese sind bedingt durch die besonders im Hochgebirge h\xc3\xa4ufig wechselnden klimatischen Bedingungen, den raschen Wechsel von heisser Sonnenstrahlung mit K\xc3\xa4ltetemperaturen und intensiver Trockenheit mit starker Feuchtigkeit. So findet man an demselben Flugplatz innerhalb eines Jahres ganz verschieden aussehende Tiere, grosse Exemplare mit dicht weisser Beschuppung und guter Entwicklung der roten Prachtfarbe, neben kleinen Individuen, mit melanistischem Einschlag und kleinen Ozellen; lediglich eine Folge der Beeinflussung des \xe2\x80\x9ekritischen" Puppenstadiums, die ersten 48 Stunden der Puppenruhe, durch die jeweils verschiedenen Bedingungen. Dieses verschiedene Aussehen und die lange Flugzeit, die beispielsweise f\xc3\xbcr P. apollo L. von Mitte Mai bis Anfang November gemeldet ist, haben den Eindruck aufkommen lassen, als
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