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  • Articles  (950,557)
  • 1980-1984  (950,557)
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  • 1
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    In:  Studies on the Fauna of Curaçao and other Caribbean Islands vol. 67 no. 1, pp. 104-106
    Publication Date: 2024-04-02
    Description: On August 3, 1982 a small squid was collected opposite “Trans World Radio” at Bonaire (Netherlands Antilles). It was kept in a tank for several hours before it died. The species was identified as Pickfordiateuthis pulchella Voss, 1953, hitherto only known from the Florida Keys, U.S.A. According to Voss (1953) it was probably confined to the geographical area represented by the Florida Keys. ABBOTT (1974) mentioned a distribution from southeast Florida to Panama without refering to literature other than Voss (1953). The specimen from Bonaire, a male, differs from the figure of the holotype (a female) mainly in having proportionally shorter tentacles and the posterior end less bluntly tapered. It agrees well with the male paratype, figured by Voss (1953: fig. 3). The measurements of the specimen are: mantle length 16.0 mm, width 6.9 mm and length of head 7.1 mm. The pigmentation of the dorsal side of the head consists of chromatophores, which are larger and darker than those on the ventral side. The pigmentation on the dorsal side of the mantle is less prominent and consists of more diffuse and smaller spots. The ventral side of the mantle is hardly pigmentated with very small dots.
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
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  • 2
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    In:  Gorteria: tijdschrift voor de floristiek, de plantenoecologie en het vegetatie-onderzoek van Nederland vol. 12 no. 6, pp. 130-135
    Publication Date: 2024-04-02
    Description: Four species considered to be newly found drifting ashore are described and illustrated: Sargassum natans (L.) Børg., Champia parvula (C. Ag.) Harv., Crouania attenuata (C. Ag.) J. Ag. and Callophyllis laciniata (Huds.) Kütz. In addition some notes are made on new records of Pogotrichum filiforme Reinke, Leathesia difformis (L.) Aresch. and Punctaria latifolia Grev.
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
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  • 3
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    In:  Mededelingen van het Botanisch Museum en Herbarium van de Rijksuniversiteit te Utrecht vol. 535 no. 1, pp. 427-430
    Publication Date: 2024-02-22
    Description: Anthodus paniculatus Martius, reduced to a synonym of Hemiangium excelsum (H.B.K.) A. C. Smith by A. C. Smith, is reestablished here as Hemiangium paniculatum (Mart.) A. M. W. Mennega. H. excelsum in the present sense is now restricted to C. America, whereas H. paniculatum occurs in S. America.
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
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  • 4
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    In:  Miscellaneous publications of the University of Utrecht Herbarium vol. 1 no. 1, pp. 81-90
    Publication Date: 2024-02-22
    Description: Three new species of Salacia are described.\nSalacia bullata spec. nov., a liana, characterized by bullate leaves, was collected in Brazil, Territorio Amapa. It comes closest to S. amplectens. A.C. Smith\xe2\x80\x99s key (1940) should be amended to include a new group \xe2\x80\x98Amplectentes\xe2\x80\x99. This group, containing S. bullata and S. amplectens would be near \xe2\x80\x98Arboreae\xe2\x80\x99.\nSalacia alwynii, spec. nov., a vining species comes from Peru, Maynas, and is characterized by very large leaves and large cauliflorous flowers. It belongs to the species group \xe2\x80\x98Ellipticae\xe2\x80\x99 sensu Smith. It was also collected in Venezuela.\nSalacia paradoxa spec. nov. is a liana collected in Brazil along the Manaus-Caracarai road. Its long leaves are narrowly elliptic, its flowers are extremely small. In leaf characters it is strikingly similar to S. solimoesensis of Smith\xe2\x80\x99s species group \xe2\x80\x98Ellipticae\xe2\x80\x99, the shape of the disk, however, suggests the species group \xe2\x80\x98Crassifoliae\xe2\x80\x99. Specimens with fruits, collected in western Brazil may belong either to S. paradoxa or to S. solimoesensis.
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
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  • 5
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    In:  Miscellaneous publications of the University of Utrecht Herbarium vol. 1 no. 1, pp. 429-439
    Publication Date: 2024-02-22
    Description: A description is given of two new species in the genus Pristimera, P. dariense from Panama and P. caudata from Suriname. P. dariense differs by its flattened disk from the other New World species of the genus, but would fit in the subgenus Trochantha N. Hall\xc3\xa9 known from Africa.\nCuervea crenulata sp. nov. is a species collected in Brazil, Minas Gerais. Another species in Cuervea, C. mitchellae (Johnst.) A.C. Smith is considered as a synonym of C. kappleriana.\nHylenaea unguiculata sp. nov. is a new species from Suriname. The material on which the new species is based was at first erronously ascribed to the genus Tontelea with remarkably similar flowers.
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2024-02-08
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
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  • 7
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    In:  Flora Malesiana - Series 1, Spermatophyta vol. 10 no. 1, pp. 455-539
    Publication Date: 2024-02-08
    Description: Herbs (sometimes saprophytic), shrubs, lianas or trees. Stipules absent but stem sometimes provided with a pair of glands at the nodes. Leaves simple, entire, usually spirally arranged, sometimes alternate, (semi)decussate or verticillate, sometimes scale-like or absent. Inflorescence usually raceme-like and unbranched, (supra- or extra-)axillary and/or terminal, sometimes thyrsoid or fasciculate, rarely flowers solitary. Bracts present; bracteoles basal, rarely ( Salomonia, Epirixanthes) absent. Flowers bisexual, more or less zygomorphous, rarely actinomorphous. Sepals 5, free and quincuncial, or the lower (abaxial) 2 connate, sometimes all connate, subequal or the lateral ones larger and then often wing-like (alae) and petaloid. Petals 3 or 5, free or variously united, occasionally also with the calyx, usually adnate to the base of the staminal tube or the filaments, subequal or more often unequal with the lower petal often keellike and frequently pouched, lobed, or crested. Stamens 2\xe2\x80\x9410, usually 8, filaments usually more or less connate except between the upper stamens, often adnate to the petals; anthers basifixed, tetra- or bi-, rarely trisporangiate, 1- or 2-locular, opening by a single and often oblique pore or by a longitudinal introrse slit. Ovary superior, usually 2-locular but occasionally 1-, 3-, 5-, 7- or 8-locular, sessile or sometimes stipitate; style simple but often variously dilated or lobed at apex, usually articulate with the ovary and nearly always deciduous in fruits. Ovules 1 per cell and subapical, or (in Xanthophyllum) 4\xe2\x80\x94more in a 1-locular, bicarpellate ovary with 2 parietal placentas, anatropous, bitegmic and crassinucellate. Fruit various, a berry, capsule, samara or drupe.\nDistribution. About 15 genera and over 1000 species, widespread in temperate and tropical regions of the world, especially well-developed in South America and South Africa. In Malesia 6 genera, of which Polygala and Securidaca (not in Australia) are cosmopolitan, Xanthophyllum and Salomonia Indo-Australian, Epirixanthes Indo-Malayan. The sixth genus is Eriandra which belongs to the tropical American tribe Moutabeae, of which 3 genera are known in South America; Eriandra occurs in New Guinea and the Solomon Islands and represents a marked example of disjunct, tropical trans-Pacific affinities.
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
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  • 8
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    In:  Gorteria: tijdschrift voor de floristiek, de plantenoecologie en het vegetatie-onderzoek van Nederland vol. 11 no. 5, pp. 106-113
    Publication Date: 2024-02-08
    Description: The two species of Eragrostis naturalized in the Netherlands, formerly referred to as E. poaeoides and E. multicaulis, should be called E. minor and E. pilosa. Both appear to be naturalized on a larger scale than was indicated in the Atlas of the Netherlands Flora i. They have spread extensively in very recent years. E. minor is, apart from its occurrence in the province of Zeeland, principally a railway companion. E. pitosa is chiefly a plant of treaded sites, occurring in joints of pavements and incidentally on heavily compacted soil. In Zeeland however, E. minor appears to be more succesfull in this kind of habitat than E. pilosa. Originally, E. multicaulis was accepted as separate from E. pilosa. Because of the variation in the specimens of the type collection E. multicaulis has been lectotypified: Eragrostis multicaulis Steudel, Syn. PI. Gram, i (nov. 1854), p. 426 [syn. Glyceria airoides Steudel, I.e. (apr. 1854), p. 287, non (Koeler) Reichenb. 1829]. Lectotype: Burg, s.n., \'Poa suzumenokatabira\', in L (908.87-2116, upper specimen). Differences between E. multicaulis and E. pilosa are discussed. It is concluded that the same variation occurs in the Netherlands as is observed elsewhere, and that no features can be considered sharply differentiating between both supposed taxa. The opinion of Koch (1974) that both belong to the same taxon, viz. E. pilosa (L.) Beauv. var.pilosa, is subscribed to. Establishment of E.pilosa in the Netherlands has probably followed after introduction and cannot be interpreted as a natural shift of this species\' northern boundary from N. France to the Netherlands.
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
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  • 9
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    In:  Gorteria: tijdschrift voor de floristiek, de plantenoecologie en het vegetatie-onderzoek van Nederland vol. 12 no. 2, pp. 23-25
    Publication Date: 2024-02-08
    Description: Tragopogon dubius Scop, has been found in 8 localities in the Netherlands, all from 1955 onwards, in dunes, and along roads and railway tracks. This might be caused by a natural extension of its area from North France northwards. T. dubius and T. porrifolius differ from T. pratensis in the dark coloured styles and the swollen peduncles, and slightly so in characters of habit and fruit; from each other they differ in the colour of the ligules and in the number of involucral bracts.
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
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  • 10
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    In:  Gorteria: tijdschrift voor de floristiek, de plantenoecologie en het vegetatie-onderzoek van Nederland vol. 11 no. 5, pp. 119-119
    Publication Date: 2024-02-08
    Description: Een nieuwe combinatie in Atriplex. Bij de bewerking van het geslacht Atriplex voor de 20e editie van Heukels\xe2\x80\x99 Flora van Nederland bleek het nodig te zijn om een nieuwe combinatie te maken. Atriplex prostrata Boucher ex DC. var. longipes (Drejer) Meijden, comb. nov. (Atriplex longipes Drejer, Flora excursoria Hafniensis, 1838, p. 107).
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
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  • 11
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    In:  Leiden Botanical Series vol. 7 no. 1, pp. 3-159
    Publication Date: 2024-02-08
    Description: The present work comprises the first revision of all species of Xanthophyllum; 93 species (22 new) have been distinguished with 5 subspecies (1 new) and 2 varieties (both new). Seven subgenera are proposed (4 new) of which one has been divided into 2 sections and 2 subsections. Keys to all taxa have been included. In the General Part the (sub)generic and (sub)sectional characters are discussed separately in order to find arguments regarding the direction of the evolution of those characters in the \xe2\x80\x98Hennigian\xe2\x80\x99 way of reasoning. From this it has been concluded that the Polygalaceae are derived from the Malpighiaceae- Vochysiaceae-Trigoniaceae-complex and secondly that Xanthophyllum belongs to a derived tribe of the Polygalaceae (and not to a separate family Xanthophyllaceae). The lack of information on the genomes of the species appeared to be a serious problem in the reconstruction of the evolution within Xanthophyllum: one subgenus with \xe2\x80\x98gigas\xe2\x80\x99-characters may represent an old allopolyploid hybrid; it is suggested that hybridization may have been important in the evolution of the genus. Although only two species, endemic to N. Queensland, do not occur in Malesia-Southeast Asia, it is shown that Australia must have been the centre of origin of the genus. The fact that Wallace\xe2\x80\x99s Line is still respected by all species is regarded as an indication that West Malesia is a secondary centre of speciation.
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
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  • 12
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    In:  Gorteria: tijdschrift voor de floristiek, de plantenoecologie en het vegetatie-onderzoek van Nederland vol. 11 no. 9, pp. 214-215
    Publication Date: 2024-02-08
    Description: Potamogeton filiformis Pers. in Nederland? P. filiformis wordt voor Nederland uitsluitend vermeld door Westhoff & Den Held, Plantengemeenschappen in Nederland, 1969, p. 54. Deze opgave is gebaseerd op niet-bloeiende exemplaren uit een collectie die in 1965 werd verzameld in het Veluwemeer. Bij herdeterminatie is echter gebleken dat deze collectie tot Juncus bulbosus behoort.
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
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  • 13
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    In:  Gorteria: tijdschrift voor de floristiek, de plantenoecologie en het vegetatie-onderzoek van Nederland vol. 11 no. 4, pp. 92-93
    Publication Date: 2024-02-08
    Description: Gentianella campestris (L.) B\xc3\xb6rner opnieuw in Zuid-Limburg gevonden. Tijdens een van mijn vele wandelingen, die ik in het najaar pleeg te maken op de bij de floristen in Zuid-Limburg goed bekende Kunraderberg, gem. Voerendaal, ontdekte ik op 1 november 1980 twee kleine, bloeiende exemplaren van Gentianella campestris, de brede duingentiaan. Samen met G. germanica en G. ciliata komen er nu drie soorten gentiaan op de Kunraderberg voor, een voor Nederland unieke situatie.\nNa de wandeling heb ik direct contact opgenomen met de onlangs overleden dr. S.J. Dijkstra (Schaesberg) om hem van de vondst op de hoogte te stellen. Groot was mijn verbazing, toen ik van hem vernam dat ook hij enkele exemplaren van G. campestris op de Kunraderberg had waargenomen, echter niet op dezelfde plek waar ik de soort had gevonden. In het najaar van 1981 werden in totaal ca. 40 bloeiende planten aangetroffen.
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
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  • 14
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    In:  Gorteria: tijdschrift voor de floristiek, de plantenoecologie en het vegetatie-onderzoek van Nederland vol. 12 no. 4, pp. 86-86
    Publication Date: 2024-02-08
    Description: Tragopogon hybridus L. adventief in Nederland. Bij het bewerken van Tragopogonmateriaal voor een publikatie over T. dubius bleek onder het materiaal van T. porrifolius een exemplaar schuil te gaan dat behoort tot de tot dusver niet in Nederland gevonden soort Tragopogon hybridus L. Deze Zuideuropese soort heeft evenals T. porrifolius paarse lintbloemen en een onder het hoofdje verdikte hoofdjessteel, maar wijkt af door de vruchten van de buitenste bloemen: de stralen van het pappus zijn bij deze vruchten verbreed en missen de lange dunne zijharen. Het exemplaar is gevonden door J. Moerkerk in september 1954 in de duinen bij Noordwijk.
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
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  • 15
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    In:  Gorteria: tijdschrift voor de floristiek, de plantenoecologie en het vegetatie-onderzoek van Nederland vol. 12 no. 2, pp. 37-37
    Publication Date: 2024-02-08
    Description: Afwijkingen bij Setaria viridis (L.) Beauv. en Setaria verticillata (L.) Beauv. Onder het in 1982 verzamelde herbariummateriaal troffen wij een exemplaar van Setaria viridis aan, afkomstig van Steenwijk (kilometerhok 16.45.24), waarbij de borstels onder de aartjes met naar achter gerichte haakjes waren bezet (van onder naar boven gaande voelt de bloeiwijze dan ruw aan). Dit kenmerk wordt als exclusief voor Setaria verticillata beschouwd en het materiaal was dan ook als zodanig gedetermineerd. Bij S. viridis was een dergelijke afwijking ons niet bekend. Bij S. verticillata komen afwijkende exemplaren, met naar voren gerichte haakjes op de borstels (van onder naar boven gaande voelt de bloeiwijze dan glad aan), vrii regelmatig voor. Bij het determineren van genoemde Setaria\xe2\x80\x99 s kan men dus niet zonder meer vertrouwen op het \xe2\x80\x98makkelijke\xe2\x80\x99 kenmerk van de richting van de haakjes op de borstels.
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
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  • 16
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    In:  Gorteria: tijdschrift voor de floristiek, de plantenoecologie en het vegetatie-onderzoek van Nederland vol. 12 no. 6, pp. 123-130
    Publication Date: 2024-02-08
    Description: Contrary to Kern & Reichgelt (1954) it is concluded that both C. reichenbachii and C. ligerica can not be distinguished from C. arenaria in the Netherlands. The paper deals with the results of a reexamination of some collections identified by Kern and Reichgelt. The collections have especially been examined on the distribution of the sexes in the inflorescence (fig. 1: complete inflorescences, male flowers in solid dots, female ones in circles), form of the achenes (fig. 2), diameter of the rhizomes (fig. 3), width of the leaves (fig. 4). Within subg. Vignea C. arenaria s. lat. can be characterized by middle partial inflorescences which have male flowers both in basal and in apical position, and by long rhizomes. It is concluded that no taxonomically important differences could be found between the three \xe2\x80\x98species\xe2\x80\x99.
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
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  • 17
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    In:  Smithsonian contributions to zoology vol. 306, pp. 1-379
    Publication Date: 2024-02-01
    Description: The West African marine brachyuran crab fauna, comprising 218 named species in 120 genera and 26 familes, is surveyed. Sixteen new genera and 24 new species are recognized. Synonymies are updated for the tropical species, and all 300 + Eastern Atlantic species are listed. Original references and synonymies are provided for all 146 Eastern Atlantic genera. Synonymies have been compiled for all 36 currently recognized families of marine crabs. Twenty-nine families are represented in the Eastern Atlantic fauna. One family, Hexapodidae Miers, 1886, and one subfamily, Camptandriinae Stimpson, 1858 (Ocypodidae) are revised at the generic level. The genera Liocarcinus Stimpson, 1871 (Portunidae), Machaerus Leach, 1818 (Goneplacidae), and Lambdophallus Alcock, 1900, Paeduma Rathbun, 1897, Parahexapus Balss, 1922, Pseudohexapus Monod, 1956, and Thaumastoplax Miers, 1881 (all Hexapodidae), are defined and recognized. It is suggested that the family Geryonidae Colosi, 1923, shows closest affinities with the family Portunidae Rafinesque, 1815.
    Keywords: Crustacea ; Decapoda ; West Arica
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
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  • 18
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Rousettus amplexicaudatus (Geoffroy, 1810) is divided into three subspecies according to size: R. a. amplexicaudatus, R. a. infumatus (Gray, 1870), and R. a. brachyotis (Dobson, 1877). Cynonycteris minor Dobsou, 1873 is synonymized with R. a. infumatus; Rousettus stresemanni Stein, 1933 with R. a. amplexicaudatus; and Rousettus amplexicaudatus hedigeri Pohle, 1952 with R. a. brachyotis. Geography and dimensional variations of the recognized subspecies are discussed. R. amplexicaudatus is recorded for the first time from Celebes, Kisar, Mentawai, Muna and Ndao. The subspecific status of specimens from Celebes, Muna, Peleng and Talisai is left undecided.\nOther Rousettus species are discussed in so far as they are known to be sympatric with certain R. amplexicaudatus populations: R. leschenaultii (Desmarest, 1820) \xe2\x80\x94 recorded for the first time from Bali and Simeulu\xc3\xab \xe2\x80\x94, R. celebensis Andersen, 1907, and R. spinalatus Bergmans & Hill, 1980 \xe2\x80\x94 of which a fourth specimen, from a new locality on Borneo, is described.\nSome dental anomalies and some ectoparasities are listed.
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
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  • 19
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Species of the heteropod families Carinariidae and Pterotracheidae collected in the Mid North Atlantic Ocean in 1980 have been studied. The distribution of the species is given, as well as the morphological variation. It is concluded that two subspecies of Carinaria lamarcki actually have to be considered distinctly recognisable and sympatric species, to be called C. lamarcki and C. challengeri. The vertical distribution of the heteropods studied proves not to be restricted to the photic zone and diurnal vertical migration occurs among the larger species. The horizontal distribution of the two Carinaria species and of at least two populations of the Pterotrachea species coincides with the southern branch of the North Atlantic Current, while others are restricted to the subtropical waters. Consequently, the present heteropods have to be considered good indicators of water masses and currents.
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
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  • 20
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    In:  Bijdragen tot de dierkunde vol. 52 no. 2, pp. 61-81
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Black-footed Penguins, Spheniscus demersus, have been living in an open air enclosure in Artiszoo since 1961. Their numbers varied from 7 to 103 in the period under study extending from 1961 to 1982. The information used in this survey is derived from records made by the zoo keepers and from a study of the behaviour of the penguins that was performed in 1979-1980.\nThe pair bond between breeding birds appears to be very strong, the only bird that ever disassociated itself returned to her first partner after one year. However, the penguins seem to find a new partner in a very short time if they happen to forfeit their first partner.\nThe couples have a strong tendency to breed each season in the same burrow. The occasional shifting to other burrows seems not to be related to the fate of the first clutch. The partners stayed together in nearly all cases in which breeding birds changed burrows. A burrow seems to get new owners only when the previous couple vacates it. This has had the consequence that, in some years, young couples could not install themselves because there was a lack of nesting places.\nThe clutch size is two and the number of clutches per season is one or two, three is less common. The birds are probably encouraged to lay a second or third clutch when the previous one fails visibly in an early stage. The frequency of laying second and third clutches might decrease if the penguins in Artiszoo were allowed to revert to their natural cycle of guarding their young for 80 days instead of the enforced period of only 42 days.\nThe breeding season runs from August to May and has two peak periods of egg-laying, one in August/September and one, less extreme, in December. The timing of breeding varied from year to year, in some years the first egg-production peak appeared in July/August and in others it appeared only in October.\nThe penguins in Artiszoo start breeding for the first time when they are two years or older, just like the penguins in South Africa.\nSince 1965 the population growth has been caused entirely by the reproductive qualities of 19 birds and their descendants.\nThe hatching success of eggs decreased spectacularly in the years after 1971 when the number of available adults exceeded the figure 25, and since that time relatively more eggs disappeared or were found to be broken. This study shows that the decline of the hatching success is caused both by a lack of nesting places and the increase of the number of penguins living in the enclosure.
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
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  • 21
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Seven springs in the Middle Atlas and five in the Rif have been studied. These show a great diversity of crenal habitats: water temperature ranges from 8.7\xc2\xb0 to 21\xc2\xb0C, and the flow from 1 l/s to 1,800 l/s. Based on hydrologic and thermic characteristics, a spring typology is provided.\nThe invertebrate community consists of 60 species, among which 4, found in the Rif, are new to science: Protonemura sp. (Plecoptera), Obuchovia sp. (Diptera, Simuliidae), Rhyacophila fonticola n. sp., and Philopotamus ketama n. sp. (Trichoptera). The new Trichoptera are both described. Two rare endemic species (the planarian Acromyadenium maroccanum and the coleopteran Elmis atlantis) have been found in a cold-water spring in the Middle Atlas; two black-fly species ( Cnetha carthusiensis and Simulium lamachei), new to North Africa, have been collected in a cold-water spring in the Rif.\nThe cold-water spring community shows a high rate of endemism. Seven endemic cold-stenothermous species constitute a most characteristic crenon fauna in northern Morocco. The fauna of warmer springs (18\xc2\xb0 \xe2\x89\xa4 temp. \xe2\x89\xa4 21\xc2\xb0C) contains potamophilous and thermophilous species, a few of them belonging to the Ethiopian fauna.\nA comparative study of spring and rhithric communities of Morocco shows that, in the Middle Atlas and the Rif, cold-water springs became refugia for cold-stenothermous, west-palaearctic species; in the past, these species occupied a larger territory which has been reduced after recent climatic and hydrologic changes.
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  • 22
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Bijdragen tot de dierkunde vol. 50 no. 1, pp. 105-144
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: The genus Pseudoniphargus has long been considered monospecific. Its unique species, Ps. africanus, was supposed to occur on both sides of the Mediterranean, on the Atlantic side of the Iberian peninsula, on the Azores, and on Madeira, in localities ranging from the sea shore to more than 1000 m of altitude, and covering almost the entire natural salinity range (0-36\xe2\x80\xb0).\nA taxonomie revision revealed that at least nine named species and several unnamed forms (of which insufficient material is available) hide under the name Ps. africanus, each with a narrow ecological and geographical range.\nThe evolutionary scenario of the members of the genus is discussed at some length: they are presumably of marine origin, and got adapted to conditions of continental waters during various marine regressions in the Eocene and Oligoc\xc3\xa8ne, but notably in the Miocene.
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  • 23
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Two new genera of the family Tubificidae inhabiting springs, wells and interstitial waters of a brackish lake in the West Indies are described. These are Spirospermoides stocki gen. et sp. n. and Krenedrilus papillatus gen. et sp. n. A detailed description of the morphological characters and genital organs is provided. A comparison with allied genera and species is also made. The occurrence of some other species of this family has been recorded.
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  • 24
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Bijdragen tot de dierkunde vol. 54 no. 2, pp. 157-162
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Toads of the genus Alytes from the Rif mountains in Morocco are electrophoretically very similar to Iberian Alytes obstetricans (DieN = 0.07). Genetic distance estimates across the Straits of Gibraltar do not exceed the values found among European samples. The data point to relatively recent colonization or anthropogenic introduction of the Midwife Toad in Africa. The notion of Pasteur & Bons (1962) that Alytes from the Rif mountains might represent a separate species is not corroborated.
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  • 25
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Description of a new species of Metaniphargus, M. venezolanus, from a cave in northern Venezuela. This is the first representative of the hadziid group of genera of the family Gammaridae to be found in South America. It is closely related to certain Caribbean, insular taxa.
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  • 26
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: A redescription is provided of Heterocypris margaritae Margalef, 1961 (= H. similis Klie, 1933). H. antillensis n. sp., a species closely related to H. margaritae, is described. Taxonomic remarks are made on H. punctata Keyser, 1975, a species from Florida, which also inhabits part of the Caribbean islands and is related to both other species.\nDescriptions of chaetotaxy were made according to the system of Broodbakker & Danielopol (1982) and form an example of the use of this system.\nCarapace length seems to be a very variable character in this genus and must be used as a taxonomic character with great caution. The structure of the hemipenis seems to be a very valuable taxonomic character, as are the furca and maxillular palp and to a lesser degree the male maxilla. The form of the carapace seems to be quite characteristic of each species, but is more difficult to define and compare when material for comparison is not at hand and other characters are not provided.
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  • 27
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Bijdragen tot de dierkunde vol. 50 no. 2, pp. 243-291
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: The freshwater ostracods living exclusively in interstitial and/or interstitial and cavernous habitats belong to the Candoninae, Pseudolimnocytherinae, Timiriaseviinae, Kliellinae and Darwinulidae. An assessment of the antiquity of several interstitial ostracod groups has been attempted using direct evidence from the phylogenetical affinities between living hypogean and fossil ostracod species, and indirect evidence from the morphological characters of the subterranean ostracods and from the bio- and paleobiogeographical distribution of the different ostracod groups.
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  • 28
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: The genus Schistura in Pakistan is reviewed: 20 species (of which 8 are new) and 1 subspecies (new) arranged in 3 species groups are recognized.
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  • 29
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Bijdragen tot de dierkunde vol. 54 no. 1, pp. 101-126
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Dugesia gonocephala is a species group, comprising numerous closely related species, which differ from each other in morphological and karyological aspects. In this paper known and presently described species, of the group from the eastern Mediterranean region, are reviewed. Hitherto the triclads of this region have been poorly known in comparison with their western counterparts. Yet there is a wealth of species in the area. Six well-delimited new species of the Dugesia gonocephala group are described and one further species is rescued from synonymy. The wealth of material available has also made possible an assessment of the taxonomic validity of many characters usually considered to be of importance within this difficult group.
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  • 30
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Description of a new species, Stactobia pacatoria sp. n., from Lebanon, clearly belonging to the nielseni-group, as defined by Schmid (1959). Notes are given on the 5th instar larva and the pupa, as well as on the remarkable larval and pupal cases, which are built using minute calcite fragments abundantly present in the biotope of the species (a madicolous habitat with very hard water).
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  • 31
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Known Sulawesian Rhinolophus belong to three species: R. philippinensis Waterhouse, 1843, R. celebensis Andersen, 1905, and R. tatar n. sp., described in this paper. Sulawesian records of R. euryotis Temminck, 1835, by Tate & Archbold (1939) are based on misidentifications.
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  • 32
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Description of the adult male and female of Neostenetroides stocki n. gen., n. sp., a new Gnathostenetroididae from cave water in San Salvador Island, Bahamas. Description of a single adult female of Stenetrium sp., a Stenetriidae from littoral hypogean water in Cura\xc3\xa7ao. The two superfamilies Gnathostenetroidoidea and Stenetrioidea being marine groups, these settlements in insular subterranean waters are noticeable.
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  • 33
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: A worldwide list of species that have to be assigned to the genus Hemicypris is given. H. exigua n. sp. and H. barbadensis n. sp. are described. A redescription is given of H. reticulata (Klie, 1930), a species from Paraguay, which was also encountered in the Antillean islands. Descriptions of chaetotaxy are made according to the system of Broodbakker & Danielopol (1982). The morphology of the limbs of the three species is similar to that of the species of the genus Heterocypris encountered in the West Indies.\nLike in the genus Heterocypris, a considerable amount of variation in mean carapace length is found. The relative length of some setae seems to be fairly constant within, and characteristic of, each species.\nSome remarks are made on the ecology and the zoogeography of the three species.
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  • 34
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Bijdragen tot de dierkunde vol. 50 no. 1, pp. 235-242
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: The type material of Colombian species of freshwater triclads (Fuhrmann, 1914) is revised and the original descriptions corrected and amplified. Planaria polyorchis is conspecific with Dugesia festai (Borelli). Planaria longistriata is a typical Girardia species of the Dugesia (Girardia) tigrina group, a group widespread in North and South America. Planaria paramensis and P. cameliae belong to a group of Dugesia species characterized particularly by their dorsal testes, and exemplified by a number of species in and around the Caribbean region.
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  • 35
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Qualitative sampling of Octocorallia in 226 underwater stations at 23 localities between Marseille and Sardinia yielded information about their tolerances with respect to depth, slope, sediment and relative irradiance. The results are confronted with those previously obtained for the Banyuls area, and some conclusions are drawn regarding the existence of typical habitat-induced Octocorallian communities.
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  • 36
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Bijdragen tot de dierkunde vol. 52 no. 2, pp. 103-120
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: The need for better and more systematic descriptions of the chaetotaxy (especially data concerning the shape, structure and pattern of distribution of the setae) is emphasized. The historical developments of studies in chaetotaxy are reviewed.\nTwo basic types of cuticular processes can be recognized: setae and pseudochaetae. The former have sensorial and mechanical functions, the latter only a mechanical function. A special type of seta is the aesthetasc or the chemosensorial receptor. Using the shape and structure of the setae, most of them can be classified in the following categories: simple, plumed, serrate and chelate.\nThe importance of developmental studies for the establishment of homologies in chaetotaxy is stressed.\nExamples of functional morphology of setae are discussed. It is emphasized that the functional morphology of most of the setae can be better understood when the whole organ is studied of which the setae are only a component. Not all the setae have an adaptive significance.\nA descriptive model of the chaetotaxy of cypridacean ostracods is presented. The different characteristics of the setae as well as their position on the limbs are coded by letters and numerals using simple formulae.
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  • 37
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Arubolana parvioculata, a new stygobiont species of cirolanid isopod crustaceans, is described from an interstitial habitat near the mouth of an intermittent river, the Rio Secco, Discovery Bay, Jamaica. This is the first subterranean cirolanid from Jamaica. Alltogether, 6 genera of stygobiont cirolanids, with 9 species, are known from 7 islands in the West Indies. The new species has a small and elongate body, which is typical of inhabitants of interstitia. It is also euryhaline.\nAn additional description is given of Arubolana imula Botosaneanu & Stock, 1979, type-species of the genus, based on new specimens from the type-locality. Bermudalana aruboides Bowman & Iliffe, 1983, from caves on the oceanic island Bermuda, is referred to the genus Arubolana. The morphological and ecological differences between the three Arubolana species are pointed out. Some of these differences are usually considered characteristic of distinction on generic level; therefore the three species possibly have to be recognized as members of different subgenera, but on account of our limited knowledge this decision has not been made.\nIt is presumed that the Arubolana species originated from a Metacirolana type of marine ancestor. A general evolutionary scenario for Arubolana is difficult to construct. A. imula is considered a regression element, but A. aruboides and A. parvioculata can be either regression and/or dispersal elements.
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  • 38
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Bijdragen tot de dierkunde vol. 54 no. 2, pp. 178-184
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Samples from wells in the coastal region of the d\xc3\xa9partement Var (France), from Mallorca and from a cave in Formentera (Balearic islands) contained among other amphipods species belonging to the genus Salentinella Ruffo; the status of the specimens from Var and from Mallorca is discussed. Salentinella formenterae n. sp. is described from Formentera and some remarks on the discriminating features used within the genus are given.
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  • 39
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: The standing crop of Gammarus pulex pulex (Linnaeus, 1758), G. fossarum Koch in Panzer, 1836 and Echinogammarus berilloni (Catta, 1878) has been studied in a small French chalk stream, the Slack. A brief description of all amphipod species encountered in this river is given, with a key to different life stages.\nPeaks in abundance could not be explained by population explosions. In spring regions and headwaters population density was highest. The gammarids showed a rather constant zonation in the Slack: G. p. pulex in the unstable spring region; G. fossarum in the upper and middle reaches, confined to the less polluted parts of the latter; and E. berilloni in the middle and lower region of the Slack, where fluctuations in water temperatures increased.\nLife histories of all three species revealed great inter- and intraspecific differences. Data on size, growth rate, sexual activity, population structure, sex ratio, fecundity and parasitation yielded ample illustrations of these dissimilarities. Laboratory experiments on egg incubation time and reproduction success demonstrated that temperature affects the three species differently.\nBoth seasonal variation and between-year differences in life processes were investigated. The impact of temperature was manifestly important in this aspect too.
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  • 40
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Flora of the Netherlands Antilles vol. 3 no. 3, pp. 335-347
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Monoecious or dioecious trees, shrubs or vines climbing by axillary tendrils. Leaves usually alternate, compound to decompound, often even-pinnate or rarely simple. Stipules sometimes present and then persistent or deciduous. Inflorescence consisting of terminal and/or axillary thyrses, or simple or compound racemes or rarely flowers solitary. Flowers small, actinomorphic or zygomorphic, hypogynous, usually unisexual by abortion or rarely bisexual. Sepals 4\xe2\x80\x945, free or connate, usually unequal, deciduous or persistent. Petals 4\xe2\x80\x945, free, clawed, often with petaloid appendages on the interior surface above the claw, or rarely wanting. Disk nectariferous, extra-staminal or intrastaminal. Stamens 6\xe2\x80\x9410 (\xe2\x80\x9412), often 7\xe2\x80\x948; filaments free or connate near the base, inserted within or on the disk; anthers versatile, introrse, with longitudinal dehiscence; in female flowers staminodial or wanting. Pistil 3\xe2\x80\x94(2\xe2\x80\x946)-carpellary, rudimentary in male flowers; ovary superior, 2\xe2\x80\x944 (\xe2\x80\x946)-locular; style short or elongate, sometimes cleft at the apex; stigma 1 or 3. Ovules 1\xe2\x80\x942 in each locule, on an axile placenta. Fruit a drupe, berry, capsule or schizocarp splitting into drupe-like, nut-like or samaroid mericarps, often 1-locular. seeds usually solitary in a locule, often with an aril. Endosperm scanty or wanting. Embryo usually curved. Pantropic family of about 150 genera and 1800 species, especially in the Neotropics; a few species extending into warm-temperate regions.
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  • 41
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Flora of the Netherlands Antilles vol. 3 no. 3, pp. 378-409
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Trees, shrubs, lianas or herbs. Leaves simple, crosswise opposite or sometimes whorled. Stipules often sheathing the stem. Inflorescence various. Flowers actinomorphic, 4\xe2\x80\x945-merous, epigynous, usually hermaphrodite. Sepals 4\xe2\x80\x946, free or fused, margin sometimes entire. Corolla sympetalous; petals 4\xe2\x80\x946. Stamens as many as the corollalobes, inserted on the corolla-tube and alternating with the lobes. Ovary inferior, 1\xe2\x80\x9410- but usually 2-locular; style filiform; stigma often bilobed. Epigynic disk mostly present. Ovules 1 to many in each locule. Fruit and seeds various. Endosperm nuclear. About 6000 species in 500 genera of world-wide distribution, most abundant in the tropics.
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  • 42
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Flora of the Netherlands Antilles vol. 3 no. 3, pp. 310-314
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Trees or shrubs. Leaves alternate, pinnately compound or simple, often crowded at the top of the branches, without pellucid dots (but sometimes resin ducts in wood and bark). Stipules usually wanting. Inflorescence consisting of axillary clusters, racemes, panicles or cymose spikes. Flowers actinomorphic, unisexual by abortion and then the plant mostly dioecious or flowers hermaphrodite. Sepals 3\xe2\x80\x948, connate or sometimes free, imbricate or valvate. Petals 3\xe2\x80\x948 or rarely absent, free or basally connate. Stamens as many or twice as many as the petals, obdiplostemonous, inserted on or at the base of a disk; filaments distinct, often appendaged by scales at the base; anthers 2-celled, with longitudinal dehiscence. Staminodes often present in the female flowers. Gynoecium of 2\xe2\x80\x945(\xe2\x80\x948) unilocular and 1-carpellary pistils, distinct or the pistils basally connate into a lobed, 2\xe2\x80\x948-locular ovary or apically connate by the styles, rarely completely connate; styles 2\xe2\x80\x948, distinct or connate or sometimes absent. Ovules 1\xe2\x80\x942 in each carpel, with axile placentation. Fruit various, a capsule, schizocarp or samara, rarely a berry or a drupe. Seeds usually one. Embryo straight or curved. Endosperm scanty or wanting. About 200 species in perhaps more than 30 genera in the tropics.
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  • 43
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Flora of the Netherlands Antilles vol. 3 no. 3, pp. 315-320
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Trees or shrubs. Leaves alternate, pinnately compound with or without a terminal leaflet. Stipules wanting. Indument usually simple, rarely of stellate or dibrachiate hairs. Inflorescence axillary or terminal, usually thyrsoid or rarely racemose. Flowers actinomorphic, hermaphrodite or unisexual and then the rudiments of the opposite sex well differentiated in the unisexual flowers. Calyx of 4\xe2\x80\x945 sepals, usually lobed or less frequently truncate or with the sepals free. Petals (3\xe2\x80\x94) 4\xe2\x80\x945 (\xe2\x80\x947), imbricate or valvate, free or partly united. Stamens 5\xe2\x80\x9410; filaments partly or completely united into a staminal tube or rarely free; with or without appendages; anthers 2-celled, inserted on the top of the filament or on the margin of the staminal tube, with longitudinal dehiscence. Disk intrastaminal, annular or columnar. Ovary superior, free or adnate to the disk, 2\xe2\x80\x9410-locular; style 1 or wanting; stigma capitate or discoid, often lobed. Ovules 1 to many in each locule, anatropous, pendulous, biseriate or superposed on an axile placenta. Fruit a berry, capsule or drupe. Seeds solitary or numerous, sometimes winged or with or without an aril or sarcotesta. Embryo plano-convex or flat; endosperm present or wanting. Species about 550 in 50 genera, in tropical and subtropical regions.
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  • 44
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Flora of the Netherlands Antilles vol. 3 no. 3, pp. 194-196
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Trees, often with very thick trunks, all parts covered by stellate hairs or squamae. Leaves alternate, simple, or digitately compound. Stipules deciduous. Flowers mostly solitary, often very large. Flowers hermaphrodite, 5-merous. Calyx valvate. Epicalyx present or wanting. Petals contorted. Stamens many, or rarely 5 or 10; filaments often somewhat connate at the base or free; anthers mono-, di- or polythecal, sometimes spirally twisted. Ovary 2\xe2\x80\x945-locular. Ovules 2\xe2\x80\x94many in each locule. Capsule loculicidal, often woolly on the inner side or the inner layer of the fruitwall becoming pulpy. Seeds with few or without endosperm; sometimes a fleshy aril present. Embryo large; cotyledons folded. Nearly 30 genera with 150 species in the tropics, mainly in America.
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  • 45
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Flora of the Netherlands Antilles vol. 3 no. 3, pp. 174-182
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Shrubs or herbs (in our region) with muculaginous ducts and with an indumentum of stellate or rarely simple hairs or lepidote. Leaves alternate, simple. Stipules present or wanting, often fugaceous. Inflorescence axillary, terminal or oppositifolious, cymose or flowers solitary. Bracts and bracteoles present, small or large. Flowers hermaphrodite or unisexual by abortion, actinomorphic. Sepals 4\xe2\x80\x945, free or basally connate, caducous or persistent. Petals as many as the sepals or wanting, usually free, sometimes sepaloid, often glandular at the base. Stamens 10 to many, sometimes partly staminodial; filaments free or shortly connate at the base into a tube or in fascicles; anthers usually 2-celled, opening by longitudinal dehiscence or apical pores. Ovary superior, sessile on the receptacle or on a gonophore, 2-locular; style simple or obsolete; stigma entire or 2\xe2\x80\x9410-split or -lobed. Ovules 1 to many in each locule, anatropous with axile placentation. Fruit drupaceous or capsular, smooth or spinose, or dry and indehiscent, the locules sometimes again divided by means of longitudinal and transverse partitions. Seeds 1 to many, pilose or alate. Embryo straight or somewhat curved. Endosperm abundant or scanty. About 600 species in 50 genera of worldwide distribution but mainly in the tropics.
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  • 46
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Flora of the Netherlands Antilles vol. 2 no. 3, pp. 289-290
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Trees or shrubs. Leaves alternate, simple. Stipules wanting. Inflorescence consisting of lateral or axillary racemes, spikes or clusters. Flowers hermaphrodite or rarely unisexual and then polygamous, actinomorphic. Calyx 5-lobed, imbricate, persistent, the tube partly or completely adnate to the ovary. Corolla often divided nearly to the base, 5\xe2\x80\x9410-lobed, imbricate. Stamens numerous, in 1\xe2\x80\x943 series; filaments usually slightly united in clusters at the base of each corolla segment; anthers 2-celled, globose, with longitudinal dehiscence, innate. Ovary inferior to half-inferior, 2\xe2\x80\x945-locular; style 1, slender; stigma more or less capitate. Ovules commonly 2 in each locule, pendulous, anatropous, on an axile placenta. Fruit a drupe or berry, usually 1-seeded. Embryo straight. Endosperm fleshy. About 280 species in only one genus in tropical regions, especially in south-east and east Asia and the Malayan region.
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  • 47
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Flora of the Netherlands Antilles vol. 3 no. 3, pp. 197-198
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Trees or shrubs. Leaves alternate, opposite, simple; petioles often thickened at both ends. Stipules present, deciduous. Inflorescence consisting of racemes or panicles or flowers solitary. Flowers actinomorphic, 4\xe2\x80\x945-merous, mostly hermaphrodite. Sepals 4\xe2\x80\x945. Petals 4\xe2\x80\x945 or wanting. Stamens numerous, free, attached to the well-developed disk; anthers mostly opening by pores. Ovary superior, 2\xe2\x80\x94many-locular; style one; stigmas 5. Ovules 2\xe2\x80\x94many, with axile placentation. Fruit mostly a capsule, rarely a drupe. Seed with endosperm and rarely with an aril. About 10 genera with c. 400 species, nearly all in the tropics.
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  • 48
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Flora of the Netherlands Antilles vol. 2 no. 3, pp. 275-276
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Trees; bark yielding a gum. Leaves alternate, deciduous, 2\xe2\x80\x943-imparipinnate. Stipules wanting or modified as glands at the base of the petioles and the pinnae. Inflorescence consisting of large, axillary panicles. Flowers hermaphrodite, zygomorphic; receptacle cup-shaped. Sepals 5, unequal, imbricate, spreading or reflexed. Petals slightly unequal, the interior one reflexed. Disk lining the receptacle, with a very short free margin. Stamens 5, epipetalous; filaments slender, somewhat unequal; anthers 1-celled, dorsifixed. Staminodes 5, episepalous, subulate. Ovary superior, stipitate, 1-locular; style slender, tubular; stigma minute. Ovules numerous, attached in 2 rows to the 3 parietal placentas, pendulous. Fruit an elongate, 1-locular, angled capsule, dehiscing by 3 valves. Seeds large, 3-winged or wingless. Embryo straight. Endosperm wanting. About 10 species in one genus in Africa and tropical Asia, especially in the semi-arid regions; one species widely cultivated and sometimes naturalized in the tropics.
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  • 49
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Flora of the Netherlands Antilles vol. 3 no. 3, pp. 165-167
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Trees or shrubs. Leaves alternate, rarely pseudo-verticillate or pseudo-opposite, entire, with small dots and lines (schizogenic cavities). Stipules wanting. Inflorescence various, terminal or axillary. Flowers hermaphrodite or unisexual, small, actinomorphic (3\xe2\x80\x94)4\xe2\x80\x945(\xe2\x80\x946)-merous. Sepals free or more or less united, valvate, usually glandulardotted, persistent. Petals usually united, mostly rotate or salverform, rarely tubular. Stamens as many as the petals and epipetalous; filaments short and adnate to the corolla or rarely free; anthers 2-celled, with longitudinal, introrse dehiscence. Ovary superior or more or less inferior, 1-locular, sessile; style 1, short or wanting; stigma various. Ovules few to numerous, anatropous or amphitropous, usually at least partly immersed in the central placenta. Fruit a berry or a drupe with stony endocarp, 1-seeded. Seed with copious endosperm. Embryo enclosed in the fleshy or horny endosperm. About 1000 species in c. 35 genera in the tropics and subtropics.
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  • 50
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Flora of the Netherlands Antilles vol. 2 no. 3, pp. 243-246
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Lianas or sometimes herbs, shrubs or trees. Leaves alternate, simple, often cordate or reniform, entire to deeply lobed. Stipules wanting. Flowers solitary or in axillary fascicles or corymbs, actinomorphic or zygomorphic, hermaphrodite. Perianth simple, coloured, united and variously 3-lobed, rarely with 3 rudimentary petals. Stamens 5, 6, 12 or \xe2\x88\x9e, free or connate to the style. Ovary inferior or half-inferior, mostly 4\xe2\x80\x946-locular, sometimes nearly apocarpous. Ovary numerous, anatropous, on axile placentas. Fruit a septicidal capsule. Seeds with endosperm and small embryo. About 600 species in 7 genera mostly in the tropics and subtropics, especially in South America; only a few species in the temperate regions.
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  • 51
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Flora of the Netherlands Antilles vol. 2 no. 3, pp. 254-269
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Trees, erect or climbing shrubs or herbs, often with simple or stellate hairs, scales or viscid glands. Leaves alternate, simple or palmately compound. Stipules small, glandular or spinose, or wanting. Flowers solitary in the axils of the leaves or in axillary or terminal racemes, hermaphrodite or rarely polygamous, zygomorphic or actinomorphic, often subtended by bracts; bracteoles wanting. Sepals 4, free or connate at the base, often unequal. Petals usually 4, sometimes wanting. Disk a ring or scale-like. Stamens 4\xe2\x80\x94numerous, often on an androphore. Ovary superior, sessile or usually on a long gynophore, 1- or morelocular; style short or filiform; stigma capitate or 2-lobed. Ovules few to many on parietal placentas, campylotropous. Fruit a berry or a bi-valved or indehiscent capsule or rupturing irregularly, many-seeded. Seeds kidney-shaped. Embryo large, various folded. Endosperm wanting. Perhaps 800 species in 45 genera in the tropics and subtropics.
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  • 52
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Flora of the Netherlands Antilles vol. 2 no. 2, pp. 137-143
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Herbs, shrubs or rarely trees; stems terete, angled or striate, often articulate. Leaves alternate or opposite, sessile or petiolate, simple and sometimes reduced to scales. Stipules present or wanting. Flowers actinomorphic, hermaphrodite or unisexual, minute, greenish, often mono- or bi-bracteate, solitary or usually in dense cymose glomerules, these spicate, axillary, paniculate or cymose, or flowers arranged in a strobile and sunken in depression of the stems. Perianth simple, sometimes wanting in the pistillate flowers, made up of (2\xe2\x80\x94)5 connate tepals, usually persisting in fruit. Stamens as many as or fewer than the tepals and epitepalous, hypogynous or adnate to a disk or to the base of the perianth; filaments free; anthers 4-celled, incurved in the bud, with longitudinal dehiscence. Ovary superior or rarely inferior, uni-locular, attenuate into the style or truncate at the apex; styles 1\xe2\x80\x943, terminal, short or elongate, stigma capitate or styles 2\xe2\x80\x943, introrsely papillose or stigmas 2\xe2\x80\x945, sessile and often filiform. Ovule solitary, campylotropous, erect or suspended from the apex of an elongate funiculus. Fruit an indehiscent nut or rarely circumscissile, membranaceous, coriaceous or fleshy, usually included in the perianth and deciduous with it. Seed with a coiled embryo, surrounding the endosperm, the latter farinaceous, fleshy, or nearly wanting. About 1500 species in more than 100 genera, of world-wide distribution, often in dry and saline areas, in prairies or deserts.
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  • 53
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Flora of the Netherlands Antilles vol. 2 no. 3, pp. 279-288
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Trees or shrubs, with or without milky sap. Leaves alternate or rarely opposite, simple, entire or rarely dentate, coriaceous. Stipules caducous or wanting. Inflorescence consisting usually of axillary clusters or flowers solitary. Flowers hermaphrodite, actinomorphic, bracteolate. Sepals 4\xe2\x80\x9412, biseriate or spirally arranged, imbricate, free or more or less connate at the base. Corolla with a minute or well-developed tube; lobes usually as many as the sepals, with or without dorsal or lateral lobes or appendages, usually imbricate. Stamens epipetalous, typically in 2 or 3 whorls, but usually only the inner whorl fertile; filaments free; anthers 2-celled, with longitudinal dehiscence. Staminodes present or wanting, variously shaped. Disk often present. Ovary superior, 4\xe2\x80\x945 (or 1\xe2\x80\x9414)-locular; style 1, often lobed at the apex. Ovules solitary in each loculus on an axile or almost basal or apical placenta, anatropous, with inferior micropyle. Fruit woody and indehiscent or a berry. Seeds various. Endosperm present or wanting. About 800 species in 40(\xe2\x80\x94125) genera in the tropics and partly also in the subtropics.
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  • 54
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Flora of the Netherlands Antilles vol. 2 no. 3, pp. 270-274
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Annual or perennial herbs, rarely woody plants. Leaves alternate, simple or compound, partly arranged in basal rosettes. Stipules wanting. Inflorescence consisting of racemes. Bracts usually wanting. Flowers hermaphrodite, actinomorphic. Sepals 4, deciduous or rarely persistent, the outer 2 median, the inner 2 lateral and often saccate at the base. Petals 4, cruciate, sometimes rudimentary or wanting, usually clawed. Stamens 6, tetradynamous (2 stamens of the outer series smaller than the 4 of the inner series); filaments sometimes winged or provided with scale-like appendages; anthers cordate or sagittate at the base, sometimes with elongate connective. Nectar glands attached to the receptacle near the bases of the filaments. Ovary superior, bi-locular by a false septum; style simple or rarely wanting; stigma discoid or more or less 2-lobed. Ovules numerous, anatropous or campylotropous, on 2 parietal placentas. Fruit a siliqua or silicle, usually 2-locular, bivalved or rarely indehiscent. Seeds attached to both sides of the septum. Embryo large, the cotyledons incumbent, accumbent or conduplicate. Endosperm wanting. About 3000 species in 350 genera, widely distributed, especially in the temperate and cold regions of the northern hemisphere.
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  • 55
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Flora of the Netherlands Antilles vol. 2 no. 3, pp. 277-278
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Dioecious, branched undershrubs; branches opposite, 4-angular, herbaceous, afterwards becoming terete and woody. Leaves opposite, simple, sessile. Stipules wanting. Male inflorescence catkinlike, axillary. Bracts in 4 rows, imbricate, persistent, slightly peltate. Flowers with a cuplike, bilabiate perianth. Staminodes 4. Stamens 4, alternating with the staminodes; filaments distinct; anthers versatile, with longitudinal dehiscence. Rudiment of ovary sometimes present. Female inflorescence more or less conical. Bracts in 4 rows, not imbricate, deciduous, slightly peltate. Flowers naked. Ovary 4-locular, sessile to short-stipitate; style very short; stigma bilobed. Ovules solitary in each locule, basifixed, anatropous. Disk wanting. Fruit baccate, crowned by the persistent stigma. Seed erect, club-shaped, slightly curved. Endosperm wanting. Two species in one genus; one species mainly in tropical America, the other one in New Guinea.
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  • 56
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Flora of the Netherlands Antilles vol. 2 no. 3, pp. 250-251
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Shrubby or rarely herbaceous half-parasites, usually more or less fleshy. Leaves simple, coriaceous, opposite, alternate or verticillate, sometimes reduced to scales. Stipules wanting. Flowers actinomorphic, hermaphrodite or unisexual, monoecious or dioecious, with slightly differentiated perianth or with sepals and petals and then 2\xe2\x80\x943-merous. Stamens as many as and opposite the tepals, more or less united with them or free; anthers usually 2-celled. Ovary inferior and usually sunken in the axis, mostly without differentiation of placenta and ovules; style one or wanting; stigma entire or lobed. Disk annular or wanting. Fruit drupaceous or baccate, with sticky pericarp. Seed one. Endosperm present. Embryo with 2 or 3\xe2\x80\x946 cotyledons. About 1300 species in c. 40 genera, mainly in the tropics.
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  • 57
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Flora of the Netherlands Antilles vol. 2 no. 3, pp. 252-253
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Annual or perennial herbs, with milky or coloured juice. Leaves alternate, entire or pinnatifid or palmatifid. Stipules wanting. Flowers usually solitary, hermaphrodite, actinomorphic. Sepals 2, rarely 3 or 4, free, very caducous. Petals 4, rarely more or wanting, free, imbricate, deciduous. Stamens numerous; filaments free, filiform; anthers 2-celled, with longitudinal dehiscence. Ovary superior, unilocular, with 2\xe2\x80\x9416, sometimes protruding, parietal placentas; style obsolete; stigmas as many as the carpels, opposite or alternating with the placentas. Ovules numerous or only one central ovule. Fruit a capsule, opening by pores or valves, rarely indehiscent. Seeds small, with a crested smooth raphe or arillate. Embryo minute. Endosperm fleshy or oily. About 250 species in 28 genera, mostly in the temperate and subtropical regions of the northern hemisphere.
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  • 58
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Flora of the Netherlands Antilles vol. 2 no. 2, pp. 204-207
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Perennial, glabrous, herbaceous vines with slender or stout and fleshy stems, often with a rhizome or tuberous roots. Leaves alternate, entire, often fleshy, sessile or petiolate. Stipules wanting. Inflorescence consisting of spikes, panicles or clusters, the flowers sessile or short-pedicellate. Bracts small; bracteoles 2 or 4, forming a calyx-like receptacle, sometimes accrescent; the upper pair often tepaloid. Flowers actinomorphic, hermaphrodite or perhaps sometimes unisexual. Tepals 5, connate at the base in a shorter or longer tube, imbricate. Stamens 5, epitepalous; anthers 4-celled, dorsifixed, with longitudinal dehiscence. Ovary superior, unilocular; styles 3, free or united; stigmas 3 or 1. Ovule 1, basal, campylotropous. Fruit dry or baccate, surrounded and sometimes winged by the expanded, persistent perianth. Seeds globular. Embryo spirally twisted or semi-circular to horseshoe-shaped. Endosperm copious; perisperm sparse. About 20 species in 4 genera, almost confined to the tropics of the New World; some species of Basella in Africa and Madagascar.
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  • 59
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Flora of the Netherlands Antilles vol. 2 no. 2, pp. 182-188
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Herbs, shrubs or trees, usually glabrous. Leaves alternate, entire, petiolate or sessile. Stipules minute, aculeolate or wanting. Inflorescence consisting of simple or compound, terminal or axillary racemes or panicles. Flowers hermaphrodite or unisexual. Perianth membranaceous or coriaceous, consisting of 4\xe2\x80\x945 tepals; the latter subequal or unequal. Stamens 3 to numerous, inserted on a hypogynous disc, irregular or biseriate, the outer cycle alternating with the tepals, the inner one epitepalous; filaments free or basically connate, filiform or subulate; anthers innate or versatile, bi-celled. Ovary superior, consisting of 1 to numerous, free or connate carpels; styles as many as the carpels, free or sometimes united; the ovules solitary in each carpel, campylotropous. Fruits 1- to many carpellary, samaroid, crustaceous or baccate; seeds erect, subglobose or subreniform; endosperm amylaceous. About 110 species in 22 genera, in tropical and subtropical regions, mostly in America.
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  • 60
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Flora of the Netherlands Antilles vol. 2 no. 2, pp. 132-136
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Trees or shrubs. Leaves alternate, distichous, simple, entire to serrate, often inequilateral at the base. Stipules small, deciduous, free or united. Inflorescence consisting of small cymes or racemes or the female flowers solitary in the leaf-axils. Flowers small, hermaphrodite, unisexual or polygamous, often zygomorphic. Tepals 3\xe2\x80\x948, free or more or less connate, imbricate or valvate. Stamens as many as the tepals, epitepalous; filaments distinct, not incurved in the bud; anthers 2-celled with longitudinal dehiscence. Ovary superior, usually 1-locular; styles 1 or 2, linear, stigmatic along the inner surface of the upper part. Ovule solitary, pendulous from the top of the cell, anatropous or amphitropous. Fruit a samara, nut or drupe. Embryo straight or curved. Endosperm scanty or wanting. Cotyledons usually flat. About 150 species in 15 genera in tropical and temperate regions, especially in the northern hemisphere.
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  • 61
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Flora of the Netherlands Antilles vol. 2 no. 2, pp. 109-110
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Mostly monoecious trees or shrubs, often of \xe2\x80\x9cweeping\xe2\x80\x9d habit, with numerous slender, jointed, angular, and striate branches. Leaves reduced to minute scales or toothed sheaths. Flowers small, unisexual, with or without perianth. Male flowers in spike-like inflorescences, born in whorls within successive sheaths towards the branch-tips; each flower with one stamen, 2 perianth leaves and 2 bracteoles (often interpreted as 4 bracteoles). Female flowers in lateral, dense, spherical heads; each flower in the axil of a bract, without a perianth, but protected by 2 bracteoles; ovary superior, uni-locular; style short, with 2 long stigmas which hang out beyond the bracts; ovules 2, collateral on a single, parietal placenta. After fertilization the female inflorescence becomes cone-like, the woody bracts subtending winged achenes. Seeds without endosperm. One genus indigenous in the southern hemisphere. 40\xe2\x80\x9450 species, mostly in Australia.
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  • 62
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    Unknown
    In:  Zoologische Verhandelingen vol. 197 no. 1, pp. 1-48
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: The present paper comprises the first part of a revision of Euchirella Giesbrecht, 1888. In this General Part, the sources of the material are accounted for, an outline is given of the various techniques employed in this study and the genus is reviewed in a historical sense.
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  • 63
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Zoologische Verhandelingen vol. 203 no. 1, pp. 1-49
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: A taxonomic revision of the scarabaeoid genus Hybosorus is given, including descriptions, nomenclatorial notes, figures of genital apparatus and other relevant parts, a key, and notes on distribution and bionomics. Lectotypes are designated for Hybosorus carolinus LeConte, H. crassus Klug, H. nitidus Lansberge, H. pinguis Westwood, H. roei Westwood, and Hybosoroides alluaudi Benderitter. Hybosorus arator (Illiger), H. carolinus LeConte, H. nitidus Lansberge (nov. syn.), H. illigeri var. nossibianus Fairmaire, H. pinguis Westwood, H. roei Westwood, H. arator subsp. arator (Illiger) sensu Endr\xc3\xb6di, 1957 (nov. syn.) and H. arator subsp. palearcticus Endr\xc3\xb6di (nov. syn.) are considered synonyms of H. illigeri Reiche. Problems concerning the type-species and some dubious names are discussed. Arguments are given for Hybosorus oblongus Dahlbom, H. pinguis Westwood, H. roei Westwood and H. carolinus LeConte being nomina oblita. Hybosorus laportei Westwood is considered a valid species and H. thoracicus Westwood a synonym of H. laportei (nov. syn.). Both were currently considered synonyms of H. illigeri Reiche. A new genus, Seleucosorus, is erected for Hybosorus punctatissimus Reiche. Hybosoroides alluaudi Benderitter, due to its close similarity to Hybosorus, is included in this revision. Hybosorus laeviceps Fairmaire is considered a synonym of H. baliensis Brancsik. Removed from Hybosorus are H. curtulus Fairmaire, being a Melolonthine, and H incultus P\xc3\xa9ringuey, being an Orphnine.
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  • 64
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Scripta Geologica vol. 64, pp. 1-35
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Impressions of the bark of two small lycophytes, Bumbudendron paganzianum gen. et sp. nov. and Bumbudendron nitidum sp. nov., are described from middle Carboniferous shales in the Sierra de Paganzo. Lepidodendroid leaf cushions with a well-developed leaf scar showing a single trace, and the presence of a fertile branch structure, invite comparison with Bodeodendron/Sporangiostrobus of the contemporaneous equatorial belt. The presence of an infrafoliar bladder provides the main distinguishing character. Small stem impressions with a thick cuticle are recorded of the simple lycophyte Malanzania nana gen. et sp. nov. which has false leaf scars corresponding to spiny excrescences. These remains have been found in the middle Carboniferous of Malanz\xc3\xa1n in the Sierra de los Llanos. They are comparable to Palaeostigma of Brazil and South Africa. The cuticle shows approximately isodiametric cells flanking the holes corresponding to false leaf scars, and more elongate cells in a fan-shaped disposition occupying the wide areas separating these scars. The rather poor record of Pennsylvanian lycophytes in western South America is analysed, the result being that there may be two additional elements, viz. \'Lepidodendropsis\' peruviana (Gothan) Jongmans and \'Cyclostigma\' pacifica (Steinmann) Jongmans. The generic names of these taxa have been misapplied and a revision of these two species is recommended.
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  • 65
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Two rather small mollusc faunas, collected nearly seventy years ago by L. M. R. Rutten, have been examined. Though fairly close together and presumably not much different in age (Preangerian: Tf3), they show no relationship to one another. Tapian Langsat: this locality yielded 11 species all of which occur in Preangerian deposits, particularly in the basal Menkrawit and Gelingseh Beds of the Sangkulirang/Mangkalihat area much farther to the North, there being but a solitary species in common with the classical Javanese Preangerian. Gunung Batuta: consisting of 13 species, this assemblage has, like the corals from the same locality but unlike Tapian Langsat, a number of species (in this case 8) in common with the classical Preangerian, while the relationships with the fauna of the Gelingseh and basal Menkrawit Beds are less noticeable. In both cases the relationships with a number of other Preangerian faunas from East Borneo are weak to non-existent, stressing the individual nature of the various sedimentary basins of East Borneo. Generally similar features in this respect have been emphasized by H. Gerth and J. H. F. Umbgrove concerning the corals, ties with distant assemblages often being much stronger than with nearby faunas.
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  • 66
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Reworked phosphoritic concretions from the base of the Diest Sands (Miocene) at Ramsel (Belgium) yield many magnificent crabs and molluscs in mould preservation. Two species of crabs are present, viz. Mursia lienharti (Bachmayer, 1961) and Tasadia carniolica (Bittner, 1884), Tasadia being a new genus. The palaeoecology of the decapod fauna is discussed and compared with Paratethyan occurrences. The age of the fauna in the concretions as indicated by the mollusc fauna is Middle Miocene, Hemmoorian, youngest Oxlundian. A similar fauna, also in reworked concretions, is known from the base of the Deurne Sands at Borgerhout (Antwerpen city area). A new coleoid cephalopod species, Spirulirostra baetensi sp. nov., is described. The European Spirulirostra and Spirulirostrina species are discussed.
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  • 67
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Scripta Geologica vol. 67, pp. 1-20
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: The fossils from Muara Kobun were collected by M. Schmidt (Royal Dutch Petroleum Company) as far back as 1902. Eighteen species, including two new ones (Cerithium (Gourmya) kobunense and Carditella witkampi) have been examined, the majority being gastropods whose combined stratigraphical ranges suggest a Preangerian age, with, however, the additional stipulation that perhaps some level high up in Tertiary f3 is involved rather than an age comparable to that of the Gelingseh faunas first partly described by K. Martin and the present writer. The molluscs from Pulu Senumpah were collected by L.M.R. Rutten in the period 1911-1913. There are no more than seven species, all gastropods, over half of which indicate best relationships with the Muara Kobun fauna, hence their being tentatively assigned the same age.
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  • 68
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  Scripta Geologica vol. 71, pp. 1-76
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: The description of the volcanoes in the former Netherlands East Indies are analysed in order of their publication, grouping them into three parts. The first group consists of information from old Javanese sources and incidental communications in travel accounts and the like, dating from the 16th, 17th and 18th century. The second group includes scientific reports from the 19th century and the last part deals with the organised volcanological research after 1900 until the Indonesian Independence. This last part not only lists the volcanoes going from west to east but also discusses several special topics that were studied, e.g. temperatures in the crater region, sulphur in Indonesia and the caldera problem. Each chapter begins with some historical notes, including biographic details of the scientists that carried out the volcanological research. A list of active volcanoes in Indonesia, including fumarole and solfatare fields, is given and also an exhaustive bibliography.
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  • 69
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    In:  Nederlandse Faunistische Mededelingen vol. 1 no. A, pp. 1-277
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: This first part of \'The larvae of the Dutch Chironomidae\' deals with the larvae of Tanypodinae and Chironomini. In chapter I an introduction is given to sampling and handling of chironomid larvae. In chapter II their general morphology and development are described, followed by a key to the subfamilies (p. 25).\nThe key for larvae of Tanypodinae (p. 34) in many cases leads to species level . For the Chironomini the first key (p. 103) leads to a genus or species group, but sometimes a further key (with description of the genus) enables identification of the species. For every taxon the fourth instar larva is described and the most important data on life cycle and ecology are given. When using this book in other countries one should be aware of the possible occurrence of species not known from or expected in the Netherlands.\nEach name used in this work has been indexed on p. 271-277. The second part of this work dealing with the Orthocladiinae, is in press.
    Keywords: Insecta ; Diptera ; Chironomidae ; Tanypodinae ; Chironomini ; larven ; Nederland
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  • 70
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: INTRODUCTION\nPart XVI of the Fauna van Nederland, Isopoda & Tanaidacea (Holthuis, 1956), deals with 27 species of Isopoda occurring in salt and/or brackish water.\nAccording to Holthuis (1956) the occurrence in the Netherlands of two of these, Sphaeroma serratum (Fabricius, 1787) and Bopyrus squillarum Latreille, 1802, is very doubtful and will remain so, as the material on which the records were based is lost and no new records of these species have been published for the Netherlands.\nSince 1956 many new data were obtained for several of the remaining 25 species, while 12 species were found for the first time in Dutch waters or in the southern North Sea. The present paper deals with the more interesting finds.\nPart of the species mentioned here have been discussed earlier. A key for the Dutch species is given by Huwae (1977). Since the publication of the key, three species, Pseudione hyndmanni (Bate & Westwood, 1868), Ione thoracica (Montagu, 1808) and Astacilla longicornis (Sowerby, 1806), were added to the Dutch fauna list. Two species, Arcturella dilatata (G. O. Sars, 1882) and Liriopsis pygmaea (Rathke, 1843) have been included here, because so far they were not represented in the collection of the Rijksmuseum van Natuurlijke Historie, although, properly speaking, they were not collected in the "Dutch" part of the southern North Sea.\nMost of the records from the Dutch coast are based on material obtained by members of the "Strandwerkgemeenschap van de Koninklijke Nederlandse Natuurhistorische Vereniging, de Nederlandse Jeugdbond voor Natuurstudie en de Algemeen Christelijke Jeugdbond voor Natuurstudie en Natuurbescherming" (the Shore Study-group of the Royal Netherlands Natural History Society, the Netherlands and General Christian Junior Leagues for Nature Study);
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  • 71
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: INTRODUCTION\nSince April 1972 an ecological trawl-survey programme has been undertaken by the Netherlands Institute for Sea Research (NIOZ), Texel, in the southern North Sea with the R. V. "Aurelia". The main object is to obtain information on distribution, density, biomass and fluctuations of crawling or swimming demersal (epibenthic) fauna such as small fishes, shrimps, prawns, crabs, asteroids, ophiuroids and some gastropods, for the evaluation of the role of these carnivores in the benthic ecosystem of the southern North Sea. Sedimentological aspects of the area are described by Creutzberg & Postma (1979). Within the context of the present paper the most important feature is the mesh of 5 x 5 mm2 of the cod end of the 51/2 m beam-trawl used and the extensive area of 5000-10,000 m2 covered during each haul. These exceptional circumstances resulted into faunistically interesting catches which gave rise to a cooperation with taxonomic specialists of the Rijksmuseum van Natuurlijke Historie (RMNH), Leiden.\nThe present paper deals with decapod crustaceans, collected during "Aurelia"-cruises, which are considered to be scarce or rare in the southern North Sea, completed with data from bottom-samples and other sources. The species in question are: Pandalina brevirostris, Spirontocaris lilljeborgii, Alpheus macrocheles, Pontophilus spinosus, Pontophilus bispinosus, Galathea dispersa, Ebalia tuberosa, Ebalia tumefacta, Ebalia cranchii, Atelecyclus rotundatus, Monodaeus couchii, Callianassa subterranea, Callianassa tyrrhena, Upogeb ia stellata and Upogebia deltaura.\nOf the genus Macropodia a number of specimens have been collected, which partly were identified as M. linaresi. Other specimens, however, represent one or two new species. On Macropodia in the southern North Sea a seperate paper will
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  • 72
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: INTRODUCTION\nDuring a preliminary investigation in 1977 and the beginning of 1978 on the benthic infauna of the seagrass communities formed by Zostera marina L. and Zostera noltii Hornem, in The Netherlands, the polychaete Malacoceros fuliginosus (Clapar\xc3\xa8de, 1869) was found. In Europe this spionid has been recorded earlier from Sweden (Hannerz, 1956), Denmark (Rasmussen, 1956, 1973), Germany (Westheide, 1966; Giere, 1968), England (Day, 1934), France (Bellan, 1964; Gu\xc3\xa9rin, 1975) and The Netherlands (Wolff, 1973). In The Netherlands only two specimens had been found, viz. one in the mouth of the Oosterschelde and another one in the North Sea.\nDuring our investigation many animals were collected, mainly in Lake Grevelingen, a stagnant salt-water lake in the SW of The Netherlands, which was separated from the influences of the river Rhine in 1964 and from the North Sea in 1971. In the seagrass communities in the Oosterschelde no specimens and in the Dutch Wadden Sea two specimens have been found near the salt marsh "De Ans", south of the island Terschelling.\nThis paper deals with the morphological characters of M. fuliginosus in Lake Grevelingen and provides some data on the ecology.\n\nMETHODS\nThe benthic infauna was collected with a sediment core (\xc3\x98 9 cm). The samples were taken randomly in a Zostera bed. The cores were driven to a depth of 10 cm below the sediment surface. Each sample was sieved through 0.5 mm mesh size and preserved in 70% alcohol.\nThe four sampling sites were: 1. Lake Grevelingen (close to Herkingen). From May 1977 till April
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  • 73
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    In:  Zoologische Bijdragen vol. 29 no. 3, pp. 71-72
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: A survey is given of the occurrence of Stenophylax permistus MacLachlan in thirty subterranean limestone quarries in Southern Limburg, The Netherlands.
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  • 74
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    In:  Zoologische Bijdragen vol. 28 no. 1, pp. 5-7
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Until the appearance, in 1970, of the American crayfish Orconectes limosus (Rafinesque, 1817) in the Netherlands, only a single species of crayfish was known here: Astacus astacus (Linnaeus, 1758). Geelen (1978a, b) provided an extensive discussion on the distribution of the two species.\nOn 13.vi.1980 the Rijksinstituut voor Visserijonderzoek of IJmuiden (National Institution for fishery Research, RIVO) presented the RMNH a freshwater crayfish with a request for identification. The specimen was caught by a fisherman in a freshwaterpond (named IJ) near Spaarndam, NW of Haarlem, province of Noord-Holland. The pond has an open connection with the Noorzeekanaal, the mostly brackish canal that connects Amsterdam with the North Sea. The crayfish, a male with a carapace length of 49.8 mm (total length 103.6 mm) proved to belong to Astacus leptodactylus Eschscholz, 1823 (pl. 1).\nA month later a second specimen of the same species was caught with hook and line in the small port of Moerdijk, on the Hollands Diep, province of NoordBrabant, by Mr. A. van As of Roosendaal. This capture was reported upon in the daily newspaper Brabants Nieuwsblad of 18.vii.1980 in which also a photograph of the specimen was published. The specimen shown in the picture was definitely neither A. astacus nor O. limosus. Mr. van As, who kept the specimen alive in his aquarium, was kind enough to allow me to examine it, and there can be no doubt that it likewise belongs to A. leptodactylus.\nDr. J. F. M. Geelen, University of Nijmegen, confirmed (in litt., 12.viii.1980) that these were the first records of A. leptodactylus for the Netherlands; she had expected that it would appear here sooner or later.\nA. leptodactylus inhabits eastern Europe (Rumenia, Bulgaria, Yugoslavia, Czecho-Slovakia, East-Germany, Poland and Russia). In many countries, for
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  • 75
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: EINLEITUNG\nIn den Jahren 1975, 1977 und 1978 konnten in den Sommermonaten zahlreiche Gew\xc3\xa4sser der Halbinsel Walcheren auf ihre aquatische K\xc3\xa4ferfauna hin untersucht werden. Walcheren, ehemals eine Insel in der Scheidem\xc3\xbcndung, geh\xc3\xb6rt zur Provinz Zeeland und ist heute durch die Polderlandschaft Beveland im Osten mit dem Festland verbunden. Die n\xc3\xb6rdlichen Inseln und Halbinseln sind im Westen durch Deiche verbunden, die ein Eindringen des Nordseewassers verhindern. Der letzte dieser Deiche ist 1978 zwischen Walcheren und Schouwen erstellt worden. Die Zufl\xc3\xbcsse vor allem der Maas f\xc3\xbchren in Zukunft vermutlich zu einer starken Auss\xc3\xbc\xc3\x9fung der n\xc3\xb6rdlichen Scheidearme, was sich mit Sicherheit auch auf die \xc3\xbcbrigen vom Grundwasser gespeisten Brackgew\xc3\xa4sser auswirkt.\nDie Fauna der stark salzhaltigen k\xc3\xbcstennahen Gew\xc3\xa4sser, die bereits von Higler (1967) untersucht wurde, ist von besonderer Bedeutung, da gerade hier seltene halophile und halobionte Arten erwartet werden k\xc3\xb6nnen. Higler\'s Hauptaugenmerk lag allerdings bei den Heteroptera, soda\xc3\x9f die vorliegende Untersuchung eine wesentliche Erweiterung der Faunenliste darstellen kann. An Hand des Arteninventars an aquatischen Insekten \xe2\x80\x94 marine Insekten fehlen im Nordatlantik \xe2\x80\x94 ist es vielleicht m\xc3\xb6glich, den Salzgehalt des jeweiligen Gew\xc3\xa4ssers abzusch\xc3\xa4tzen. Der konkurrenzarme Lebensraum beherbergt auch ubiquit\xc3\xa4re Kurzzeitbesiedler, die m\xc3\xb6glicherweise nur eine Fortpflanzungsperiode lang dieses Habitat besiedeln.\nDie Macrofauna einzelner Gew\xc3\xa4sser auf Walcheren untersuchten Nieser (1966), Higler (1967) und Van der Velde & Polderman (1974). Brakman (1966) erstellt eine Liste der Coleoptera von den Niederlanden, die die Angaben von
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  • 76
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    In:  Zoologische Bijdragen vol. 29 no. 4, pp. 73-76
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: A survey is given of the occurrence of nine species of Lepidoptera in subterranean limestone quarries in Southern Limburg, The Netherlands.
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  • 77
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    In:  Blumea: Biodiversity, Evolution and Biogeography of Plants vol. 27 no. 1, pp. 75-113
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: In subgenus Chamaebatus two Malesian species are recognized, in subgenus Idaeobatus 18. Synonymy, descriptions, and habitat notes are given, sometimes extending to, but not complete for, extra-Malesian parts of the species areas. No new names or combinations are published. Keys are given to the species.
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  • 78
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    In:  Blumea: Biodiversity, Evolution and Biogeography of Plants vol. 29 no. 2, pp. 399-408
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: In a recent thesis B.S. Fey (Z\xc3\xbcrich) has developed a new theory about the origin of the cupule in Fagaceae. He has concluded that the appendages (spines, lamellae, etc.) on the outside of the cupule are regularly arranged and that they reflect a condensation (concrescence) of a dichasial flower system, so that cupule and fruit(s) form together the representation of one ancestral inflorescence; the cupular appendages would then largely represent the bracts of the ancestral inflorescence.\nThis stands in contrast with former opinions, in which the cupule was interpreted as of separate vegetative origin from the nut(s) which was (were) the remain (s) of the inflorescence.
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  • 79
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    In:  Blumea: Biodiversity, Evolution and Biogeography of Plants vol. 26 no. 2, pp. 445-448
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: The article contains a discussion regarding the different identity of the specimens J. F. Duthie 3858 in the Kew (K), and the Calcutta (CAL) and Poona (BSI) herbaria. The specimens at CAL and BSI represent a new species of Arenaria, which is described here.
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  • 80
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    In:  Blumea: Biodiversity, Evolution and Biogeography of Plants vol. 27 no. 1, pp. 209-210
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Frutex scandens, 3 m altus. Folia petiolata; petiolus 1.5 \xe2\x80\x94 2.25 cm longus, gracilis, exauriculatus; squama axillae pro majore parte libera, bilobata ad rotundata, usque ad 3.5 mm alta; lamina 13.5 \xe2\x80\x94 22 cm longa, 4 \xe2\x80\x94 6.5 cm lata, oblonga vel lanceolata, coriacea; basis anguste cuneata; margo integer; apex gradatim acuminatus, acumine longo gracili acuto; costa subtus rotundata; nervi secundarii utrimque circa 6, minute sulcati, subinspectabilis. Inflorescentiae terminales, triflorae, praeterea ramos basales trivel unifloros in axile foliorum summorum suffulta; pedunculi robusti 2 (\xe2\x80\x94 15) mm longi, pedicelli robusti circa 1 cm longi, verrucosi, ebracteolati. Calyx campanulatus 6 \xe2\x80\x94 7 mm altus, lobis semiconnatis, rotundatis, marginatis. Corolla membranacea, tubo gracili 6 \xe2\x80\x94 7 cm longo, lobis patentibus 1.5 cm longis. Stamina tubo corollae circa 4 mm exserta, antheris 3.5 mm longis. Stylus tubo corollae usque ad 10 mm exsertus, stigma peltata 2 mm diam.\nTypus: M. M. J. van Balgooy 3247, Indonesia, Central Celebes, Mt. Roroka Timbu, West slope, c. 1 S, 120\xc2\xb0 E, 9-5-1979, fl. (L).
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  • 81
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    In:  Blumea: Biodiversity, Evolution and Biogeography of Plants vol. 28 no. 1, pp. 61-75
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Two gynoecial primordia are initiated as discrete units but soon get interconnected by the occurrence of interprimordial growth between them. A rim of meristematic tissue thus produced gives rise to the ovary wall by zonal growth. The residual floral apex grows parallel to the gynoecial primordia in the form of a septum. The two placental ridges arise from the inner lateral walls of the ovary, grow into the ovarian cavity, and ultimately fuse with the axial septum. The anterio- posterior region of the ovary wall also grows into the ovarian cavity to form a false septum which divides each locule into two. The Labiatae show a placentation which is neither true axile nor true parietal but an intermediate condition between the two, as the septum grows like in a typical axile placentation and the placentae like in typical parietal placentation. The gynobase in Labiatae is considered to be carpellary in nature.
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  • 82
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    In:  Blumea: Biodiversity, Evolution and Biogeography of Plants vol. 30 no. 1, pp. 45-49
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: A new species, Rhododendron caliginis (Ericaceae) is described from Papua New Guinea and 2 species of Rhododendron previously described as new by A. Gilli (1980) are reduced. Rhododendron heptaster is reduced to R. konori and R. sleumeri is reduced to R. blackii.
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  • 83
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    In:  Blumea: Biodiversity, Evolution and Biogeography of Plants vol. 26 no. 2, pp. 387-392
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Among collections recently (1979) made in the surroundings of Kutacane, Aceh, N. Sumatra, by Mr. and Mrs. De Wilde, a grass has turned up which proved to be a species of Chikusichloa Koidz., a genus sofar known only from South China, Japan, and the Ryukyu Islands. As this is a very interesting find and since the genus is new for the Flora Malesiana area, a few notes seem appropriate.\nChikusichloa was originally described in the Paniceae by Koidzumi (1925), based on C. aquatica Koidz. from Kyushu. The author pointed out a resemblance to Zizania L., which is now considered to belong to the Oryzeae. Honda (1930) recognized its special position and created a subtribe Paniceae-Chikusichloeae. Keng (1931) correctly placed it in the Oryzeae, pointing out possible affinities with Zizaniopsis Doell & Aschers. and Hydrochloa Beauv. Ohwi (1942-a) recognized the subtribe, also, now in the Oryzeae, and added Hydrochloa to it; he corrected the spelling to Chikusichloinae. The two genera seem indeed distinct from the other Oryzeae by the very much reduced to absent glumes and sterile lemmas, the longstipitate fertile lemma, which is dorsoventrally flattened at anthesis, and not laterally so, and which becomes more or less terete in fruit. Otherwise the two do not resemble each other very much.
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  • 84
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    In:  Blumea: Biodiversity, Evolution and Biogeography of Plants vol. 30 no. 1, pp. 169-172
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: The genera Hunteria and Lepiniopsis of the family Apocynaceae are in Malesia represented by one species each. Distribution and ecology are cited in full.
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  • 85
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    In:  Blumea: Biodiversity, Evolution and Biogeography of Plants vol. 28 no. 1, pp. 145-150
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: The genus Badusa is transferred from the Cinchoneae to the Condamineae subtribe Portlandiinae: it is closely related to Morierina. A new species B. palawanensis is described from Palawan, and a new subspecies from Biak, B. corymbifera ssp. biakensis.
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  • 86
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    In:  Blumea: Biodiversity, Evolution and Biogeography of Plants vol. 26 no. 2, pp. 439-444
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: The monotypic genus Urariopsis, based on Uraria cordifolia Wall., has been compared with several S.E. Asiatic species of Uraria. The species Uraria prunellaefolia, U. collettii, and U. barbata are considered to be most closely related to U. cordifolia. The pods of U. cordifolia and U. collettii consist of longitudinally flattened, peltate loments, those of U. prunellaefolia consist of laterally flattened, longitudinally arranged loments; in the other species the loments are laterally flattened and zig-zag folded. No correlating characters were found, and the differences in shape of the pods are not considered sufficient ground to distinguish groups on generic level. Notes on morphology, nomenclature, and geographic distribution are presented.
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  • 87
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    In:  Blumea: Biodiversity, Evolution and Biogeography of Plants vol. 28 no. 2, pp. 367-388
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: The leaf anatomy of all 33 species of Heisteria is described, based on a study of 143 specimens. There is a considerable amount of diversity in stomatal type (anisocytic, anomocytic, cyclocytic, laterocytic or paracytic), in occurrence and type of mesophyll sclereids, and of fibre bundles along the leaf margin. Outline and thickness of anticlinal epidermal cell walls, cuticle thickness, crystal complement, and stomatal size also vary, but often below the species level. The leaf anatomical diversity can be used for recognising 8 groups of varying distinctness in Heisteria. H. asplundii and H. skutchii with laterocytic stomata, and H. pentandra and H. scandens with paracytic stomata constitute the two most distinct infrageneric groups; the other six groups appear mutually more closely related and are partly linked through intermediates. A tentative phylogenetic classification of Heisteria and a discussion of the position of Heisteria in the Olacaceae is given.
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  • 88
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    In:  Blumea: Biodiversity, Evolution and Biogeography of Plants vol. 30 no. 1, pp. 89-151
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: In Southeast Asia (excluding India) 44 taxa are recognized, 39 species, of which four are newly described ( I. kerrii, I. luzoniensis, I. emmae, and one unnamed species A, which will be treated by Nguyen Van Thuan, Paris), four subspecies, one of which is new (I. sootepensis subsp. acutifolia) and three are new combinations ( (I. suffruticosa subsp. guatemalensis, I. trifoliata subsp. unifoliata, I. trita subsp. scabra) ), and one variety which is a new combination I. spicata var. siamensis). A key, descriptions and full synonymy are given as well as 4 distribution maps and 5 figures.
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  • 89
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    In:  Persoonia - Molecular Phylogeny and Evolution of Fungi vol. 10 no. 4, pp. 427-534
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Entoloma subgenus Nolanea (emend. Romagnesi 1978) is revised on account of personal observations and studies on collections from various herbaria. The types of European taxa, as far as they could be recovered, have been examined. Observations on extralimital taxa are included. The infrageneric classification of Romagnesi (1978) is followed in broad outline with some slight alterations: sect. Papillata is emended by including sections Minuta Romagn. and Cosmeoxonema Fernandae, Largent & Thiers. One new section, viz. sect. and four new subsections, viz. subsect. Tristia, Icterina, Infularia, and Cheilocystidiata are introduced. 54 Taxa are recognized, five of which are new: Entoloma sericeum var. cinereo-opacum, E. fernandae f. eccilioides, E. chlorophyllum, E. globulifer, and E. sphaerocystis. Several new combinations are proposed, viz. Entoloma ambrosium, E. clandestinum, E. conferendum, E. conferendum var. pusillum, E. cuspidifer, E. hirtipes var. sericoides, E. inutile, E. infula, E. sacchariolens, E. sericeoides, E. sericeonitens, E. sericeum f. nolaniforme. E. solstitiale, E. verecundum, and Entoloma sect. Staurospora, sect. Turfosa, subsect. Cosmeoxonema, subsect. Fibulata, and subsect. Minuta. For nomenclatural reasons two new names are introduced, viz. Entoloma leptopus to replace Nolanea tenuipes P. D. Orton and E. foetulentum to replace Nolanea foetida Killermann. Keys, descriptions and illustrations are given to all species accepted. In an appendix doubtful and excluded species are briefly discussed.
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  • 90
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    In:  Persoonia - Molecular Phylogeny and Evolution of Fungi vol. 12 no. 1, pp. 51-66
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: A new species, Flammulina fennae, is described. Flammulina velutipes is subdivided into two varieties, var. velutipes and var. lactea (Qu\xc3\xa9l.) comb, nov., and two formae, f. velutipes and f. longispora f. nov. Keys to the western European taxa of Flammulina are given.
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  • 91
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    In:  Persoonia - Molecular Phylogeny and Evolution of Fungi vol. 11 no. 3, pp. 311-315
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: The pycnidial state of Leptosphaeria acuta appeared to be identical with the lectotype of Diploplenodomus piskorzii, and belongs to Phoma sect. Plenodomus. The binomials Phoma acuta, Leptophoma acuta and Plenodomus acuta are misapplied ambiguous names often referring to the anamorph of Leptosphaeria doliolum sensu stricto.
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  • 92
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    In:  Persoonia - Molecular Phylogeny and Evolution of Fungi vol. 11 no. 4, pp. 515-518
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: During our stay in the Nothofagus region near Osorno from April to July 1979, we collected an interesting species of Amanita, Unlike A. diemii Sing., which appeared to be rather common in this area, the new species was collected only once.\nOur Amanita is undoubtedly identical with A. gayana (Mont.) Mont., as described by Singer (1969: 151). However, checking the protologue of Agaricus gayanus Mont. (1853: 332), we soon discovered that we were dealing with two different species. Therefore we have to describe our (and Singer\xe2\x80\x99s) species as a new one, naming it A. aurantiovelata.
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  • 93
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    In:  Persoonia - Molecular Phylogeny and Evolution of Fungi vol. 12 no. 1, pp. 81-85
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Morphological studies and mating experiments indicate the synonomy of Syncephalastrum verruculosum and S. racemosum. The ornamentation of the sporangiospores is due to folds of the merosporangial wall. It is highly variable and cannot be used for species delimitation.
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  • 94
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    In:  Persoonia - Molecular Phylogeny and Evolution of Fungi vol. 12 no. 3, pp. 195-223
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Some nomenclatural corrections are given as a consequence of the 1983-edition of the International Code of Botanical Nomenclature. The new combinations Entoloma sect. Candida (Romagn.) Noordel. and E. subgen. Pouzarella (Mazz.) Noordel. are made. Two new species are described in sect. Griseorubida, viz. Entoloma griseorubidum and E. calaminare. The new combination E. indutoides (P. D. Orton) Noordel. is made. Section Cyanula is emended to include all species of subgen. Leptonia with blue, brown, yellow, pink, and green colours. Several new taxa are described, viz. Entoloma chalybaeum f. bisporigerum, E. lividocyanulum, E. huijsmanii, E. viaregale, E. pseudoturci, E. porphyrofibrillum, and E. scabropelle. The new combinations E. chalybaeum var. lazulinum (Fr.) Noordel., E. cyanulum (Lasch) Noordel., and E. cruentatum (Qu\xc3\xa9l.) Noordel. are made. On account of some recent collections from Denmark and Scotland a new species in sect. Polita, viz. E. caeruleopolitum Noordel. & Brandt-Pedersen, is described.
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  • 95
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    In:  Persoonia - Molecular Phylogeny and Evolution of Fungi vol. 12 no. 2, pp. 181-184
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: In the course of a study of fungi isolated from soil in Spain, an ascomycete belonging to the genus Apiosordaria was isolated. It differs from previously described species by much larger and pitted ascospores.
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  • 96
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    In:  Persoonia - Molecular Phylogeny and Evolution of Fungi vol. 11 no. 1, pp. 93-120
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: The genus Mycena is subdivided into 23 sections, three of which are further subdivided into subsections. A number of these sections are described as new or proposed as new combinations, as follows. Mycena sect. Luculentae (with the subsections Elegantes, Rosellae, and Pterigenae), M. sect. Polyadelphia, M. sect. Monticola, M. sect. Cinerellae, M. sect. Intermediae, M. sect. Pudicae, M. sect. Rubromarginatae, subsections Purae and Violacellae (of sect. Calodontes), subsections Hiemales and Omphaliariae (of sect. Hiemales).
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
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  • 97
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    In:  Persoonia - Molecular Phylogeny and Evolution of Fungi vol. 12 no. 1, pp. 95-97
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: The coelomycete genera Callistospora and Creodiplodina were described but not illustrated by Petrak (1955, 1957). Both genera have been omitted in recent publications on Coelomycetes. The following notes and figures are based on a study of the type specimens collected by E. Gauba in Australia and maintained in herb. W.
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  • 98
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    In:  Persoonia - Molecular Phylogeny and Evolution of Fungi vol. 11 no. 4, pp. 407-420
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: The genera Ascocorticium and Ascosorus have been studied. For Ascocorticium vermisporum Hanerslev, the new genus Ascocorticiellum is described.
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  • 99
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    In:  Persoonia - Molecular Phylogeny and Evolution of Fungi vol. 11 no. 4, pp. 443-449
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: The species described in Gelasinospora and in the synonymous genus Anixiella are keyed out and listed alphabetically. Three species described as Anixiella are transferred to Gelasinospora.
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  • 100
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    In:  Gorteria: tijdschrift voor de floristiek, de plantenoecologie en het vegetatie-onderzoek van Nederland vol. 10 no. 7, pp. 120-129
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Hieracium peleterianum M\xc3\xa9rat subsp. peleterianum is reported from the West-Frisian Island of Terschelling. The plants were found in 12 different localities in the eastern part of the island. The plants studied turned out to be diploid (2n=l\xc3\x9f), sexual and selfincompatible. The presence of hybrids (2n=27) between H. pilosella L.(2n=36) and H. peleterianum M\xc3\xa9rat (2n=l\xc3\x9f) could be demonstrated near Formerum. The hybrid (H. X longisquamum Peter) is completely sterile but spreads vegetatively. The same hybrid can be produced artificially. In most artificial hybrids the diploid H. peleterianum was the pollen-parent, the reciprocal cross did not usually result in the formation of hybrids. The pentaploid form of H. pilosella (which reproduces agamospermously) failed to produce hybrids with H. peleterianum when the latter was used as egg-cell plant. The subspecies peleterianum is usually confined to coastal areas. The Dutch plants agree completely with Danish plants from Jylland and Sjaelland and with Norwegian plants from Oslo, but they differ from French, Swiss and Italian plants of Hieracium peleterianum M\xc3\xa9rat subsp. ligericum Zahn in Engler and subsp. subpeleterianum Naegeli et Peter. Cytological examination of all plants collected outside the Netherlands (34 plants from 11 populations) confirmed the diploid chromosome number. The population from Terschelling forms a logical link between the distribution areas north and south of the Netherlands. In the author\xe2\x80\x99s opinion H. peleterianum should be regarded as native not as adventitious.
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