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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2022-05-25
    Description: Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2010. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Paleoceanography 25 (2010): PA2211, doi:10.1029/2009PA001846.
    Description: Carbon isotopes of foraminiferal tests provide a widely used proxy for past oceanographic environmental conditions. This proxy can be calibrated using live specimens, which are reliably identified with observations of cell ultrastructure. Observations of ultrastructures can also be used for studies of biological characteristics such as diet and presence of symbionts. Combining biological and isotopic studies on individual foraminifera could provide novel information, but standard isotopic methods destroy ultrastructures by desiccating specimens and observations of ultrastructure require removal of carbonate tests, preventing isotope measurements. The approach described here preserves cellular ultrastructure during isotopic analyses by keeping the foraminifera in an aqueous buffer (Phosphate Buffered Saline (PBS)). The technique was developed and standardized with 36 aliquots of NBS-19 standard of similar weight to foraminiferal tests (5 to 123 μg). Standard errors ranged from ± 0.06 to ± 0.85‰ and were caused by CO2 contaminants dissolved in the PBS. The technique was used to measure δ13C values of 96 foraminifera, 10 of which do not precipitate carbonate tests. Calcareous foraminiferal tests had corrected carbon isotope ratios of −8.5 to +3.2‰. This new technique allows comparisons of isotopic compositions of tests made by foraminifera known to be alive at the time of collection with their biological characteristics such as prey composition and presence or absence of putative symbionts. The approach may be applied to additional biomineralizing organisms such as planktonic foraminifera, pteropods, corals, and coccolithophores to elucidate certain biological controls on their paleoceanographic proxy signatures.
    Description: Support was provided by NSF grants OCE‐0550396 (to J.B.M.), OCE‐0551001 (to J.M.B.), and OCE‐ 0550401 (to A.E.R.).
    Keywords: Foraminifera ; Ultrastructure ; Carbon isotopes
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Article
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2024-01-20
    Description: Meer dan twintig jaar geleden keerde de eikenprocessierups terug in ons land. Al snel werden de aantallen zo groot, eerst in Noord-Brabant, later ook in andere delen van het land, dat ongemak en risico\xe2\x80\x99s voor de volksgezondheid ontstonden vanwege de extreem\nirriterende brandharen van de rups. De eikenprocessierups heeft een geheel eigen spectrum aan parasitoiden, waarvan de sluipvliegen in aantal verreweg het grootst zijn. In dit artikel wordt een nieuwe parasiet van de eikenprocessierups gepresenteerd.
    Keywords: Diptera ; Tachinidae ; Lepidoptera ; Thaumetopoeidae ; Phorocera grandis ; Thaumetopoea processionea ; biologie
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 3
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    In:  Zoologische Mededelingen vol. 54 no. 21, pp. 291-312
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: The present paper contains descriptions of one genus of the Hilarographini (Tortricidae), three species, one subspecies, with one forma, of the Choreutidae, and six species with one forma, of the Glyphipterigidae, all groups formerly having been assigned to the so-called Glyphipterigidae auctorum.\nThese taxa will be illustrated in the forthcoming revisionary volume of the complex "family" in the series "Microlepidoptera Palaearctica", now in preparation. The new descriptions are published here, in order not to delay their appearance unduly.\nThe whereabouts of the type specimens are indicated with abbreviations, of which a list will be found at the last page of this paper. The author is grateful for the permission to retain certain duplicates for the collection of this museum. The drawings of the genitalia are by Messrs. A. C. M. van Dijk, the Hague, and J. J. A. M. Wessendorp, of this museum; some sketches are by the author.\nCharitographa gen. nov. (\xcf\x87\xce\xb1\xcf\x81\xce\xb9\xcf\x84\xce\xbf\xce\xb3\xcf\x81\xce\xac\xcf\x86\xce\xbf\xcf\x82 = charmingly marked) Superficially similar to Thaumatographa Walsingham, 1897, but female genitalia with a ductus bursae rather wide throughout, with its lower half and the corpus bursae densely clothed inside with a layer of modified, stiff, asteroid and pedunculate spines, arranged regularly and forming a continuous layer, while a signum or signa are absent; lobi anales soldered into a stiff tube, open and narrowed towards top. The male genitalia with the aedeagus robust and shorter than valva.\nType-species, Hilarographa micadonis Stringer, 1930, Japan.\nThe monobasic genus seems to be a peculiar development of Thaumato-
    Keywords: Lepidoptera ; Hilarographini (Tortricidae) ; Glyphipterigidae auctorum ; new taxa
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: The new species Roscidotoga lamingtonia is described, a leafminer on Sloanea woollsii (Elaeocarpaceae) from the subtropical rainforests of Lamington National Park, southern Queensland, and Border Ranges National Park, New South Wales. R. callicomae Hoare, 2000 is recorded for the first time from Queensland, and from Lamington National Park. These records fall within the genus\xe2\x80\x99 limited range in the rainforests in eastern Australia. R. lamingtonia is the second species of the\ngenus feeding on Elaeocarpaceae. On the basis of a few possible apomorphies we hypothesize one host-shift from Cunoniaceae to Elaeocarpaceae. DNA barcodes for R. lamingtonia and R. callicomae are given.
    Keywords: Lepidoptera ; Nepticulidae ; Roscidotoga lamingtonia ; Roscidotoga callicomae ; new species
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 5
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    In:  Nederlandse Faunistische Mededelingen vol. 37, pp. 45-104
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: In this paper the Dutch species of the micro moth genus Agonopterix are presented. The identification is notoriously difficult. Therefore high quality illustrations of the male and female genitalia are provided. A revision of the Dutch material proved that A. atomella and A. capreolella have to be removed from the Dutch list, whereas\nA. oinochra is new to the Dutch fauna. Several species have disappeared from the Netherlands, of which Agonopterix laterella is the most conspicuous. The caterpillar lives on cornflower, a beautiful blue flower that once gave colour to the Dutch agricultural\nlandscape. Now it has almost disappeared, taking Agonopterix laterella along in its fall. Distribution maps and phenology charts are provided for all 23 Dutch species.
    Keywords: Lepidoptera ; Elachistidae ; Depressariinae ; Agonopterix ; tabel ; herkenning ; biologie ; verspreiding
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 6
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    Dar Al Ummah, Abu Dhabi
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Introduction\nThe Tischeriidae form a small family with about 120 known species, occurring in most continents, but currently not known from Australia (Di\xc5\xa1kus & Puplesis, 2003a). They are rather small moths, usually less than 10 mm wingspan, and with rather drab colours, ochreous, brown, black, uniform or with some spotting, sometimes metallic. The larvae are invariably leafminers, characterised by the habit of the larva to eject the frass from the mine. The family was recently reviewed and divided into three genera (Di\xc5\xa1kus & Puplesis, 2003b). Only one species has previously been known from the Arabian Peninsula, Tischeria omani Puplesis & Di\xc5\xa1kus, 2003 (Di\xc5\xa1kus & Puplesis, 2003b) from northern Oman. This species has not yet been found in the UAE, but could be expected. Here I report another species, new to the Arabian Peninsula and to the UAE.
    Keywords: Lepidoptera ; Tischeriidae
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart
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  • 7
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    Dar Al Ummah, Abu Dhabi
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Introduction\nThe Nepticulidae are a family of about 800 named species of very small moths (wingspan less than 10 mm), of which the larvae make leaf-mines, stem-mines or rarely galls. The family is poorly known from the desert regions in Northern Africa and the Middle East, but relatively well known from Central Asian deserts (Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Mongolia), thanks to the work of R. Puplesis and students (summarised in Puplesis, 1994). The family was previously hardly known from the Arabian Peninsula, except for four species, recently described from northern Oman (Puplesis & Di\xc5\xa1kus, 2003). Here the family is recorded for the first time from the UAE, with seven species, two in Stigmella Schrank, 1802, and five in Acalyptris Meyrick, 1921, of which one is described as new. Except for S. birgittae Gustafsson, 1985, these species are also new for the Arabian Peninsula. Because some of the recorded species are actually rather common and widespread in the desert regions of North Africa and Asia, but virtually unknown in the literature, several unpublished records and synonymies of these species are presented here and they are redescribed. In this way the family Nepticulidae is not only recorded for the first time from the UAE, but also from Libya, Sudan, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan. \nStigmella omani Puplesis & Di\xc5\xa1kus, 2003, is synonymised with S. birgittae Gustafsson, 1985, S. ziziphivora Gustafsson, 1985, is synonymised with S. zizyphi Walsingham, 1911. The latter does not occur in the UAE, but is compared with the closely related S. birgittae. Nepticula liochalca Meyrick, 1916, and N. homophaea Meyrick, 1918, are both synonymised with Stigmella xystodes (Meyrick, 1916), all three described from India; this species is here reported new for many countries in the North-African-Asian warm eremic region. In Acalyptris, A. lvovskyi (Puplesis, 1984) is synonymised with the type species A. psammophricta Meyrick, 1921. Acalyptris gielisi is described as new; it is very close to the South African A. lanneivora (V\xc3\xa1ri, 1955). From a fifth species of Acalyptris, only one female has been collected. It is described, but not named here. The seven recorded species probably only represent a small portion of the actual fauna, which could best be studied additionally by searching for stem- and leaf-mines on potential hostplants. The genera Trifurcula Zeller, 1848, and Ectoedemia Busck, 1907, are also likely to occur here. \nDNA sequences of several specimens were used in addition to morphological characters for decisions on species identities, in particular for associating males and females. The results of the barcoding gene CO1 are discussed at the end of this chapter.
    Keywords: Lepidoptera ; Nepticulidae
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart
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  • 8
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    In:  Entomologische berichten vol. 74 no. 3, pp. 111-114
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Een recente vondst van de lindevouwmot (Phyllonorycter issikii) in Zuid-Holland duidt op een sterke uitbreiding van de soort in Nederland, die voorheen alleen uit de omgeving van Roermond bekend was. Dit sluit aan op de Europese verspreidingsgeschiedenis van Ph. issikii, met een gestage uitbreiding vanuit het oosten richting het westen sinds de jaren 1980. De herkenning van de soort, met name van de rupsen en de bladmijnen die zij maken op lindes, wordt besproken en tegelijk wordt er opgeroepen om vondsten te melden. De vraat aan lindes (Tilia) blijft in de meeste gevallen beperkt en zorgt niet voor verkleuring van het blad.
    Keywords: Faunistiek ; Gracillariidae ; Lepidoptera ; Phyllonorycter issikii ; Tilia
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Keywords: monographs ; Lepidoptera ; biodiversity ; Southwestern Africa ; book review
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/review
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  • 10
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    In:  Nederlandse Faunistische Mededelingen vol. 33, pp. 13-20
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Van de esdoorntandvlinder Ptilodon cucullina waren tot 1990 slechts weinig waarnemingen bekend. Aan de belangrijkste voedselplant kon dat niet liggen want veldesdoorn is overal veelvuldig aangeplant en verwilderd. Sinds 1990 wordt de soort in de zuidelijke helft van het land steeds meer waargenomen; een ontwikkeling die ook in het aangrenzende Belgi\xc3\xab niet onopgemerkt is gebleven. Waarschijnlijk speelt het warmere klimaat hierbij een belangrijke rol. De verwachting is dat de soort zich de komende jaren ook boven de grote rivieren sterk zal gaan uitbreiden.
    Keywords: Lepidoptera ; Notodontidae ; Ptilodon cucullina ; verspreiding ; herkenning ; Nederland
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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