3,123 research outputs found

    Osmia (Melanosmia) nearctica Rightmyer, Griswold & Arduser 2010

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    Osmia (Melanosmia) nearctica Rightmyer, Griswold & Arduser, 2010 Counties: Itasca. Comments: This is the first US record of this boreal species, which was previously only known from Canada (Rightmyer et al. 2010). Material examined: Itasca Co.: Scenic SP (47.7086, -93.5652): 1 ♁ (MNDNR), 22 Apr 2021, N. Gerjets leg., net, Salix sp., det. Z. Portman and confirmed by M. Arduser; Scenic SP (47.7018, -93.5683): 1 ♁ (MNDNR), 1 May 2021, J. Pellinen leg., pantraps, det. Z. Portman.Published as part of Portman, Zachary M., Gardner, Joel, Lane, Ian G., Gerjets, Nicole, Petersen, Jessica D., Ascher, John S., Arduser, Mike, Evans, Elaine C., Boyd, Crystal, Thomson, Robin & Cariveau, Daniel P., 2023, A checklist of the bees (Hymenoptera: Apoidea) of Minnesota, pp. 1-95 in Zootaxa 5304 (1) on page 72, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5304.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/804856

    Anthidiellum (Loyolanthidium) boreale Portman & Gardner & Lane & Gerjets & Petersen & Ascher & Arduser & Evans & Boyd & Thomson & Cariveau 2023, stat. nov.

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    Anthidiellum (Loyolanthidium) boreale (Robertson, 1902) stat. nov. Dianthidium boreale Robertson 1902: 232 ♁. Holotype: ♁ USA, Illinois, Carlinville [INHS]. Images of holotype examined. Counties: Yellow Medicine. Material examined: Yellow Medicine Co.: Stony Run (44.875, -95.647): 1 ♀ (MNDNR), 13 Jul 2022, N. Gerjets leg., handnet, Amorpha canescens, determined by M. Arduser. Comments: Originally described as a species by Robertson (1902), Anthidiellum boreale (Robertson) has generally been treated as a subspecies of Anthidiellum notatum (Latreille) (Schwarz 1926; Mitchell 1962; Hurd 1979; Gibbs et al. 2017). Anthidiellum notatum historically had five subspecies (A. n. boreale, A. n. gilense, A. n. notatum, A. n. robertsoni, and A. n. rufimaculatum), but Urban (2001) raised two of them— A. gilense (Cockerell) and A. robertsoni (Cockerell) —to species status. Urban (2001) did not formally treat A. boreale or A. rufimaculatum Schwarz, but they did refer to them as species when noting that no specimens had been examined. In addition, A. boreale has long been recognized as morphologically distinct (Mitchell 1962, Gibbs et al. 2017), and the male genitalia are also distinct from A. notatum notatum (M. Arduser, unpublished). As a result, we are formally raising A. boreale to a full species. An additional issue is that there is a primary homonym, Anthidiellum borealis Wu, 2004, which we assign a new name in the “Additional Nomenclatural Change’’ section below. The exact range of A. boreale is unclear, but it has been previously reported from Illinois (Robertson 1902), Michigan (Gibbs et al. 2017), and Nebraska (Swenk 1914). We have further recorded it from Indiana, Kansas, Missouri, and Wisconsin (M. Arduser, unpublished). Genus Anthidium Fabricius Taxonomy: Miller et al. (2002); Gonzalez & Griswold (2013). Subgenus Anthidium Fabricius s. str.Published as part of Portman, Zachary M., Gardner, Joel, Lane, Ian G., Gerjets, Nicole, Petersen, Jessica D., Ascher, John S., Arduser, Mike, Evans, Elaine C., Boyd, Crystal, Thomson, Robin & Cariveau, Daniel P., 2023, A checklist of the bees (Hymenoptera: Apoidea) of Minnesota, pp. 1-95 in Zootaxa 5304 (1) on page 63, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5304.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/804856

    Mike Olszewski Interview, 2009

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    Mike Olszewski is a newscaster for WKSU-FM and a professor of communications at Kent State University and the University of Akron, as well as the author of several books. He was born in Cleveland in 1953. The interview discusses his childhood, racial issues, music, and the media

    Mike Olszewski Interview, 2009

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    Mike Olszewski is a newscaster for WKSU-FM and a professor of communications at Kent State University and the University of Akron, as well as the author of several books. He was born in Cleveland in 1953. The interview discusses his childhood, racial issues, music, and the media

    Dr. Mike Davison – Faculty Author Interview

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    Dr. Mike Davison, Professor of Music, discusses his documentary film, Cuba: Rhythm in Motion. This dynamic film captures the joy of making music in Cuba, an island that Dr. Davison has visited numerous times with his students. The contrasting yet intertwined histories of Cuban and American music are traced and illustrated with extensive performance footage. A DVD of Cuba: Rhythm in Motion is available in Parsons Music Library

    Mike Nichols Oral History

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    Oral histories created by University of Kansas students, staff and faculty as part of the Religion in Kansas Project are archived at http://hdl.handle.net/1808/12524 in KU ScholarWorks, the digital repository of the University of Kansas.Oral history interview with Mike Nichols conducted by Diana Brown at the Latte Land coffee shop in Kansas City, Kansas, on July 6, 2014. Mike is the author of The Witches’ Sabbats, taught classes on Paganism for decades, and owned The Magic Lantern occult book shop in Kansas City in the 1980s; this interview discusses those experiences. This interview was conducted for the Religion in Kansas Project as part of a summer fieldwork internship funded by the Friends of the Department of Religious Studies.Friends of the Department of Religious Studie

    Mike Ladd: Invisible mending

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    An Author event presented by The Friends of the University of Adelaide Library, recorded in the Ira Raymond Room, Barr Smith Library, 18 May 2017.Mike Ladd's new collection, Invisible Mending ranges across genres including essay, memoir, short story and poetry. Based loosely on the ideas of scarring and healing, Invisible Mending extends from family intimacies to connection and disconnection in the Australian community, environmental damage and repair. It also has an international view. Parts of it were written at an artist's residency in Malaysia and while travelling through South America

    Eucera (Synhalonia) lepida

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    Eucera (Synhalonia) lepida (Cresson, 1878) Counties:Mahnomen. Comments: A single female was recently collected by the MNDNR. Material examined: Mahnomen Co.: Santee Prairie SNA (47.3915, -95.9323): 1 ♀ (MNDNR), 8 Jun 2021, E. Maxson leg., Amorpha nana, determined by Z. Portman and confirmed by M. Arduser. Subgenus Xenoglossa Smith Taxonomy: Hurd & Linsley (1964).Published as part of Portman, Zachary M., Gardner, Joel, Lane, Ian G., Gerjets, Nicole, Petersen, Jessica D., Ascher, John S., Arduser, Mike, Evans, Elaine C., Boyd, Crystal, Thomson, Robin & Cariveau, Daniel P., 2023, A checklist of the bees (Hymenoptera: Apoidea) of Minnesota, pp. 1-95 in Zootaxa 5304 (1) on page 35, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5304.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/804856

    Portrait of Australian theatre expert, Mr David Addenbrooke [picture] /

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    Title from inscription on reverse.; Condition good.; Inscriptions: "Australian theatre expert Mr David Addenbrooke readily admits that he is an author by accident. A thesis he wrote for amaster's degree is now a book, 'The Royal Shakespeare Company' ... Mr Addenbrooke at his home in Perth, Western Australia. Australian Information Service photograph by Mike Brown, 24/7/75/6, P75/591" --printed on reverse

    Colletes aberrans Cockerell 1897

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    Colletes aberrans Cockerell, 1897 Counties: Anoka, Hennepin, Otter Tail, Polk, Ramsey, Scott, Wabasha, Washington.Published as part of Portman, Zachary M., Gardner, Joel, Lane, Ian G., Gerjets, Nicole, Petersen, Jessica D., Ascher, John S., Arduser, Mike, Evans, Elaine C., Boyd, Crystal, Thomson, Robin & Cariveau, Daniel P., 2023, A checklist of the bees (Hymenoptera: Apoidea) of Minnesota, pp. 1-95 in Zootaxa 5304 (1) on page 43, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5304.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/804856
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