3,564 research outputs found

    Chrysopa satilota Banks

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    3.Chrysopa satilota Banks, Psyche 17: 102, 1910. Merizo, June 11; Piti, Sept. 15, April 30. Known from Samoa, Australia and elsewhere.Published as part of Banks, Nathan, 1942, Neuropteroid Insects from Guam, pp. 25-30 in Insects of Guam I, Honolulu, Hawaii :Bernice P. Bishop Museum on page 29, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.515992

    Myopsocus bakeri Banks

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    2.Myopsocus bakeri Banks, Phil. Jour. Sci. 11, D: 199, pl. 1, fig. 3, 1916. Tarague, May 17, 5 specimens. All are darker than the type from Luzon, but the marks are in the same place, and the venation and hind border of the wing the same as the t)'ipe, which came from the Philippines.Published as part of Banks, Nathan, 1942, Neuropteroid Insects from Guam, pp. 25-30 in Insects of Guam I, Honolulu, Hawaii :Bernice P. Bishop Museum on page 25, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.515992

    Nathan Banks

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    Volume: 61Start Page: 81End Page: 11

    Chrysopa tagalica Banks, vVash. Ent. Soc., Proc. 15: 174 1913

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    2. Chrysopa tagalica Banks, vVash. Ent. Soc., Proc. 15: 174, 1913. Mt. Alifan, May 21, Usinger, 1 specimen. This species differs from C. basalis in lacking the black mark on the basal joint of the antennae. It was described from the Philippines.Published as part of Banks, Nathan, 1942, Neuropteroid Insects from Guam, pp. 25-30 in Insects of Guam I, Honolulu, Hawaii :Bernice P. Bishop Museum on page 29, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.515992

    Dr. Nathan Nobis, Morehouse College, August 2011

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    This video is a conversation with Dr. Nathan Nobis. Dr. Nobis talks about his paper, "The Harmful, Nontherapeutic use of Animals in Research is Morally Wrong." Brad Ost, AUC Woodruff Library, is the interviewer

    Interview with Nathan Banks [2009]

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    A list of works on North American entomology : compiled for the use of students and other workers as well as for those about to begin the collection and study of insects

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    "Similar lists, by Mr. E.A. Schwarz and Mr. Nathan Banks, were published as Bulletin no. 19, old series, and Bulletin 24, new series, of this office."Includes bibliographical references and index.Mode of access: Internet

    Letter from Nathan Bankhead, Bankhead and Henderson, to Carl Hayden

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    Letter from Nathan Bankhead to Carl Hayden concerning his sheep and the accusations of Horace M. Albright

    Hemipsocus chloroticus var. stenostigmus Banks, 1942, new variety

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    3. Hemipsocus chloroticus stenostigmus, new variety (fig. 1, d). Differs from the numerous chloroticus seen in having the pterostigma much narrower, only little more than one half as wide as the costal area before it, and the posterior side, instead of being plainly bowed, is straight for most of the distance; the radial sector and medius connected by a short cross vein usually united at one point. Fork of radial sector is as long as its pedicel; fork of medius 3 times as long as pedicel; areola postica subtriangular, more than twice as long as high. Agana, May 4, 1 small male. Variations are so common in the venation of Psocidae that it is hardly safe to call this a separate species, even though the shape of the pterostigma is quite constant. True H. chloroticus occurs from Ceylon eastward to Formosa, and also in the Philippines.Published as part of Banks, Nathan, 1942, Neuropteroid Insects from Guam, pp. 25-30 in Insects of Guam I, Honolulu, Hawaii :Bernice P. Bishop Museum on page 25, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.515992

    Caecilius arotellus Banks, 1942, new species

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    4. Caecilius arotellus, new species (fig. 1, a, c). Body pale yellowish, no mark on clypeus; vertex sometimes a little darker, and sometimes darker on sides of thoracic notum; legs and antennae pale. Wings hyaline, sometimes very faintly yellowish, often yellowish on pterostigma, not at all fumose. The wings are moderately slender; in the forewings the stigma is long, swollen behind, and tapering to tip; the union of radial sector and medius is quite short, but little more than one half the basal section of radial sector; the fork of radial sector is very slender; much longer than its pedicel; the branches of the medius nearly straight; the areola postica, nearly twice as long as high, highest toward base, and reaching fully one half way on hind margin to the branch of medius; the principal veins have one row of hairs, the stigma with many hairs. In hindwing, the medius curves up less divergent from the radial sector than usual; union of radial sector and medius is about twice as long as the basal section of radial sector. Length of forewing, 2 to 2.2 mm. Piti, Machanao, Mt. Tenjo, Dededo, Fonte Valley, Sumay, Merizo, Upi Trail, Santa Rosa Peak, May, July, August, October, November, many specimens. Type and paratypes in collection of Hawaiian Sugar Planters' Association, paratypes also in Museum of Comparative Zoology (no. 23828). The venation is similar to that of C. luridus Enderlein of New Guinea, but the wing is more slender, the areola postica larger, and the wing not fumose. The apical half of forewing is very much like C. angustus Enderlein of Australia, but the wing is not so long, and the cubitus runs nearer to the anal than to the medius; from C. castella Banks of the Philippines it differs in having the fork of the radial sector much more slender, and in the larger areola postica; these differences hold in a considerable series of each species.Published as part of Banks, Nathan, 1942, Neuropteroid Insects from Guam, pp. 25-30 in Insects of Guam I, Honolulu, Hawaii :Bernice P. Bishop Museum on pages 26-27, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.515992
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