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Archeologische Begeleiding volgens protocol Proefsleuven
In opdracht van de gemeente Onderbanken heeft archeologisch onderzoeksbureau Becker & Van de Graaf een Archeologische Begeleiding door middel van werkputten in Jabeek uitgevoerd. Tussen 9 en 26 februari 2009 zijn vijf werkputten onderzocht. Bij het veldonderzoek zijn op het centrale plein de Maar de resten van een waterput aangetroffen waarvan de bovenkant was voorzien van een voor Nederland bijzonder bakstenen gewelf met kruisribben. Van de werkputten op de Maar lag een op de plaats van de in de 20e eeuw gedempte waterpoel, die oorspronkelijk als drinkplaats voor vee in gebruik. In de andere werkput zijn de sedimenten van een hoogmiddeleeuwse voorganger van de drinkplaats aangeboord, zoals ook uit botanisch onderzoek aan grondmonsters valt af te leiden
Stock Certificate for the Becker Brewing and Malting Company, 1904
This is stock certificate number 15 for the Becker Brewing and Malting Company. It signifies that E. N. Allison Jr. owns twenty shares of capital stock or twenty-thousand dollars worth of the Company. The certificate is signed by J. S. Becker and G. L. Becker
Ipamerica auctuncus Razowski & Becker, 2016, sp. n.
Ipamerica auctuncus, sp. n. Figs. 2, 14 Diagnosis. Ipamerica auctuncus is the only representative of the genus; it is most similar to Ricula trechalea Razowski & Becker, 2012 from Pará, Brazil, from which it differs by having a distinct incision of the termen beneath the apex of the forewing and in the reduction of the terminal row of spots. Description. Head: Cream brown. Thorax: Cream brown, sprinkled whitish. Wing span 10.5 mm. Forewing (Fig. 14) cream sprinkled and suffused with pale brown; costal strigulae whitish; divisions brown; leaden grey lines from costa and subterminal area; dorsal patch indistinct accompanied by several similar lines chiefly towards wing base; distinct black spots in ocellus. Cilia pale brownish, basal line brown. Hindwing brownish. Cilia paler. Abdomen: Male genitalia (Fig. 2) as described for the genus. Female unknown. Distribution and biology. Known from the states of Goias and Distrito Federal, Brazil. Holotype male: " Brasilia: GO[ias], Ipameri, 10.X. 1988, V.O. Becker, Col; Col. Becker 59710 "; GS 770 WZ. Paratype male: " Brasil: D[istrito] F[ederal], Planaltina, 1000 m, 15 ° 35 'S 47 ° 42 'W, V.O. Becker, Col; Col. Becker 41413 "; GS 523 WZ. Etymology. The specific epithet refers to the size of the uncus; Latin: auctus - enlarged.Published as part of Razowski, Józef & Becker, Vitor O., 2016, Acailandica and Ipamerica: two new Neotropical grapholitine genera (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae), pp. 248-254 in Zootaxa 4066 (3) on page 254, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4066.3.2, http://zenodo.org/record/26377
Chimoptesis faceta Razowski & Becker, 2015, sp. n.
Chimoptesis faceta, sp. n. Figs 6, 40 Diagnosis. Superficially, C. faceta can be distinguished from its congeners by the presence of white dorsal forewing markings. The genitalia indicated it is related to C. chrysopyla from which it is distinguished by the sharp termination of the socii and a larger cucullus. Description. Wing span ca 18 mm. Male: Head white cream; thorax browner. Forewing as in dentitia, termen concave, somewhat oblique. Ground colour white in form of two dorsal patches and ocellar area, slightly greyer along costa; terminal fourth of wing and some suffusions pale ferruginous, silver beyond median fascia. Markings black along dorsum, atrophying costally except for median fascia, which is rust. Cilia blackish. Hindwing cream, tinged pale greyish brown; cilia paler. Genitalia (Fig. 6) with uncus broad, short; socius broad, tapering terminally, sharp apically, densely hairy; angle of sacculus rounded; neck of valva short; cucullus large, without caudal thorns in posterior third; aedeagus simple. Female: Unknown. Holotype male: " Mexico: N[uevo]L[eon], C[erro] Potosí, 2300 m, 26.VI. 1997, V.O. Becker Col; Col. Becker 110444 "; GS 1345 WZ. Six male paratypes with identical label data. Etymology. The name refers to the forewing colouration; Latin: faceta—nice.Published as part of Razowski, Józef & Becker, Vitor Osmar, 2015, Systematics and faunistics of Neotropical Eucosmini. 1. Chimoptesis Powell, 1964 (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae), pp. 204-220 in Zootaxa 3941 (2) on page 209, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3941.2.2, http://zenodo.org/record/23995
Syllepte confusalis Becker 2023, sp. n.
Syllepte confusalis Becker, sp. n. urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: 6999ECDE-880B-4343-A36B-E614C12224BD Figs. 1j, 3 k-l, 5n Material examined: Holotype ♂, BRAZIL: São Paulo (SP), São José do Barreiro, 1640 m, S 22,72°, W 44,61°, x.2021 (VOB 165009); Paratypes: 1 ♂, 3 ♀♀, same data as holotype, g. s. 5737 (VOB); 1 ♂, 1 ♀, Paraná (PR): Curitiba, 920 m, 14.x.1974, 5.vi.1975, g. s. 5738 (Becker 8201, 8448); 1 ♂, Guaratuba, 1600 m, 5.viii.1975, g. s. 5725 (Becker 8233); 1 ♀, Quatro Barras, 800 m, 2.v.1970, ex Bakeridesia rufinervia (VOB 8446); Rio de Janeiro (RJ), 1 ♂, Nova Friburgo, 1100 m, 9.xi.1998 (Becker 117807); 2 ♂♂, Itatiaia, 2000 m, S 22, 37°, W 44, 75°, 24-27.ix.2021, g. s. 5727, 5730 (Becker 164270), 1♂, Teresópolis, Casa do Pesquisador, 22°27’17”S 42°59’50”W, 1134m, 13-16.VI.2021, C.C.D. Corrêa leg., MN-LEP 0002626, DNA-LAPEL 436 (MNRJ), 1♂, Itatiaia, Parque Nacional do Itatiaia, Casa do Pesquisador, Casa do Pesquisador, 22°27’16”S 44°36’29”W, 807m, 07-08.IV.2021, T.Zacca leg., MN-LEP 0002247, DNA-LAPEL 245 (MNRJ), 1♂, Itatiaia, Parque Nacional do Itatiaia, 910m, 23-27.X.2019, A. Soares, G. Marconato, M. A. Costa & N. Tangerini leg., MN-LEP 0001448 (MNRJ), 1♂, Itatiaia, Parque Nacional do Itatiaia, 910m, 07-10.II.2019, A. Soares, G. Marconato, M.A.Costa & N. Tangerini leg., MN-LEP 0001445 (MNRJ); SP, 1 ♂, Campos do Jordão, 1600 m S 22º46’, W 45º31, 27.ii.2001 (Becker 131349); 1 ♂, Campos do Jordão, Parque Estadual Campos do Jordão, Alojamento, 1514m, 22°41’25”S 45°29’13”W, 05-06.X.2021, C. C. D. Corrêa leg., MN-LEP 0003497 (MNRJ); 1 ♂, São Luis do Paraitinga, 900 m, S 23º20’, W 45º06’, 13-20.iii.2001, g. s. 5726 (Becker 132329); 1 ♂, Salesópolis, Estação Biológica de Boracéia, 900 m, S 23°38’, W45°52’, 1-4.iv.2022 (Becker 166180); 2 ♂♂, Minas Gerais (MG), Aiuruoca, 1600 m, S 22,03°, W 44,68°, 24.i.2019, 4-9.x.2021 (Becker 157695, 165325) (VOB). Diagnosis: Large (Fig. 1j). Male FW length 17-19 mm (37-42 mm wingspan), female 16-18 mm (35-40 mm wingspan). Yellowish. Wings ornate with an intricate net of curved and lunulate lines; FW apex acute, a large fuscous patch beyond the median line to termen, from R4 to tornus; HW with a fuscous area at apex, distad of postmedial band, narrowing along termen to M3; an elongate, irregular fuscous band at middle, delimiting a yellowish orbicular. Male genitalia with uncus short, expanded distally forming lateral, broad triangles. Description: Sexes similar. FW 17-19 mm (37-42 mm wingspan) (Fig. 1j). Head and thorax pale yellow. Labial palpi pale yellow, fuscous distally. Patagia with a fuscous line across middle; tegula with row of fuscous scales at base. Legs pale yellow; fore and mid coxae and femora fuscous, tarsi ringed fuscous. FW pale yellow, basal and antemedial bands curved, fuscous; antemedial band followed with three orbicular spots; reniform spot extending to near costa; large, fuscous patch beyond postmedial band, from R4 to tornus. HW with orbicular and reniform spots well defined; postmedial line double, forming lunules on vein interspaces; broad fuscous patch on apex, narrowing along termen towards M3; terminal line fuscous; internal margin white; cilia fuscous from apex to M3, pale yellow to tornus. Abdomen pale yellow, banded fuscous on articulations. Male genitalia (Figs. 3k): Uncus short, broad, with lateral triangular expansions; valva two times longer than wide, margins nearly parallel, costa straight, distal third of ventral margin round to acute apex; fibula a thin, sharp, bent hook. Juxta an elongate shield. Vinculum expanded basally, round. Phallus (Fig. 3l) straight, thin; vesica with an irregular, small plate. Female genitalia (Fig. 5n): Ostium bursae long, narrow; ductus bursae, long, almost as long as abdomen, straight, broadened slightly basad; corpus bursae oblong, signum a small, round, spined plate. Distribution: Endemic to the Atlantic Forest of southeastern Brazil, at high elevations. Etymology: From the Latin confusion -onis =mixture, disorder; in reference to the confusion caused by the earlier workers misidentifications of P. scripturalis. Remarks: A large species, the same size and externally almost identical to S. limata. Easily separated by their distribution: S. limata from North America to Ecuador, at high elevations; S. confusalis restricted to the Atlantic Forest of southeastern Brazil. Also by their male genitalia: inS. limata the uncus (Fig. 3i) is long, with the margins nearly parallel, and slightly concave at apex, whereas in S. confusalis (Fig.3k) the uncus is short, broadly expanded laterally into a triangular projection. This species has been misidentified as S.scripturalis by earlier workers, and under this name curated in all collections. S. scripturalis (Figs. 1 k-l) is a smaller [FW 12 mm; 27 mm wingspan], the same size and externally identical to S. suffusalis (Fig. 1m), if not the same species.As, unfortunately, no male ofS. scripturalis is available to allow comparing their genitalia, the two are retained as distinct. S. limata is treated as P.scripturalis, byAmsel (1956-1957: 129), a misidentification; the male genitalia (Pl. 81, fig. 8) martch those of other specimens from Mexico and Central America.Published as part of Becker, Vitor Osmar, 2023, The identity of Syllepte incomptalis Hübner (Lepidoptera: Crambidae: Spilomelinae) with synonymies, new combinations and new species, pp. 1-12 in Revista Brasileira de Entomologia (e 20220093) (e 20220093) 67 (1) on pages 9-10, DOI: 10.1590/1806-9665-RBENT-2022-0093, http://zenodo.org/record/811145
Acailandica cacaulandiae Razowski & Becker, 2016, sp. n.
Acailandica cacaulandiae, sp. n. Figs. 6, 12 Diagnosis. In facies, A. cacaulandiae is most similar to A. pyrozona, but it is distinguished from the latter by having a brown hindwing and a variegated dorsoterminal one-fourth of the forewing. Description. Head: Dark brown. Thorax: Proximal third dark brown, ventral part white-grey. Wing span 13 mm. Forewing (Fig. 12) distinctly expanding terminad; costa almost straight; termen weakly oblique, hardly depressed beneath apex; ground colour orange; costal strigulae white, followed by bluish refractive lines; divisions and markings dark brown; median fascia preserved in costal part of wing; basal blotch oblique, irregular; dorsal area densely spotted, crossed by incomplete fascia expanding from beyond mid-dorsum; terminal marking reduced. Cilia brownish grey, grey at apex. Hind wing dark brown. Cilia whitish. Abdomen: Male unknown. Female genitalia (Fig. 6) with sterigma submembranous, concave posteriorly, more strongly sclerotized, short anteostial part; antrum sclerite weak, separated from posterior sclerite of ductus bursae; cingulum large, weakly sclerotized, with median origin of ductus seminalis; two unequally sized signa. Holotype female: " Brasil: RO[ndônia], Cacaulandia, 140 m, IX. 1991, V.O. Becker Col, Col. Becker 80231 ”; GS 680 WZ. Etymology. The species is named after its type locality, Cacaulandia.Published as part of Razowski, Józef & Becker, Vitor O., 2016, Acailandica and Ipamerica: two new Neotropical grapholitine genera (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae), pp. 248-254 in Zootaxa 4066 (3) on page 253, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4066.3.2, http://zenodo.org/record/26377
Chimoptesis tamaulipasia Razowski & Becker, 2015, sp. n.
Chimoptesis tamaulipasia, sp. n. Figs 11, 49 Diagnosis. C. tamaulipasia is closely related and similar to C. setoses, but in C. tamaulipasia the forewing is more yellow-brown and the male genitalia have a more angular process of the sacculus and a minute spine at the top of the tegumen (uncus). Description. Wing span 16 mm. Male: Head yellow-brown, vertex browner, labial palpus cream. Forewing slightly expanding terminad; costa weakly convex; apex pointed; termen weakly sinuate. Ground colour cream with indistinct yellow-brown suffusion especially in middle of wing; costal strigulae small, cream, divisions and apex brown; ocellus cream with indistinct refractive line and brown inner dots. Markings reduced to dorsopostbasal spot and costal part of median fascia. Cilia damaged, yellow brown, cream at tornus. Hindwing pale brownish, cilia creamer. Genitalia (Fig. 11) with top of tegumen broad, with submedian spine, setose; socius large, broad, rounded ventrally; neck of valva short, broad; sacculus weakly convex with a distinct triangular prominence at angle; cucullus broadest postmedially with small ventral lobe; aedeagus rather slender. Female: Unknown. Holotype male: " Mexico: Tam[aulipas], Gomes Farias, 1000 m, 29–31.VII. 1988, V.O. Becker, M.A. Solis; Col. Becker 69891 "; GS 969 WZ.Published as part of Razowski, Józef & Becker, Vitor Osmar, 2015, Systematics and faunistics of Neotropical Eucosmini. 1. Chimoptesis Powell, 1964 (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae), pp. 204-220 in Zootaxa 3941 (2) on pages 211-212, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3941.2.2, http://zenodo.org/record/23995
Chimoptesis juniptesis Razowski & Becker, 2015, sp. n.
Chimoptesis juniptesis, sp. n. Figs 12, 50 Diagnosis. Chimoptesis juniptesis shares similar socii, uncus and valvae with C. setoses. Chimoptesis juniptesis is distinguished primarily by the presence of lateral processes of the uncus and smaller socii. Description. Wing span 15 mm. Male: Head cream brown, thorax browner. Forewing typical of genus with gently sinuate termen. Ground colour brownish cream, strongly suffused brownish, with darker suffusions; costal strigulae fine, whitish; divisions, apex, and termen dark brown; ocellus paler than remaining surface. Markings brown: indistinct basal blotch; median fascia slender with darker tornal part. Cilia brown. Hindwing brownish white basally, browner on peripheries, cilia similar. Genitalia (Fig. 12) with uncus short, broad, slightly concave medially with curved, sharp lateral processes; socius broad, rounded terminally; neck of valva short; sacculus slightly convex, angulate distally; cucullus long with weak ventral lobe and short slender terminal part lacking spines; aedeagus simple, moderately slender. Female: Unknown. Holotype male: " Mexico: Chiapas, San Cristobal de las Casas, 2300 m, 23–27.VI. 1981, V.O. Becker Col; Col. Becker 43787 "; GS 1011 WZ. Etymology. The specific name refers to the flight period of the moth; Latin: junius—june; Greek: ptesis—flying.Published as part of Razowski, Józef & Becker, Vitor Osmar, 2015, Systematics and faunistics of Neotropical Eucosmini. 1. Chimoptesis Powell, 1964 (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae), pp. 204-220 in Zootaxa 3941 (2) on page 211, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3941.2.2, http://zenodo.org/record/23995
Chimoptesis kallion Razowski & Becker, 2015, sp. n.
Chimoptesis kallion, sp. n. Figs 18, 33 Diagnosis. C. kallion is closely related to C. miniaula, but C. kallion can be distinguished by its larger signa and the broader sclerite of the antrum. Description. Wing span 18 mm. Male: Unknown. Female: Head and thorax brownish cream with weak darker markings. Forewing costa weakly bent; termen slightly concave medially, not oblique. Ground colour pale brownish cream, finely strigulated with brownish, terminal part of wing pale rust; costal strigulae cream; divisions brown; ocellus cream with weak inner spots and outer line, diffusely edged grey. Markings brown, postbasal blotch well developed in dorsal half of wing, median fascia conspicuous in costal half. Cilia cream tinged grey (pinkish in paratype). Hindwing pale brownish; cilia creamer. Genitalia (Fig. 18) with posterior edge of sterigma slightly convex; antrum fairly broad; cingulum as long as antrum with weaker posterior sclerite; signa large. Holotype female: " Mexico: Chiapas, San Cristobal de las Casas, 2300 m, 23–27.VI. 1981, V.O. Becker Col; Col. Becker 43777 "; GS 851 WZ. Etymology. The name is based on a comparison to miniaula; Greek: kallion—more beautiful.Published as part of Razowski, Józef & Becker, Vitor Osmar, 2015, Systematics and faunistics of Neotropical Eucosmini. 1. Chimoptesis Powell, 1964 (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae), pp. 204-220 in Zootaxa 3941 (2) on page 207, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3941.2.2, http://zenodo.org/record/23995
Chimoptesis albomixta Razowski & Becker, 2015, sp. n.
Chimoptesis albomixta, sp. n. Figs 22, 44 Diagnosis. Chimoptesis albomixta is closely related to C. castanescens but differs from the latter in having a cream white costal ground colour, a concave posterior edge of the sterigma, a longer cingulum, and smaller signa. Description. Wing span 18 mm. Male: Unknown. Female: Head and thorax brownish. Forewing slender; termen somewhat oblique, concave medially. Ground colour whitish in median part of costal area, otherwise suffused brown; strigulation brown; ocellar area indistinct; terminal third of wing tinted rust. Markings brown, weak; postbasal fascia almost complete. Cilia rust brown. Hindwing greyish white, tinged brown in distal half. Cilia concolorous with wing base. Genitalia (Fig. 22) with posterior part of sterigma broad, distal edge concave; sclerite of antrum short, membranous medioproximally; folds of subgenital sternite slender, straight; cingulum long; blades of signa small, slender. Holotype female: " Mexico: D[istrito] F[ederal], 2600 m, 24.VIII. 1981, Becker Col; Col. Becker 41854 "; GS 859 WZ. Etymology. The name refers to the colouration of the median part of costal area of the forewing; Latin: albus—white, mixta—mixed.Published as part of Razowski, Józef & Becker, Vitor Osmar, 2015, Systematics and faunistics of Neotropical Eucosmini. 1. Chimoptesis Powell, 1964 (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae), pp. 204-220 in Zootaxa 3941 (2) on page 210, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3941.2.2, http://zenodo.org/record/23995
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