1,540 research outputs found
Figures 31–33 in Drosophilidae (Diptera) of the Cook Islands
Figures 31–33. Drosophila bipectinata Duda males, with detail of sex combs of male foreleg. Specimens in AM registered K.385867, K.385864 and K.385869.001 with label data: "COOK IS, Aitutaki | –18.8549° –159.7884° | 10.ii.2017 fruit | Michal Polak".Published as part of Mcevey, Shane F. & Polak, Michal, 2021, Drosophilidae (Diptera) of the Cook Islands, pp. 153-170 in Records of the Australian Museum (Rec. Aust. Mus.) 73 (5) on page 166, DOI: 10.3853/j.2201-4349.73.2021.1770, http://zenodo.org/record/717796
Shane and Hannah Burcaw
Shane Burcaw is the author of the bestselling memoir, Laughing at My Nightmare, which was shortlisted for the ALA Excellence in Nonfiction Award. He has also published the essay collection Strangers Assume that My Girlfriend Is My Nurse and is at work with his wife Hannah on a collection of stories about interabled couples. His blog, Laughing At My Nightmare, about the humor of living with Spinal Muscular Atrophy, has over half a million followers and he and his wife’s You Tube channel, Squirmy and Grubs, has nearly 1 million subscribers
Figure 1 in Drosophilidae (Diptera) of the Cook Islands
Figure 1. Main islands or archipelagos of the Tropical South Pacific (TSP, above). The Cook Islands, as a country, includes Pukapuka coral atoll in the northern group; the present survey is restricted to the three large islands—Rarotonga, Aitutaki and Mangaia—of the Cook Islands southern group, boxed in blue above and enlarged below. Atolls and smaller islands in the Cook Islands southern group are named in grey below (see also Fig. 2 and Tables 1–3).Published as part of Mcevey, Shane F. & Polak, Michal, 2021, Drosophilidae (Diptera) of the Cook Islands, pp. 153-170 in Records of the Australian Museum (Rec. Aust. Mus.) 73 (5) on page 154, DOI: 10.3853/j.2201-4349.73.2021.1770, http://zenodo.org/record/717796
Figures 3–10 in Drosophilidae (Diptera) of the Cook Islands
Figures 3–10. Comparison of Drosophila sp. aff. funebris from Cook Islands (left) and D. funebris (right): (3, 4) lateral views of head; (5, 6) dorsal views of cephalo-chaetotaxy, back of head, and scutum anteriorly; (7, 8) ratio of heavy to light costal setation in third costal section of wing—almost entire in Cook Island specimen, only about 0.4 in D. funebris (see Table 4); and (9–10) costal spine size at subcostal break (second spine of pair broken off in Fig. 9 photo). All specimens in AM: Figs 3, 5, 7, 9—K.471932 (Rarotonga); Figs 4 (K.353509), 6 (K.353514), 8 (K.353510), and 10 (K.353614) (all D. funebris from Johannesburg). Scale is 200 µm.Published as part of Mcevey, Shane F. & Polak, Michal, 2021, Drosophilidae (Diptera) of the Cook Islands, pp. 153-170 in Records of the Australian Museum (Rec. Aust. Mus.) 73 (5) on page 159, DOI: 10.3853/j.2201-4349.73.2021.1770, http://zenodo.org/record/717796
Figures 34–41 in Drosophilidae (Diptera) of the Cook Islands
Figures 34–41. Scaptodrosophila bryani (Malloch), lateral views of males (34–37, K.393581–82, K.393583) and females (38–40, K.393585–87); anterior, middle, and posterior katepisternal setae (kepst s) indicated (36–37); detail of setae arising from scutellum (ap sctl s, apical scutellar seta, long; b sctl s, basal scutellar seta, short) and posterior part of scutum (41). All with label data: "COOK IS, Mangaia | –21.9531° –157.9148° | 7.ii.2017 ... fruit | Michal Polak" except Figs. 37 and 41: "NT Casuarina urban | 12.3731°S 130.8864°E | fruit compost 28.ix.2009 | S. McEvey & M. Braby". All in AM.Published as part of Mcevey, Shane F. & Polak, Michal, 2021, Drosophilidae (Diptera) of the Cook Islands, pp. 153-170 in Records of the Australian Museum (Rec. Aust. Mus.) 73 (5) on page 167, DOI: 10.3853/j.2201-4349.73.2021.1770, http://zenodo.org/record/717796
Shane: Tourette
Shane Fistel is a talented sculptor and painter. He also suffers from Tourette's syndrome, that often-misunderstood condition that historically has been misdiagnosed as insanity and even demonic possession. In this program, neurologist/author Oliver Sacks explores his unique friendship with Shane. Together, they travel to the Charcot Library at the Salp?tri?re in Paris to learn more about Tourette's syndrome. This condition, first described in 1885 by Jean-Martin Charcot's colleague Gilles de la Tourette, is a neurochemical disorder. Due to its influence, Shane?a charismatic individual totally lacking in social inhibitions?feels compelled to act in ways that others find antisocial and threatening
Figures 13–20 in Drosophilidae (Diptera) of the Cook Islands
Figures 13–20. Drosophila rarotongae sp. nov. (13) male habitus; (14) arista of AM K.385602; (15) wing of AM K.385592; (16, 17) ventrolateral and dorsal views respectively, of hypandrium of AM K.385594 and K.385584—aed, aedeagus; gon s, gonopodal seta (one of a pair); goncx, gonocoxite; pgt, postgonite; phapod, phallapodeme; pregt, pregonite; pregt proc pregonite process; pregt sens, pregonite sensilla (three sensilla detected on this structure under high power); prens, prensisetae (lower of two series, upper series with two prensisetae); trn bd, transverse band; (18) epandrium of AM K.385594; (19) oviscapt of female AM K.385600; and (20) sex combs on foretarsi of male AM K.385592.Published as part of Mcevey, Shane F. & Polak, Michal, 2021, Drosophilidae (Diptera) of the Cook Islands, pp. 153-170 in Records of the Australian Museum (Rec. Aust. Mus.) 73 (5) on page 162, DOI: 10.3853/j.2201-4349.73.2021.1770, http://zenodo.org/record/717796
Letter to Senator Shane Massey from Robert D. Cook, February 7, 2025
This letter to Senator Shane Massey is about an opinion on law and its analysis
Interview: Shane Homan (Monash University)
Shane Homan is Associate Professor in media and cultural studies at Monash University, Australia. With a PhD from Macquarie University (1999), he has also taught at the Universities of Western Sydney and Newcastle. His research and publications in popular music studies over the past decade have mainly focused on the Australian and global music industries and cultural industries policy, but also youth and popular music. He is the author of The Mayor's a square: live music and law and order in..
Interview: Shane Homan (Monash University)
Shane Homan is Associate Professor in media and cultural studies at Monash University, Australia. With a PhD from Macquarie University (1999), he has also taught at the Universities of Western Sydney and Newcastle. His research and publications in popular music studies over the past decade have mainly focused on the Australian and global music industries and cultural industries policy, but also youth and popular music. He is the author of The Mayor's a square: live music and law and order in..
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