4,238 research outputs found
Fig. 1 in The Lecithotrophic Zoea Of Chirostylus Ortmanni Miyake & Baba, 1968 (Crustacea: Anomura: Galatheoidea: Chirostylidae) Described From Laboratory Hatched Material
Fig. 1. Chirostylus ortmanni Miyake & Baba, 1968: a, anterior view of carapace; b, antennule; c, antenna.Published as part of Clark, Paul F. & Ng, Peter K. L., 2008, The Lecithotrophic Zoea Of Chirostylus Ortmanni Miyake & Baba, 1968 (Crustacea: Anomura: Galatheoidea: Chirostylidae) Described From Laboratory Hatched Material, pp. 85-94 in Raffles Bulletin of Zoology 56 (1) on page 86, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.534134
Galathea amamiensis Miyake & Baba 1966
Galathea amamiensis Miyake & Baba, 1966 Galathea amamiensis Miyake & Baba, 1966: 75, figs 13, 14. — Baba et al. 2008: 65 (compilation). Material examined. Mayotte. Stn 23, Choizil pass, "Patate à Teddy", 12 ° 40 ' 56.91 "S, 44 ° 57 ' 51.63 "E, 15–30 m, J.-M. Bouchard, V. Dinhut, J. Dumas coll., 13 November 2009, outer reef, collapsed barrier, 1 ov. F 2.6 mm (MNHN-Ga 7352). Distribution. Previously known from Japan, Ryukyu Islands, Okinawa, Oshima Strait, Amami-oshima (type locality), Indonesia, Moluccas, Gorong Island, and Madagascar, subtidal to 50 m. The new records from Mayotte were collected at 15– 30 m.Published as part of Macpherson, Enrique & Cleva, Régis, 2010, Shallow-water squat lobsters (Crustacea, Decapoda, Galatheidae) from Mayotte (Comoros Island), La Réunion and Madagascar, with the description of a new genus and two new species, pp. 57-68 in Zootaxa 2612 on pages 58-59, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.19781
Galathea rubromaculata Miyake & Baba 1967
Galathea rubromaculata Miyake & Baba, 1967 Galathea rubromaculata Miyake & Baba, 1967 c: 236, figs 7, 8 (East China Sea, 32 ° 24.8´N, 129 ° 24.7´E, 173 m).— Baba, 1988: 77 (off N Mindanao, 333 m).— Baba, 2005: 245 (key, synonymies).—Baba et al., 2008: 76 (compilation).— Poore et al., 2011: 333, pl. 11 G–H (color photo, Philippines). Material examined. Philippines. MUSORSTOM 2, Stn DR45, 13° 27 'N, 122 ° 18 'E, 447–500 m, 26 November 1980: 1 ov. F 2.7 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-8310). Remarks. No genetic data are available for this species. Distribution. East China Sea, Philippines, 173– 500 m.Published as part of Macpherson, Enrique & Robainas-Barcia, Aymee, 2015, Species of the genus Galathea Fabricius, 1793 (Crustacea, Decapoda, Galatheidae) from the Indian and Pacific Oceans, with descriptions of 92 new species, pp. 1-335 in Zootaxa 3913 (1) on page 271, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3913.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/23923
The Lecithotrophic Zoea Of Chirostylus Ortmanni Miyake & Baba, 1968 (Crustacea: Anomura: Galatheoidea: Chirostylidae) Described From Laboratory Hatched Material
Clark, Paul F., Ng, Peter K. L. (2008): The Lecithotrophic Zoea Of Chirostylus Ortmanni Miyake & Baba, 1968 (Crustacea: Anomura: Galatheoidea: Chirostylidae) Described From Laboratory Hatched Material. Raffles Bulletin of Zoology 56 (1): 85-94, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.534134
Anomala iwasei Y. MIYAKE 1994
Anomala iwasei MIYAKE, 1994 Distribution: China, Laos, Vietnam (new country record). Specimens examined: Holotype: , Samneua Laos 20.VI.91 | Holotype: Anomala iwasei Y. MIYAKE, 1994 (RIEB). Additional material: 1 , 3 , N. VIETNAM – Lao Cai prov., Van Ban dist. Van Ban Nature Reserve (at light) (~ 1000 m) 23.-26.V.2011, L. Bartolozzi, S. Bambi, F. Fabiano, E. Orbach leg. (MZUF); 1 , LAOS north, 5-11.V.1997 20 km NW Louang Namtha N21°09.2.E 101°18.7 alt. 900+- 100 m. M. Strba & R. Hergovits leg. (VMPC). Remarks: Anomala iwasei was originally described from Laos (Sam Neua) and occurs in Yunnan, China (LIN 1996a). Herein, we provide the first record of this species from Vietnam, where it interestingly occurs sympatrically with its very close relative A. sapa MIYAKE, 1994 in Lào Cai Province.Published as part of Zorn, Carsten, Kobayashi, Hirokazu & Wada, Kaoru, 2017, Notes on the genus Anomala SAMOUELLE, 1819 (Coleoptera, Scarabaeidae, Rutelinae) in Vietnam and neighboring regions: eight new species and faunistic records, pp. 325-352 in Beiträge Zur Entomologie = Contributions to Entomology 67 (2) on page 343, DOI: 10.21248/contrib.entomol.67.2.325-352, http://zenodo.org/record/574244
Doing Occidentalism in Contemporary Japan: Nation Anthropomorphism and Sexualized Parody in Axis Power Hetalia,
Axis Powers Hetalia (2006–present), a Japanese gag comic and animation series, depicts relations between nations personified as cute boys against a background of World War I and World War II. The stereotypical rendering of national characteristics as well as the reduction of historically charged issues into amusing quarrels between nice-looking but incompetent boys was immensely popular, especially among female audiences in Japan and Asia, and among Euro-American manga, anime, and cosplay fans, but it also met with vehement criticism. Netizens from South Korea, for example, considered the Korean character insulting and in early 2009 mounted a protest campaign that was discussed in the Korean national assembly. Hetalia's controversial success relies to a great extent on the inventive conflation of male-oriented otaku fantasies about nations, weapons, and concepts represented as cute little girls, and of female-oriented yaoi parodies of male-male intimacy between powerful "white" characters and more passive Japanese ones. This investigation of the original Hetalia by male author Hidekaz Himaruya (b. 1985) and its many adaptations in female-oriented dōjinshi (fanzine) texts and conventions (between 2009 and 2011, Hetalia was by far the most adapted work) refers to notions of interrelationality, intersectionality, and positionality in order to address hegemonic representations of "the West," the orientalized "Rest" of the world, and "Japan" in the cross-gendered and sexually parodied mediascape of Japanese transnational subcultures
Paralomis truncatispinosa Takeda & Miyake 1980
<i>Paralomis truncatispinosa</i> Takeda & Miyake, 1980 <p>(Fig. 5 f)</p> <p> <i>Paralomis truncatispinosa</i> Takeda & Miyake, 1980: 42, figs 1–4. — Macpherson 2003: 416. <i>Paralomis heterotuberculata</i> Yumao, Fuzhen & Zhicheng, 1984: 329.</p> <p> <b> <i>Material examined</i>.</b> Taiwan: Stn CD 231, 31.08.2003, 22°14.32'N, 119°58.78'E, 951–1062 m: 1 specimen broken, sex undetermined, ca. LC = 35 mm.</p> <p> <i>Coloration.</i> Carapace pinkish red, large flat tubercles pinkish.</p> <p> <b> <i>Distribution</i>.</b> Previously known from East China Sea, at 642– 840 m.</p>Published as part of <i>Macpherson, Enrique & Chan, Tin-Yam, 2008, Some lithodid crabs (Crustacea: Decapoda: Lithodidae) from Taiwan and adjacent waters, with the description of one new species from Guam, pp. 43-52 in Zootaxa 1924</i> on page 49, DOI: <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/184757">10.5281/zenodo.184757</a>
Galathea bimaculata Miyake & Baba 1966
Galathea bimaculata Miyake & Baba, 1966 (Fig. 115 I) Galathea bimaculata Miyake & Baba, 1966 a: 69, figs 9, 10 (Okinawa Island, Kume Island, Amami-oshima Island, intertidal).— Baba, 1979 b: 652 (Marsegu Island, subtidal).— Miyake, 1982: 145, pl. 49, fig. 2 (Ishigaki Island, subtidal).— Baba, 1982 b: 60 (Palau Islands, subtidal).— Kamezaki et al., 1988: 97, with color fig. (Okinawa Island).— Minemizu, 2000: 166, with fig. (Kume Island, Ryukyu Island, 10 m).—Baba et al., 2008: 66 (compilation). Material examined. Taiwan. 22.0873 °S, 120.8911 °E, 1 May 2009: 1 M 2.1 mm (UF 23103). Indonesia. Bali, Tubuhau, 4 April 1982: 1 M 3.6 mm (SMF 16599). NE coast of Marsegu Island. Rumphius Expedition II, 18 January 1975: 2 M 2.3–2.6 mm, 1 ov. F 2.3 mm (MNHN-Ga 1151). Papua New Guinea. PAPUA NIUGINI. Stn PR76, 05°01.6'S, 145 ° 47.9 'E, 2–15 m, 21 November 2012: 1 ov. F 2.5 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-13907). — Stn PR174, 05° 11.3 'S, 145 ° 49.5 'E, 5–36 m, 4 December 2012: 1 M 2.8 mm, 1 ov. F 2.9 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-13910).— Stn PB07, 05° 10.8 'S, 145 ° 49.8 'E, 22 m, 30 December 2012: 1 F 2.0 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013 - 396).— Stn PB14, 05° 13.8 'S, 145 ° 48 'E, 15 m, 30 December 2012: 1 ov. F 2.3 mm, 1 F 3.0 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-13906).— Stn PB15, 05°04.7'S, 145 ° 48.9 'E, 5 m, 30 December 2012: 1 ov. F 3.0 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-13909).— Stn PB23, 04° 59.5 'S, 145 ° 47.7 'E, 13 m, 30 December 2012: 3 M 1.8–2.5 mm, 1 ov. F 2.0 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-13908), 1 M 2.8 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013 - 687). Vanuatu. SANTO, Stn DB1, 15° 33.1 'S, 167 ° 17.8 'E, 15–25 m, 10 September 2006: 1 M 2.6 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-9726), 8 M 1.8–2.9 mm, 8 ov. F 2.1 –3.0 mm, 6 F 1.6 –2.0 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-15886).—Stn DB8, 15° 34.6 'S, 167 ° 13.8 'E, 12 m, 12 September 2006: 1 M 2.4 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-9728).—Stn DB33, 15° 34.7 'S, 167 ° 13.8 'E, 14–25 m, 18 September 2006: 2 M 2.7–3.3 mm, 1 ov. F 2.8 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-15887).—Stn DB63, 15° 26.9 'S, 167 ° 15.8 'E, 21 m, 25 September 2006: 3 M 2.5 –3.0 mm, 2 ov. F 2.3–3.2 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013- 15888).—Stn NB43, 15° 35.6 'S, 167 °16.0'E, 6–30 m, 4 October 2006: 2 M 2.4–2.6 mm, 1 F 3.0 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-15889), 1 ov. F 2.4 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-9729), 1 ov. F 3.0 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-9730).—Stn FB92, 15° 33.6 'S, 167 ° 16.6 'E, 2–4 m, 14 October 2006: 1 M 3.2 mm, 1 ov. F 3.0 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-9727). Australia. Western Australia, Ningaloo Reef, 22.6216 °S, 113.9758 °E, 6 m, 1 May 2009: 1 M 2.7 mm (UF 21832).— 22.6234 °S, 113.6367 °E, 6 m, 1 May 2009: 1 ov. F 2.9 mm (UF 21917).— 22.6232 °S, 113.6532 °E, 5–6 m, 1 May 2009: 2 M 2.3 –3.0 mm, 1 ov. F 2.4 mm (UF 23071). New Caledonia. Lifou Island. LIFOU, Stn 1455, 20° 56.8 ’S, 167 °02.7’E, 15–20 m, 25 October 2000: 1 ov. F 2.6 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-9725).—Stn 1429, 20° 47.5 ’S, 167 °07.1’E, 8–18 m, 3–5 November 2000: 1 M 2.4 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-9733).—Stn 1449, 20° 45.8 ’S, 167 °01.65'E, 17 m, 17 November 2000: 1 M 2.4 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-9731), 1 ov. F 2.0 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-9732). New Caledonia. CHALCAL 2, Stn CP18, 24°47.00'S, 168 °09.43'E, 274 m, 27 October 1986: 1 ov. F 3.4 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-8303). Coloration. Base color of carapace and abdomen whitish. Dark bluish or brownish blotch behind each orbit, on each anterior branchial region, on each side of abdominal somites 2–3, and along median part of abdominal somites 4–5. P 1 with transverse brown and whitish stripes; base of both fingers white, each tip with red spot. P 2–4 with distal part of meri and propodi and along extensor margin of propodi and dactyli pink, with darker transverse ridges. Rostrum and eyes peduncle reddish or pale. Remarks. Galathea bimaculata is closely related to G. p s i l a n. sp. from New Caledonia (see Remarks of G. psila). Distribution. Western Pacific, from Japan to New Caledonia, Western Australia; on bryozoan and seaweeds, 2– 36 m.Published as part of Macpherson, Enrique & Robainas-Barcia, Aymee, 2015, Species of the genus Galathea Fabricius, 1793 (Crustacea, Decapoda, Galatheidae) from the Indian and Pacific Oceans, with descriptions of 92 new species, pp. 1-335 in Zootaxa 3913 (1) on pages 59-60, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3913.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/23923
Galathea balssi Miyake & Baba 1964
Galathea balssi Miyake & Baba, 1964 Galathea australiensis.— Balss, 1913 b: 13, figs 13 (Uraga Strait, Sagami Bay, and Nagasaki, 150 m) (not G. australiensis Stimpson, 1858). Galathea balssi Miyake & Baba, 1964: 205, figs 1, 2 (East China Sea, 120–122 m).— Miyake & Baba, 1967 c: 228 (East China Sea, 84–130 m).— Haig, 1973: 278, fig. 2 a–f (E of Rockhampton, Queensland, 31 m).— Baba, 1988: 69 (Sulu Archipelago, E of Masbate, and South China Sea off SW Luzon, 140–216 m).— Davie, 2002: 61 (list).— Komai, 2000: 352 (list).— Baba, 2005: 243 (key, synonymies).—Baba et al., 2008: 66 (compilation).—Poore et al., 2008: 19 (SW Australia, 100–382 m).— Dong & Li, 2010: 6 (East and South China Sea, Nansha Islands, 55–139 m). ? Galathea australiensis.— Yokoya, 1933: 57 (Suruga Bay and SE of Tsushima, 51–110m). Not Galathea balssi.— Tirmizi & Javed, 1993: 47, fig. 21 (= Galathea anepipoda Baba, 1990). Not Galathea balssi. —Poore et al., 2008: 19 (SW Australia, 100–382 m) (= Galathea argus n. sp.). Material examined. Japan. Kochi Prefecture, no depth recorded: 1 ov. F 5.3 mm (SMF). Philippines. MUSORSTOM 1, Stn CP2, 14°03'N, 120 ° 19 'E, 182–187 m, 19 March 1976: 1 ov. F 5.7 mm, 3 F 4.1–4.4 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-8232).—Stn CP3, 14°02'N, 120 ° 16 'E, 183–185 m, 19 March 1976: 2 M 3.0– 5.1 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-8236).—Stn CP5,14°01'N, 120 ° 23 'E, 200–215 m, 19 March 1976: 1 F 5.9 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-8240). — Stn CP6, 14°01'N, 120 ° 20 'E, 182–200 m, 19 March 1976: 1 F 6.8 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013- 8247).— Stn CP10, 14°00'N, 120 ° 18 'E, 187–205 m, 19 March 1976: 1 M 5.9 mm, 3 ov. F 5.8–6.8 mm (MNHN- IU- 2013-8238).— Stn CP20, 13° 59 'N, 120 ° 20 'E, 208–222 m, 21 March 1976: 1 M 5.9 mm, 1 ov. F 5.8 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-8237).—Stn CP24, 14°00'N, 120 ° 18 'E, 189–209 m, 22 March 1976: 1 M 4.8 mm, 2 ov. F 5.9 –6.0 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-8235).— Stn CP25, 14°03'N, 120 ° 20 'E, 191–200 m, 22 March 1976: 1 M 5.7 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-8234), 7 M 4.4–6.9 mm, 11 ov. F 4.8 –7.0 mm, 1 F 5.5 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-8233).—Stn CP27, 14°00'N, 120 ° 19 'E, 188–192 m, 22 March 1976: 1 ov. F 5.6 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-8241).— Stn CP32, 14°02'N, 120 ° 18 'E, 184–193 m, 23 March 1976: 1 M 6.0 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-8243).— Stn CP33, 13° 59 'N, 120 ° 19 'E, 187–197 m, 23 March 1976: 1 ov. F 7.1 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-8248).— Stn CP36, 14°01'N, 120 ° 20 'E, 187–210 m, 23 March 1976: 1 M 3.8 mm, 1 ov. F 6.7 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-8244).— Stn CP60, 14°07'N, 120 ° 18 'E, 124–129 m, 27 March 1976: 1 F 2.4 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-8249).— Stn CP61, 14°02'N, 120 ° 18 'E, 184–202 m, 27 March 1976: 2 ov. F 5.6–7.8 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-8239). MUSORSTOM 2, Stn CP12, 14°01'N, 120 ° 20 'E, 197–210 m, 21 November 1980: 1 ov. F 5.1 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-8242). MUSORSTOM 3, Stn CP124, 12°03'N, 121 ° 35 'E, 10–123 m, 4 June 1985: 1 ov. F 5.3 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-8246), 1 M 6.3 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013- 13977). Indonesia. Kei Islands. KARUBAR, Stn CP66, 09°01'S, 132 °09'E, 211–217 m, 1 November 1991: 1 F 6.6 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-8245). Vanuatu. SANTO, Stn AT69, 15° 40.4 'S, 167 ° 17.3 'E, 207–229 m, 5 October 2006: 1 M 3.2 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-8250). Remarks. The material examined agrees quite well with the original description and illustrations. Nevertheless, the parahepatic and epigastric spines can be absent in some specimens. Galathea balssi resembles G. galene n. sp. from Vanuatu (see below under Remarks for the latter species). Distribution. Western Pacific, from Japan to Queensland and Vanuatu, 31– 222 m.Published as part of Macpherson, Enrique & Robainas-Barcia, Aymee, 2015, Species of the genus Galathea Fabricius, 1793 (Crustacea, Decapoda, Galatheidae) from the Indian and Pacific Oceans, with descriptions of 92 new species, pp. 1-335 in Zootaxa 3913 (1) on page 56, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3913.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/23923
Galathea genkai Miyake & Baba 1964
<i>Galathea genkai</i> Miyake & Baba, 1964 <p> <i>Galathea genkai</i> Miyake & Baba, 1964: 208, figs 3, 4 (coast of northern Kyushu, 10 m).— Lewinsohn, 1969: 120, fig. 23 (Red Sea, 20–35 m).— Haig, 1974: 447 (Western Australia).— Baba, 1988: 74 (Sibuyan Sea, Philippines, 68 m).— Davie, 2002: 61 (no record).—Baba <i>et al</i>., 2008: 69 (compilation).— Baba <i>et al.,</i> 2009: 111, figs. 90–91 (Taiwan).— Poore <i>et al</i>., 2011: 332, pl. 10G (color photo, Taiwan).</p> <p> <b>Material examined</b>. South China Sea. Macclesfield Bank, Stn 24, 15°26'30"N, 114°14'E, 24–63 m, May 1892: 1 M 4.3 mm (NHMUK).</p> <p>Madagascar. ATIMO VATAE, Stn CP3520, 24°51.2'S, 47°28.2'E, 80–86 m, 30 April 2010: 1 M 5.4 mm (MNHN-IU-2013-8433).—Stn DW3532, 24°39.4'S, 47°31.7'E, 86–87 m, 2 May 2010: 1 F 5.5 mm (MNHN-IU- 2013-8432).—Stn DW3605, 24°54.5'S, 44°51.0'E, 56–57 m, 13 May 2010: 1 ov. F 5.5 mm (MNHN-IU-2013- 8435).—Stn DW3606, 25°48.4'S, 44°51.1'E, 44–46 m, 13 May 2010: 1 ov. F 5.6 mm (MNHN-IU-2013-8431).</p> <p> <b>Remarks</b>. The species is characterized by the scale-like ridges on the carapace and the absence of epigastric spines. The molecular analyses have shown the existence of a complex of species morphologically differentiated by the shape of the rostrum and the length of the walking legs. We have found three different species: <i>G. genkai</i> Miyake & Baba, 1964, <i>G. gladiola</i> <b>n. sp.</b> from Vanuatu, New Caledonia and Chesterfield Islands, and <i>G. m a c h a e r a</i> <b>n. sp.</b> from the Solomon, Wallis and Futuna Islands (see Remarks of <i>G. machaera</i>).</p> <p> <b>Distribution</b>. Japan, northern Kyushu, Philippines, Sibuyan Sea, Taiwan, South China Sea (Macclesfield Bank), Western Australia, Red Sea, Madagascar; 10– 87 m.</p>Published as part of <i>Macpherson, Enrique & Robainas-Barcia, Aymee, 2015, Species of the genus Galathea Fabricius, 1793 (Crustacea, Decapoda, Galatheidae) from the Indian and Pacific Oceans, with descriptions of 92 new species, pp. 1-335 in Zootaxa 3913 (1)</i> on page 126, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3913.1.1, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/239230">http://zenodo.org/record/239230</a>
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