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Ramanika Gupta Interview
This interview with Ramanika Gupta was recorded by Susham Bedi, a well-known Hindi novelist in her own right, as part of an ongoing project to record a variety of Hindi women writers’ thoughts on their own work. The writers discuss sources of inspiration, methods, and some of their own life stories.Asian Studie
A Debate on Skepticism and Perceptual Belief
This chapter consists of five exchanges between Annalisa Coliva, Anil Gupta, and Crispin Wright. These philosophers debate a wide range of issues including (i) whether perceptual judgments presuppose general hinge propositions (e.g., “External objects are, by and large, as they appear to be”); (ii) whether the justification of perceptual judgments requires that the hinge propositions be justified; (iii) whether the idea of hinge proposition helps address skeptical arguments; and (iv) which skeptical arguments deserve a constructive response and which deserve to be dismissed as fallacious
Data Supporting “Studying mate preferences using inertial measurement units: A validation study with treefrogs”
The 8 data and code files in this archive accompany the manuscript "Studying mate preferences using inertial measurement units: A validation study with treefrogs"Investigations of mate choice continue to address fundamental questions about the
mechanisms and evolution of animal behaviour. A common behavioural assay used to study
acoustically guided mate choice with playback experiments is phonotaxis, a typically robust
response in which a chooser approaches a sound source broadcasting acoustic signals, such
as courtship songs or mating calls. Robust empirical studies of phonotaxis often require
substantial laboratory facilities, such as a dedicated and sound-treated room or enclosure, in
which the acoustic environment is controlled and in which animals are freely able to move
about. The financial and space resources required to outfit a research laboratory to investigate
phonotaxis may be sufficiently prohibitive such that some researchers are excluded from
undertaking bioacoustic behavioural research. Here, we validate a new device designed to
measure animal movements related to phonotaxis behaviour using an inertial measurement unit
(IMU). The device is small and portable; it can be constructed for less than $300 US dollars; and
the build instructions and code for operation are freely available (Gupta et al., 2020, HardwareX,
8, e00116). In a series of four experiments with treefrogs, we demonstrate using the device that
an IMU-based approach to measuring animal movement can replicate a broad range of findings
from traditional phonotaxis experiments on species recognition and sexual selection. We
conclude by discussing several possible uses for IMU-based measurements of phonotaxis.National Science FoundationGupta, Saumya; Bee, Mark A. (2023). Data Supporting “Studying mate preferences using inertial measurement units: A validation study with treefrogs”. Retrieved from the University Digital Conservancy, https://doi.org/10.13020/fzk6-1q04
Charops plautus Gupta & Maheshwary
Charops plautus Gupta & Maheshwary from host Udaspes folus (Cramer) (Figs. 17, 18 & 19) The solitary pupal parasitoid Charops plautus Gupta & Maheshwary was reared from the host Udaspes folus Gupta & Maheshwary (1970). No male specimens were bred and the species was identified based on females. Udaspes folus is the first host record of the parasitic wasp genus Charops. Brief diagnosis: This species has following characters: scape and pedicel ventrally yellow; tegula pale yellow. Mesopleuron reticulate rugose; malar space 0.7 × basal width of mandible; inter-ocellar distance 3 × ocello-ocellar distance; fore coxa with a mix of black and yellow patches; trochanter pale yellow and femur yellow brown medially; tarsus pale yellow. Mid leg with coxa black; trachanter pale yellow; femur yellow brown with very faint black infuscation on dorso-apical region. Hind leg with coxa black; femur yellow brown with a black patch ventrally in basal half; hind tibia yellow brown with apical 1 / 4 th black; tarsi brown with basitarsus darker; tibial spurs pale yellow. Metasoma with petiole black except at extreme apical region. Second tergite yellow brown with apical margin black; rest metasoma yellowish brown. Specimens examined: Two females, Powai, IIT-Bombay, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India; 19.12 °N 72.91 °E, elevation 50 m (160 ft), 22.ix. 2012, bred from pupa of U. folus (Grass Demon) (Lepidoptera: Hesperiidae), coll. Swapnil Lokhande & Abhay Soman; NBAII/Brac/Micro/ Charops /plau/0912. All specimens deposited in NBAII.Published as part of Gupta, Ankita, Lokhande, Swapnil A. & Soman, Abhay, 2013, Parasitoids of Hesperiidae from peninsular India with description of a new species of Dolichogenidea (Hymenoptera: Braconidae) parasitic on caterpillar of Borbo cinnara (Wallace) (Lepidoptera: Hesperiidae), pp. 277-290 in Zootaxa 3701 (2) on page 283, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3701.2.8, http://zenodo.org/record/24927
Carta d' H. Gupta a Ferran Sunyer
Carta d'H. Gupta, on diu que Pawan Kumar Kamthan ha sol·licitat un treball com a lector en matemàtiques i que ha donat el seu nom com a referent. Li demana un informe confidencial de la seva activitat acadèmica
Impatiophila sikkimensis Gupta & Gupta 1991, comb. nov.
26) Impatiophila sikkimensis (Gupta & Gupta, 1991), comb. nov. Drosophila sikkimensis Gupta & Gupta, 1991: 62. Diagnosis. Abdominal tergites with “light brown bands”; II and III with “medially interrupted bands”; IV and V with “completely bands” (Gupta & Gupta, 1991). Scutum “pale brown to shining dark brown, with a obscure lightly brown longitudinal stripe” (Gupta & Gupta, 1991). Distribution. India (Sikkim).Published as part of Fu, Zhao, Toda, Masanori J., Li, Nan-Nan, Zhang, Ya-Ping & Gao, Jian-Jun, 2016, A new genus of anthophilous drosophilids, Impatiophila (Diptera, Drosophilidae): morphology, DNA barcoding and molecular phylogeny, with descriptions of thirty-nine new species, pp. 1-100 in Zootaxa 4120 (1) on page 61, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4120.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/26683
Ropalidia brevita Das & Gupta 1989
233) Ropalidia brevita Das & Gupta, 1989 Ropalidia (Antreneida) brevita Das and Gupta, 1989: 110, 121, 163. Type data: Holotype male, NZC. Type locality: Delhi, India. Material examined. INDIA: Arunachal Pradesh: Pasighat, xi.2017, 1 ♀, Coll. Gandhi Gracy. Gujarat: AAU Anand, 27.xi.2015, 2 ♂, Coll. Sandesh & Umeshkumar; 10.xii.2018, 1 ♀ & 1 ♂, Coll. Ankita Gupta. Himachal Pradesh: IARI Katrain, 22.v.2016, 1 ♀, Coll. Sandesh Gawas; Palampur, 24.x.2017, 1 ♀ & 2 ♂, Coll. Ankita Gupta. Karnataka: Nandihills, 17.i.2006, 1 ♀, Coll. Naveenkumar; Sirsi, 20.vi.2016, 1 ♀, Coll. Ashwath; Dharwad, 30.xi.2005, 1 ♀, Coll. Shivaprakash; Hebbal Bengaluru, 29.xi.2010, 1 ♀, Coll. Umeshkumar; Shiva- moga, 4.viii.2018, 1 ♂, Coll. Ankita Gupta. Maharashtra: Bhimashankar Pune, 27.xi.2016,10 ♀ & 6 ♂, Coll. Sandesh Gawas; 22.ii.2017, 6 ♀, Coll. Sandesh Gawas. Odisha: OUAT Bhubaneshwar, 26.i.2017, 5 ♀ & 1 ♂, Coll. Sandesh Gawas; Puri, 30.i.2017, 1 ♀, Coll. Sandesh Gawas. Rajasthan: MPUAT Udaipur, 21.xi.2015, 4 ♀, Coll. Sandesh & Umeshkumar. Uttarakhand: Bhimtal, 12.xi.2016, 1 ♂, Coll. Ankita Gupta. Distribution. India: Arunachal Pradesh (new record), Assam, Chhattisgarh, Delhi, Goa, Gujarat, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Karnataka, Kerala, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Odisha, Rajasthan, Sikkim, Tamil Nadu, Telangana, Uttarakhand, Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal. Elsewhere: Pakistan. (Jonathan et al. 1996, Gupta 1997, Jonathan et al. 2000b, Jonathan & Kundu 2003, Gusenleitner 2006, Kojima et al. 2007, Kundu et al. 2010, Girish Kumar & Sharma 2014a, 2014b& 2015, Girish Kumar et al. 2017 a, Rafi et al. 2017, Sheikh et al. 2017, Gawas et al. 2019, Girish Kumar et al. 2019b).Published as part of Gawas, Sandesh M., Kumar, Girish, Pannure, Arati, Gupta, Ankita & Carpenter, James M., 2020, An annotated distributional checklist of Vespidae (Hymenoptera: Vespoidea) of India, pp. 1-87 in Zootaxa 4784 (1) on page 54, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4784.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/386231
Wardianum chauhani Gupta & Gupta 1979
W. chauhani Gupta & Gupta, 1979 Type host. Common snipe, Gallinago gallinago (Linnaeus) (Syn. Capella gallinago Linnaeus) (Charadriiformes: Scolopacidae). Type locality. Kanpur, Utter Pradesh, India. Remarks. No oral or ventral sucker described—Gupta & Gupta (1979).Published as part of Dronen, Norman O. & Blend, Charles K., 2015, Updated keys to the genera in the subfamilies of Cyclocoelidae Stossich, 1902, including a reconsideration of species assignments, species keys and the proposal of a new genus in Szidatitreminae Dronen, 2007, pp. 1-100 in Zootaxa 4053 (1) on page 49, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4053.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/23711
Ropalidia santoshae Das & Gupta 1989
249) Ropalidia santoshae Das & Gupta, 1989 Ropalidia (Antreneida) santoshae Das & Gupta, 1989: 123. Type data: Holotype male, NZC. Type locality: Shillong, Meghalaya, India. Distribution. India: Arunachal Pradesh, Meghalaya, Sikkim, West Bengal. Elsewhere: Bhutan; China. (Das & Gupta 1989, Jonathan et al. 1996, Jonathan et al. 2000a, Jonathan & Kundu 2003, Kundu et al. 2006, Kojima et al. 2007, Tan et al. 2014 a, Dorji et al. 2016, Girish Kumar et al. 2017a).Published as part of Gawas, Sandesh M., Kumar, Girish, Pannure, Arati, Gupta, Ankita & Carpenter, James M., 2020, An annotated distributional checklist of Vespidae (Hymenoptera: Vespoidea) of India, pp. 1-87 in Zootaxa 4784 (1) on page 58, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4784.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/386231
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