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Novakia scatopsiformis Strobl 1893
Novakia scatopsiformis Strobl 1893 (Fig. 19 A) Novakia scatopsiformis Strobl 1893: 162 Kerteszina tunesica Enderlein 1913: 27 Specimens examined. 1 ♂, CYPRUS, Ayios Therapon, Roadside + scrub etc., 16.v. 1983, I.F.G. M c Lean [PJCC]; 1 ♂, CRETE, Samaria Gorge, Pinus brutia, 17.v. 1982, I.F.G. M c Lean [PJCC]. The type species of this genus is found in the Mediterranean Region and has been recently collected as far north as southern Sweden (J. Kjaerandsen, pers. comm.). The male terminalia (dorsal and ventral view), female terminalia (dorsal view), and a portion of the antenna of this species are illustrated in Chandler et al. (2006).Published as part of Kerr, Peter H., 2007, Revision of the Holarctic genus Novakia Strobl (Diptera: Mycetophilidae), pp. 27-40 in Zootaxa 1554 on page 37, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.17819
Trematopygus laevithorax STROBL. For 1903
Trematopygus laevithorax STROBL 1903 Trematopygus laevithorax STROBL 1903: 69 f. – Lectotypus () von HINZ (1986: 275) festgelegt: " rufic. v... Admont...29/5.", Admont. Zwei Paralectotypen (1, 1) sind vorhanden, dazu das der Var. 1 (Strobl). Der Lectotypus ist stark beschädigt, beide Fühler und der Gaster fehlen. Gültiger Name: Hemiphanes gravator FÖRSTER 1871 (syn.nov.). Hinz synonymisiert das Taxon irrtümlich mit H. flavipes FÖRSTER. Die beiden Paralectotypen gehören ebenfalls zu H. gravator, das der Var. 1 gehört möglicherweise zu einer unbeschriebenen Art (zu dieser gehört auch eine kleine Serie in der ZSM).Published as part of Horstmann, K., 2012, Typenrevisionen einiger von Strobl beschriebener Taxa der Ichneumonidae (Hymenoptera, Ichneumonidae), pp. 1137-1153 in Linzer biologische Beiträge 44 (2) on page 1150, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.532895
Revision of the Holarctic genus Novakia Strobl (Diptera: Mycetophilidae)
Kerr, Peter H. (2007): Revision of the Holarctic genus Novakia Strobl (Diptera: Mycetophilidae). Zootaxa 1554: 27-40, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.17819
Novakia simillima Strobl 1910
<i>Novakia simillima</i> Strobl 1910 <p> <i>Novakia simillima</i> Strobl 1910: 45.</p> <p>Specimens examined. 1 ♂, SPAIN, Zaragoza, near Pina de Ebro, Retuerta de Pina, Juniperus thurifera wds, 2844. 25.3.1991, Malaise trap, Javier Blasco Zumeta [PHKC]; 1 ♂, SPAIN, Zaragoza, near Pina de Ebro, Retuerta de Pina, Juniperus thurifera wds, 2951. 25.4.1991, Malaise trap, Javier Blasco Zumeta [PHKC]; ♂, SPAIN, Zaragoza, near Pina de Ebro, Retuerta de Pina, Juniperus thurifera wds, 2893. 9.iv.1991, Malaise trap, Javier Blasco Zumeta [PHKC].</p> <p>This species was redescribed by Chandler & Blasco-Zumeta (2001). The type locality is near Admont, Austria, however it is more commonly collected in Spain. The male terminalia (dorsal and ventral view), female terminalia (dorsal view), and a portion of the antenna of this species are illustrated in Chandler et al. (2006).</p>Published as part of <i>Kerr, Peter H., 2007, Revision of the Holarctic genus Novakia Strobl (Diptera: Mycetophilidae), pp. 27-40 in Zootaxa 1554</i> on page 38, DOI: <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/178191">10.5281/zenodo.178191</a>
Stegana nigrithorax STROBL 1898
Stegana nigrithorax STROBL, 1898 M a t e r i a l u n t e r s u c h t: 1♂, 9.vii.2006, Bohrenberg 1 km w Salzderhelden [MTB 4125.4]; 4♂♂, 16.vi.2007, Forst 1 km ö Osterberg bei Lippoldshausen [MTB 4524.4]; 1♂, 31.vii.2018, Hainholz, Jettenhöhle, Kat.-Nr. 4327-013 [MTB 4327.2]. S. nigrithorax ist bislang nur aus dem südniedersächsischen Hügelland bekannt, wo die Belege an Totholz in Wäldern oder dem Eingang einer Höhle in einem Laubwald gefunden wurden.Published as part of Jens-H, 2020, Die Fruchtfliegen Niedersachsens und Bremens (Diptera, Drosophilidae) The Fruit Flies (Diptera, Drosophilidae) of Lower Saxony and, pp. 475-499 in Linzer biologische Beiträge 52 (1) on page 492, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.527511
Die Simuliidae (Diptera) der Kollektion STROBL
Summary
The 15 Simuliidae in the STROBL collection (Museum of Natural History of the monastery of Admont, Austria) were revised, and the synonymies of Simulium argenteostriatum STROBL, 1898, were established
Anthrax pilosulus STROBL 1902
Anthrax pilosulus STROBL 1902 D i s t r i b u t i o n: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Greece, Gruzia, Israel, Italy, Kyrgyz-Rebublic, Mecedonia, Moldova, Russia (SET), Tajikistan, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, former Yugoslavia. M a t e r i a l: Antalya: 11 km NE Elmalı, 19.07.1997 (Van der Poorten). Kayseri: Yahyalı, 37°56'22" N- 35°18'46" E, 28.07.2000 (Dils J., Faes J.). Malatya: Develi, 38°25'23" N- 37°48'24" E, 26.07.2000 (Dils J., Faes J.). Niğde: Maden, 37°25'56" N- 34°34'41" E, 28.07.2000 (Dils J., Faes J.).Published as part of Dils, J. & Özbek, H., 2006, Contribution to the Knowledge of the Bombyliidae of Turkey (Diptera), pp. 455-504 in Linzer biologische Beiträge 38 (1) on page 476, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.543337
Author Correction: A prospective observational study of post-COVID-19 chronic fatigue syndrome following the first pandemic wave in Germany and biomarkers associated with symptom severity (Nature Communications, (2022), 13, 1, (5104), 10.1038/s41467-022-3
In the author list of this article, the names of the authorswere incorrectly listed with initials and family name only. The incorrect author list read as “C. Kedor, H. Freitag, L. Meyer-Arndt, K. Wittke, L. G. Hanitsch, T. Zoller, F. Steinbeis, M. Haffke, G. Rudolf, B. Heidecker, T. Bobbert, J. Spranger, H. D. Volk, C. Skurk, F. Konietschke, F. Paul, U. Behrends, J. Bellmann-Strobl and C. Scheibenbogen”. The author list has now been amended to include the given and family names in the HTML and PDF versions of the article. The corrected author list reads as “Claudia Kedor, Helma Freitag, Lil Meyer-Arndt, Kirsten Wittke, Leif G. Hanitsch, Thomas Zoller, Fridolin Steinbeis, Milan Haffke, Gordon Rudolf, Bettina Heidecker, Thomas Bobbert, Joachim Spranger, Hans- Dieter Volk, Carsten Skurk, Frank Konietschke, Friedemann Paul, Uta Behrends, Judith Bellmann-Strobl and Carmen Scheibenbogen”
Novakia Strobl
Novakia Strobl Novakia Strobl 1893: 162. Type species. Novakia scatopsiformis Strobl 1893: 162, by monotypy. Diagnosis. Three ocelli, arranged in lateral line. Frons setose or bare on upper half. Antennae separated or touching at their base; length of antennae considerably shorter in female than in male. Mesopleuron, laterotergite and mediotergite all bare. Wing membrane with small, irregularly arranged trichia only, all wing veins with setae or wing veins mostly bare on the dorsal surface. Costa produced beyond tip of R 5. Subcosta bare, ending free. Wing veins sc-r, Rs, and R 4 absent; r-m longer than R 1; R 1 and R 5 touch or fuse for short distance at their base. Point of furcation of cubital fork before level of point of furcation of media; both cubital branches straight or nearly so. Female tergites 9 and 10 bearing distinctive fringe of setae on posterior margin, setae of tergite 10 light-colored. Description. Body length 1.6–2.2 mm. Wing length 1.6–2.3 mm. Coloration. Head dark brown to black. Eye color brown when preserved fresh in alcohol, typically eyes gray when dried. Antenna brown to dark brown. Scutum and scutellum dark brown to black. Thoracic sclerites brown to black. Coxae, femora, tibiae, pale brown to black or whitish to pale yellow brown as in N. lisae sp. n.; tibial spurs yellowish brown to brown; tarsi pale brown to black. Wing hyaline or with brownish tint over most of surface, without markings; haltere stem and knob pale to dark brown. Abdominal segments brown to black. Terminalia brown to dark brown in male; in female, cercus pale yellowish to pale yellowish brown. Head. Flattened anteriorly, surface often somewhat shiny, with short microtrichia. Three ocelli, arranged in lateral line, relative size of ocelli variable, distance of lateral ocellus to eye margin variable. Occiput rounded. Postocular region and top of head with evenly distributed, short brown setae; frons with short setae or bare. Frontal furrow present, frontal tubercle simple and pointed, positioned between or above antennal bases; face with short setae; transverse frontoclypeal membrane developed or incomplete; clypeus with short setae. Labellum appressed against head, with short dark setae. Lacinia short, inconspicuous. Palp consisting of five palpomeres, about as long or longer than head, sensilla cochleariformis of palpomere 3 small and inconspicuous. Antennal length in male 2–3.5 times the length of head; in female, antennal length 0.8–2.2 times the length of head; antennal bases separated by approximately 1 / 3 width of scape or touching; scape wider than long; pedicel wider than long; 14 flagellomeres; length of flagellum considerably shorter in female than in male, terminal flagellomere longer than wide. Thorax. Surface somewhat shiny with short pubescence throughout. Scutum with short, dark, appressed, evenly distributed setae; lateral prealar setae thicker and longer. Antepronotum and proepisternum setose; other lateral thoracic sclerites bare. Posterior margin of scutellum bearing two pairs of long black setae. Mediotergite bare. Setae of legs short, variable; fore tibia with ovate anteroapical depressed area bearing several rows of small setae. Tarsal claws may be modified into comb-like form; empodium pulvilliform. Wing membrane clear (or mostly brown tinted in N. lisae), with small, irregularly arranged trichia over cell membrane surface; costal vein extends approximately 0.3–0.5 of distance between R 5 and M 1; subcostal vein short, thick, bare, and ending free; radial veins with setulae on upper surface; vein R 1 shorter or longer than half length of r-m; crossvein r-m close to R along length, touching or becoming fused for short distance before R 1 arises; Rs absent; stem of medial fork very faint to mostly absent or readily apparent; length of medial fork relative to medial stem variable; medial veins setulose on upper surface or mostly bare; cubitus and its anterior branches (CuA 1 and CuA 2) with setulae on upper surface or bare in; anal vein short, setulose or bare on upper surface. Male Terminalia. Tergite 8 reduced and terminalia rotated so that dorsal surface of terminalia is directed anteriorly, appressed against abdomen, and ventral surface is directed posteriorly. Epandrium (= tergite 9) posterior margin emarginate or not. Gonocoxites with lateral lobes bearing gonostyli; gonocoxal lobes (Søli, 1997) separated widely or by small notch medially; gonostylus of variable form, sometimes bearing thin, elongate internal lobe. Female Terminalia. Tergite 8 incomplete dorsally, split into two lateral sclerites; tergite 9 entire, posterior margin with row of black setae, of two lengths, interspersed; tergite 10 entire, with fringe of long light-colored setae; cerci two-segmented; two spermathecae.Published as part of Kerr, Peter H., 2007, Revision of the Holarctic genus Novakia Strobl (Diptera: Mycetophilidae), pp. 27-40 in Zootaxa 1554 on pages 28-29, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.17819
FIGURE 8. Novakia miloi, male genitalia. A in Revision of the Holarctic genus Novakia Strobl (Diptera: Mycetophilidae)
FIGURE 8. Novakia miloi, male genitalia. A, hypandrium, dorsal view; B, epandrium, dorsal view. Scale bar = 0.1 mm.Published as part of Kerr, Peter H., 2007, Revision of the Holarctic genus Novakia Strobl (Diptera: Mycetophilidae), pp. 27-40 in Zootaxa 1554 on page 32, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.17819
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