187,190 research outputs found
Marlene R. Hancock : A biographical statement:
A statement from Marlene Hancock describing her academic interest in the Middle East, and her experience as the organizer and faculty advisor of the Douglas College Internationl Model United Nations (DOUGIMUN)
W. R. Hancock
Photograph: Portrait of Blue Cross board chairman W. R. Hancock. Date unknown.https://digitalcommons.unf.edu/flablue_images/2864/thumbnail.jp
Robert R. Hancock
Black and white head shot photograph of Robert R. Hancock, Professor of Mathematics, 1965-1985.https://thekeep.eiu.edu/archives_faculty_eh/1198/thumbnail.jp
W. R. Hancock
Photograph: Portrait of Blue Cross of Florida board member W. R. Hancock. Photo date: January 10, 1973.https://digitalcommons.unf.edu/flablue_images/2812/thumbnail.jp
Hancock, R W F, WX4666
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/390120Surname: HANCOCK. Given Name(s) or Initials: R W F. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: WX4666. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 40587.214889
Item: [2016.0049.22413] "Hancock, R W F, WX4666
Bactrocera (Bactrocera) carambolae Drew & Hancock 1994
Bactrocera (Bactrocera) carambolae Drew & Hancock Bactrocera (Bactrocera) carambolae Drew & Hancock, 1994: 11; Norrbom et al., 1998: 89; Drew & Romig, 2013: 61. Holotype in BMNH. Common name: Carambola Fruit Fly. Definition: Face fulvous with a pair of medium-sized oval black spots; postpronotal lobes and notopleura yellow; scutum black with pale lateral margins; broad parallel-sided lateral postsutural yellow vittae ending at or behind ia. seta; medial postsutural yellow vitta absent; anepisternal (mesopleural) stripe reaching midway between anterior margin of notopleuron and anterior npl. seta dorsally; scutellum yellow with a narrow dark basal band; legs with femora fulvous and with a large preapical dark spot on outer surface of fore femora in some specimens, tibiae dark fuscous; wing with cells bc and c colourless, microtrichia in outer corner of call c only, a narrow fuscous costal band overlapping R 2+3 and expanding slightly beyond apex of this vein across apex of R 4+5, a narrow fuscous anal streak, supernumerary lobe of medium development; abdominal terga III-V orange-brown with a dark ‘T’ pattern consisting of a narrow transverse band across anterior margin of tergum III that widens to cover lateral margins, a medium width medial longitudinal band over all three terga, a dark rectangular pattern on anterolateral corners of tergum IV, anterolateral corners of tergum V dark fuscous, ceromata on tergum V orange-brown, abdominal sterna dark fuscous to black. Distribution: Andaman Islands, Southern Thailand, Southern Vietnam, Peninsular Malaysia, East Malaysia, Indonesia. Adventive in French Guyana, Guyana, Surinam and NE Brazil. Recently recorded from Cambodia and Bangladesh (Leblanc et al., 2015; 2019). Hosts: A major pest species with a preference for Averrhoa carambola L. See Allwood et al. (1999) for recorded host plants. The host range in Surinam and Guyana, a region into which B. carambolae was introduced, matches that recorded in South-East Asia (van Sauers-Muller, 2005). Attractant: Methyl eugenol. Comments: Generally, B. carambolae can be separated from the other dorsalis complex pest species in possessing the costal band broader apically and a broad medial longitudinal black band on abdominal terga III-V. Based on the mitochondrial genes COI and ND5, B. carambolae is separate from B. dorsalis, B. occipitalis and B. papayae (Drew & Romig, 2013). It also possesses distinct chemical components in the male pheromones (Drew & Hancock, 1994).Published as part of Drew, R. A. I. & Hancock, D. L., 2022, Biogeography, Speciation and Taxonomy within the genus Bactrocera Macquart with application to the Bactrocera dorsalis (Hendel) complex of fruit flies (Diptera Tephritidae: Dacinae), pp. 333-360 in Zootaxa 5190 (3) on pages 346-347, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5190.3.2, http://zenodo.org/record/713815
Bactrocera (Bactrocera) pyrifoliae Drew & Hancock 1994
Bactrocera (Bactrocera) pyrifoliae Drew & Hancock Bactrocera (Bactrocera) pyrifoliae Drew & Hancock, 1994: 55; Norrbom et al., 1998: 94; Drew & Romig, 2013: 164. Holotype in BMNH. Common Name: Oriental Pear Fly. Definition: Face fulvous with a pair of medium-sized circular black spots; postpronotal lobes and notopleura yellow; scutum black with dark brown lateral margins; narrow lateral postsutural yellow vittae tapering posteriorly to end before ia. seta; medial postsutural yellow vitta absent; anepisternal stripe equal in width to notopleuron dorsally; scutellum yellow with a narrow black basal band; legs fulvous with a small subapical black spot on outer surfaces of fore femora and dark fuscous around apices of mid and hind femora, fore and mid tibiae dark fuscous and hind tibiae black; wings with cells bc and c colourless, microtrichia in outer corner of cell c only, a narrow fuscous costal band confluent with R 2+3 and with a slight swelling around apex of R 4+5, a narrow fuscous anal streak, supernumerary lobe of medium development; abdominal terga III-V orange-brown and with each tergum with a dark fuscous to black ’T’ pattern and dark fuscous to black lateral margins, ceromata on tergum V dark fuscous, abdominal sterna dark fuscous to black. Distribution: Northern Thailand and northern Vietnam. Hosts: Reared from five host families with a preference for peach and pear in the family Rosaceae. Attractant: A possible weak response to cue lure (Drew & Romig, 2013). Comments: Bactrocera pyrifoliae is morphologically unique within the group in possessing terga III, IV and V each with a separate dark fuscous to black ‘T’ pattern. In having lateral postsutural yellow vittae narrowing posteriorly, all femora with apical dark markings and an extensively dark abdomen with fuscous ceromata, it most resembles the Elaeocarpaceae-feeding B. thailandica (which also has a dark basal band on abdominal terga III and IV) and the Melastomataceae-feeding species B. melastomatos and B. osbeckiae and is possibly related to them.Published as part of Drew, R. A. I. & Hancock, D. L., 2022, Biogeography, Speciation and Taxonomy within the genus Bactrocera Macquart with application to the Bactrocera dorsalis (Hendel) complex of fruit flies (Diptera Tephritidae: Dacinae), pp. 333-360 in Zootaxa 5190 (3) on pages 351-352, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5190.3.2, http://zenodo.org/record/713815
Bactrocera (Bactrocera) papayae Drew & Hancock
Bactrocera (Bactrocera) papayae Drew & Hancock Bactrocera (Bactrocera) papayae Drew & Hancock, 1994: 48; Norrbom et al., 1998: 93; Drew & Romig, 2013: 142, 2016: 7. Holotype in BMNH. Bactrocera (Bactrocera) philippinensis Drew & Hancock, 1994: 52; Norrbom et al., 1998: 94. Holotype in BPBM. Syn. Drew & Romig, 2013: 142. Common Name: Asian Papaya Fruit Fly. Definition: Face fulvous with a pair of large oval black spots; postpronotal lobes and notopleura yellow; scutum black with dark brown laterally and around notopleural suture; broad parallel-sided lateral postsutural yellow vittae ending at or behind ia. seta; medial postsutural yellow vitta absent; anepisternal stripe reaching midway between anterior margin of notopleuron and anterior npl. seta dorsally; scutellum yellow with a narrow black basal band; legs with femora entirely fulvous, fore and hind tibiae dark fuscous, mid tibiae fuscous basally (darker stripe on ventral surface of fore tibiae more distinct on fresh specimens); wing with cells bc and c colourless, microtrichia in outer corner of cell c only, a narrow fuscous costal band confluent with R 2+3 and may widen slightly around apex of wing, a narrow fuscous anal streak, supernumerary lobe of medium development; abdominal terga III-V orangebrown with a narrow transverse black band across anterior margin of tergum III which expands laterally into narrow margins (in some specimens this band is broken in the midline), a narrow to medium width medial longitudinal black band over all three terga, anterolateral corners of terga IV and V dark fuscous to black, ceromata on tergum V orange-brown, abdominal terga dark fuscous to black. Distribution: Peninsular Malaysia, East Malaysia, Central to Southern Thailand (at least as far north as Bangkok), Philippines, Palau, Borneo, Indonesia, Singapore, Moluccas, Indonesian Papua, Papua New Guinea, New Britain, Christmas Island (Australian Territory). Hosts: A wide range of commercial/edible and wild host fruits (see Allwood et al., 1999). Attractant: Methyl eugenol. Comments: Detailed discussion on the specific status of B. papaya e has been presented in Drew & Romig (2013, 2016, 2022). The major host preferences of this species make it a serious biosecurity risk, particularly for specific export industries such as bananas. The closest species morphologically is B. dorsalis and the two can be separated on the basis of aedeagus and ovipositor measurements, particularly those of host-reared specimens. In B. papayae the aedeagus length range is 2.54–3.4 mm and in B. dorsalis 2.46–2.7 mm, and in B. papayae the ratio of the length of the oviscape to length of tergum V is 1: 1 to 1.5: 1, whereas in B. dorsalis it is 0.7: 1 to 0.8: 1. The glans is elongate and tubular in B. papayae and sobovate in B. dorsalis.Published as part of Drew, R. A. I. & Hancock, D. L., 2022, Biogeography, Speciation and Taxonomy within the genus Bactrocera Macquart with application to the Bactrocera dorsalis (Hendel) complex of fruit flies (Diptera Tephritidae: Dacinae), pp. 333-360 in Zootaxa 5190 (3) on page 351, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5190.3.2, http://zenodo.org/record/713815
Euphranta haldwanica Hancock & Goodger
Euphranta haldwanica Hancock & Goodger Material examined: 1♂, Haldwani Div. U.P., H. N. Parker, 11.iii.1923, R. R. D. 23, B.C. R 223, Glass jar A, ex Dysoxylum malabaricum, 1♀ same data as above except for date 13.iii.1923 (FRI) Diagnosis: This species was described by Hancock and Goodger in David et al. (2013), wherein morphology of postabdominal structures was not studied except for aculeus tip. Male: epandrium in lateral view oval, broad lateral surstylus (Fig. 15) with no delineation of anterior and posterior lobes, proctiger hyaline and setose, much smaller than epandrium; in posterior view, epandrium elongate-oval, medial surstylus shorter than lateral surstylus with weakly sclerotised prensisetae (Fig. 16). Phallus elongate, tubular (3.11 mm), with glans of phallus almost hyaline except for two basal, conical sclerotised plates without prominent acrophallus (Fig. 17). Oviscape (2.84 mm long) brown; distal end of eversible membrane (2.04 mm) with closely packed broad, dentate spicules (Fig. 19); aculeus (0.83 mm) tip without preapical indentations (Fig. 18). Spermatheca weakly sclerotized, clavate (Fig. 20).Published as part of David, K. J., Hancock, D. L., Sankararaman, H., Sachin, K. & Sudhir, Singh, 2020, A new species of Euphranta Loew (Diptera: Tephritidae: Trypetinae: Adramini) from India, pp. 584-590 in Zootaxa 4868 (4) on pages 588-589, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4868.4.8, http://zenodo.org/record/441821
Dacimita David & Hancock 2022, gen. n.
Dacimita David & Hancock, gen. n. Type species Dacimita curvifasciatus David & Hancock, sp. n. Diagnosis: Head (Fig. 2) higher than long with single pair of weak frontal setae; ocellar and orbital setae vestigial/ absent. Face concave, fulvous with elongate, black markings; first flagellomere shorter than face, arista shortplumose; postocciput and vertex swollen. Scutum (Fig. 3) elongate, black, microtrichose, with yellow lateral presutural and sublateral postsutural vittae; anepisternal stripe (Fig. 4) broad, reaching postpronotal lobe; chaetotaxy reduced. Wing (Fig. 7) elongate, predominantly hyaline with two transverse bands, cell bm as broad as cell cua, extension of cell cua shorter than main part of cell cua; crossvein r-m placed near midlength of cell dm. Abdomen (Figs. 5, 6) elongate, slightly petiolate, with black transverse bands on tergites 2−5. Epandrium (Figs. 8, 9) sclerotised, with well developed setae, proctiger larger than epandrium; epandrium and surstylus not demarcated; phallus with well developed acrophallus, subapical lobe and preglans lobe present. Oviscape (Fig. 11) broad, setose; eversible membrane broad with semicircular spicules (Fig. 12), taeniae not prominent; aculeus (Figs. 11, 12) as broad as eversible membrane with conical apex and preapical constriction, sternite 8 with prominent lobes. Two spermathecae, convoluted in appearance with bulbous apex. Etymology: Dacimita is derived from a combination of “ Dacini ” (root word- Dacus) and “imito”, meaning resembling dacines. The genus is considered masculinePublished as part of David, K. J., Hancock, D. L., Gracy, R. G. & Sachin, K., 2022, A new genus of fruit fly in subfamily Dacinae (Diptera: Tephritidae) from India, pp. 585-597 in Zootaxa 5195 (6) on pages 586-587, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5195.6.7, http://zenodo.org/record/722402
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