79,205 research outputs found

    Huang Siru jiang gao

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    黃仲元撰 ; 詹子清編 ; 涂應鍾校.綫裝, 1函.框21x14公分, 10行20字, 小字雙行同, 白口, 雙魚尾, 四周文武雙邊. 版心上鐫"黃四如講藁"及卷次, 中鐫小題, 下鐫葉次.出版年據序.Xian zhuang, 1 han.Kuang 21 x 14 gong fen, 10 hang 20 zi, xiao zi shang hang tong, bai kou, shuang yu wei, si zhou wen wu shuang bian. Ban xin shang juan "Huang Siru jiang gao" ji juan ci, zhong juan xiao ti, xia juan ye ci.Chu ban nian ju xu.Huang Zhongyuan zhuan ; Zhan Ziqing bian ; Tu Yingzhong jiao

    Jiang Rong, Le Totem du loup, (Wolf Totem) translated by Yan Hansheng and Lisa Carducci

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    Published in China in 2004 by Changjiang wenyi chubanshe, Jiang Rong’s novel Lang tuteng (Wolf Totem) was immediately a phenomenal success. I myself witnessed this success while in China, where bookshops displayed multiple stacks of the book. Its author, Jiang Rong, the pseudonym of Lu Jiamin, was an activist in the Tiananmen Square movement in 1989; now a researcher in social sciences and the husband of Zhang Kangkang, a well-known writer, Jiang Rong maintained a mystery surrounding his iden..

    A case of gynandromorphy in Ducetia japonica (Thunberg, 1815) (Orthoptera Tettigoniidae: Phaneropterinae)

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    Huang, Jiang-Rong, Liu, Yun-Fei, He, Zhu-Qing (2021): A case of gynandromorphy in Ducetia japonica (Thunberg, 1815) (Orthoptera Tettigoniidae: Phaneropterinae). Zootaxa 4970 (1): 182-188, DOI: https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4970.1.1

    Paragnomoxyala Jiang and Huang 2015

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    Genus Paragnomoxyala Jiang and Huang, 2015 Diagnosis. Cuticle transversely striated; buccal cavity large, funnel-shaped or rectangular, with cuticulariZed walls; lips extended outwards; outer labial sensilla papilliform, only four cephalic setae; amphidial fovea circular; slender spicules straight, gubernaculum absent; tail conico-cylindrical with three terminal setae.Published as part of Sun, Yan & Huang, Yong, 2017, One new species and one new combination of the family Xyalidae (Nematoda: Monhysterida) from the East China Sea, pp. 401-410 in Zootaxa 4306 (3) on page 406, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4306.3.6, http://zenodo.org/record/84451

    FIGURE 1 in A case of gynandromorphy in Ducetia japonica (Thunberg, 1815) (Orthoptera Tettigoniidae: Phaneropterinae)

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    FIGURE 1. Gynandromorphy specimen (A, B), one male (C) and one female (D) in live.Published as part of Huang, Jiang-Rong, Liu, Yun-Fei & He, Zhu-Qing, 2021, A case of gynandromorphy in Ducetia japonica (Thunberg, 1815) (Orthoptera Tettigoniidae: Phaneropterinae), pp. 182-188 in Zootaxa 4970 (1) on page 184, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4970.1.10, http://zenodo.org/record/475597

    FIGURE 2 in A case of gynandromorphy in Ducetia japonica (Thunberg, 1815) (Orthoptera Tettigoniidae: Phaneropterinae)

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    FIGURE 2. Head and forewing of gynandromorphy specimen.Published as part of Huang, Jiang-Rong, Liu, Yun-Fei & He, Zhu-Qing, 2021, A case of gynandromorphy in Ducetia japonica (Thunberg, 1815) (Orthoptera Tettigoniidae: Phaneropterinae), pp. 182-188 in Zootaxa 4970 (1) on page 184, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4970.1.10, http://zenodo.org/record/475597

    Inventing A Wolfish China - On Jiang Rong'S Wolf Totem

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    The Wolf Totem by Jiang Rong has won great success both in and out of China. Jiang Rong criticizes Han Chinese and embraces the culture of the northern ethnic minority group, the Mongols, because of its stronger sense of competition and domination. In the epilogue of this novel, Jiang argues that the wolf totem was the most ancient totem for all Chinese people and retells Chinese history using this framework. This paper explores the background of the novel and its author, as well as supporting materials the author uses in his proposal concerning the wolf totem, and suggests that the wolf totem is a purely ideological invention of Jiang Rong. This invention reflects Jiang's own philosophy and caters to the cultural needs of modern Chinese people. In inventing the wolf totem, the author uses historical documents, archeological findings, as well as a far-fetched bodily metaphor. However, none of this evidence is validated by scholarly research

    Teratozephyrus yaolihuoi Huang, Jiang

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    <i>Teratozephyrus yaolihuoi</i> Huang, Jiang & Song sp. nov. <p>(Figs 1–2, 5)</p> <p> <i>Chrysozephyrus</i> sp. — Jiang <i>et al</i>. 2001: 103, pl. 114, figs. 26–334 [misidentification]</p> <p> <b>Type material.</b> <b>Holotype</b>: male, VII.1995, Baoshan, Shunchang County, Nanping City, Fujian Province, P. R. China, leg. Li-Huo Yao, dissection number JF200 (Coll. CFJ, will be later deposited in the Lepidoptera collection of Fujian Academy of Forestry Sciences).</p> <p> <b>Description. Male.</b> Length of forewing 21 mm. Antennae lost, but according to Jiang <i>et al</i>. (2001), length is about half length of forewing. Compound eyes covered densely with whitish hair. Thorax and abdomen dorsally black and ventrally grayish white. Forewing upperside ground color blackish brown, with a intense heart-shaped orange patch in discal zone, occupying basal part of spaces 3 to 5 and extending to distal end of discoidal space and the middle part of space 2; cilia blackish. Forewing underside ground color yellowish brown; discoidal space bar slightly tint with orange and edged with white; postdiscal band white, running from costa to space 2, with the part in space 2 slightly dislocating inwards; submarginal band blackish, edges outwards with a white line and attenuating towards costa; marginal line obsolete, only visible in space 1b and 2. Hindwing upperside ground color same as forewing, with costal zone paler; vein 2 bearing a long, tail-like projection (tip lost); cilia blackish. Hindwing underside ground color as forewing; discoidal space bar slightly darker than ground color, edged with white; postdiscal band white, running from vein 8 to dorsum and strongly dislocating and curving inwards on vein 2, with part from vein 2 to dorsum forming a V-shaped pattern; submarginal band slightly darker than ground color, ornamented with two whitish lines anteriorly and posteriorly; a black rounded spot broadly encircled by orange presenting in space 2; three orange tornal spots of different shapes and sizes presenting in spaces 1b and 1c and edged with black; marginal line prominent, thin and white, extending from vein 1c to vein 8. <b>Male genitalia.</b> Uncus short and stout, moderately wide in dorsal view and gradually narrowing towards end. Tegumen rectangular and broad. Socii short and broad with a straight termen in lateral view, curves inwards distally in ventral and dorsal view. Branches of gnathos (falces) slender, J-shaped in lateral view and basally bearing a short and broad lateral process in dorsal view. Lateral window shallow, narrow and crescent-shape. Lateral process short and forming a small round bump. Vinculum slen- der. Saccus short and broad in lateral view and nearly trapezoid in dorsal view. Juxta slender, U-shaped. Valva broad basally and gradually narrow towards tip in lateral view, its lateral margin strongly curving medially in ventral and dorsal view; ampulla bifurcate, forming stout branches; sacculus short and rounded. Phallus slender, gently curving downwards in middle; suprazonal sheath slightly longer than subzonal sheath; aedeagus gradually tapering towards end in lateral view, with extreme distal part slightly bending downwards; vesica small, with numerous cornuti scattered on surface in basal part and gradually becaming sparse towards distal part.</p> <p> <b>Diagnosis.</b> The male of <i>T. yaolihuoi</i> <b>sp. nov.</b> externally resembles only <i>T. hinomaru</i> Fujioka, 1994 (Figs 3–4, 6, 7–8, type locality: Chin-fo-shan, Nanchuan, Szechuan, now Mt. Jinfou, Nanchuan District, Chongqing City) from Chongqing City and Guizhou Province, southwestern China in sharing a similar intense orange patch on the forewing upperside, The new species, however, can be readily distinguished from the latter externally by the following features: 1) on the upperside of the forewing, the orange patch is less extensive and not extending to space 6 in <i>yaolihuoi</i>, while that in <i>T. hinomaru</i> is much larger and forming a long orange bar in the space 6; 2) on the underside of both wings, the ground color is yellowish brown without a reddish tint in the new species, while the ground color is ochreous brown with a reddish tint in <i>T. hinomaru</i>. In male genitalia, <i>T. yaolihuoi</i> <b>sp. nov.</b> can be distinguished from <i>T. hinomaru</i> soundly by the following characters: 1) uncus is significantly narrowing towards its tip in the dorsal view, while that in <i>T. hinomaru</i> is much broader throughout the whole length and only slightly narrowing at the distal end; 2) uncus, in the lateral view, is not broadening towards the base, while that in <i>T. hinomaru</i> is significantly broadening towards the base; 3) tegumen, in the dorsal view, is wide with the horizontal width much longer than the length of the uncus, while tegumen in the dorsal view is narrower with the horizontal width slightly longer than the length of the uncus <i>in T. hinomaru</i>; 4) branch of gnathos (falx) in lateral view is curving near the distal end, while that in <i>T. hinomaru</i> is curving slightly before the middle point of the whole length; 5) sacculus is rounded in ventro-posterior view, while that in <i>T. hinomaru</i> is sharper and forming a triangular projection in the same view; 6) aedeagus has its distal end slightly bending downwards, and aedeagus vesica has shorter cornuti at its base, while the distal end of aedeagus in <i>T. hinomaru</i> is pointing forwards and aedeagus vesica has much longer cornuti at its base.</p> <p> <b>Female.</b> Unknown.</p> <p> <b>Distribution.</b> Currently only known from the type locality in northwestern Fujian Province (Fig. 9).</p> <p> <b>Etymology.</b> This species is dedicated to the memory of Mr. Li-Huo Yao, a butterfly amateur who collected the holotype of this interesting lycaenid butterfly and devoted most of his life to investigating the butterfly fauna of Fujian Province.</p>Published as part of <i>Huang, Si-Yao, Jiang, Fan & Song, Hai-Tian, 2021, A new species of the genus Teratozephyrus Sibatani, 1946 from China (Lepidoptera Lycaenidae, Theclinae), pp. 187-192 in Zootaxa 4963 (1)</i> on pages 188-190, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4963.1.11, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/4711138">http://zenodo.org/record/4711138</a&gt

    Dataset for Back-end-of-line a-SiOxCy:H dielectrics for resistive memory

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    Dataset of figures in the paper Fan, J., Kapur, O., Huang, R., De Groot, C., &amp; Jiang, L. (2018). Back-end-of-line a-SiOxCy:H dielectrics for resistive memory. AIP Advances. This dataset including XPS on a-SiOxCy:H films and current-voltage measurements tests on W/a-SiOxCy:H/Cu resistive memories.</span

    Paragnomoxyala Jiang & Huang, 2015, gen. nov.

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    Genus Paragnomoxyala gen. nov. Body slender, gradually tapering towards both terminal ends. Cuticle with transverse striations, beginning at base of buccal cavity and ending at tail tip. Internal labial sensilla not visible; outer labial setae absent. Only four short cephalic setae. Sub-cephalic setae absent. Amphidial fovea circular at the level of buccal cavity. Lips high. Buccal cavity large, funnel-shaped with cuticularized walls and extended anteriorly, 1.6-1.8 hd long, 63–79 % cbd wide, lacking teeth, not surrounded by pharyngeal tissue. Tail conico-cylindrical with three terminal setae. Spicules straight. Gubernaculum absent. Female monodelphic; anterior outstretched ovary to the left of the intestine. Etymology. The genus name refers to the close genus Gnomoxyala. Diagnosis and discussion. Paragnomoxyala gen. nov. is characterized by large buccal cavity unique in Xyalidae, funnel-shaped with cuticularized walls and extended anteriorly; cuticle transversely striated; only four cephalic setae, without outer labial sensilla setae; subcephalic setae and cervical setae absent; circular amphidial fovea; straight spicules; no gubernaculum; tail conico-cylindrical with three terminal setae; and female monodelphic with an anterior outstretched ovary. It is similar to other genera of the family in possessing large cuticularised buccal cavities or straight spicules without gubernaculum, namely Gnomoxyala Lorenzen, 1977, Coronema Nicholas & Stewart, 1995, Sphaerotheristus Timm, 1968, Hofmaenneria Gerlach & Meyl, 1957 and Elzalia Gerlach, 1957. Paragnomoxyala gen. nov. differs from Gnomoxyala by its large buccal cavity with extended anteriorly, striated cuticle, circular amphidial fovea, and spicules longer than abd. In Gnomoxyala, the buccal cavity is cylindrical, not extended anteriorly, the lips not high, cuticle is only faintly striated, amphidial fovea absent, cervical setae are present, and spicules are shorter than abd. It differs from Coronema by having fine cuticle striations, no buccal ring and tail conico-cylindrical with three terminal setae. In Coronema, the cuticle is strongly annulated with eight ridges, a buccal ring is present and the tail is conical without terminal setae. This new genus differs from Sphaerotheristus which has cuticle with longitudinal ridges, and cephalic sensilla in two crowns with the posterior crown bearing 10 or 12 setae (Fonseca & Bezerra 2014). The new genus differs from Hofmaenneria by having a wider buccal cavity, the amphidial fovea almost at the level of buccal cavity vs posterior to the cavity, spicules short and straight vs slender and ventrally arcuate, gubernaculum absent vs present, and tail with terminal setae vs elongated without terminal setae. It differs from Elzalia by having a wider buccal cavity, only four cephalic setae, outer labial setae absent, spicules short and no gubernaculum. In Elzalia, the anterior sensilla are in two circles, the posterior circle with ten setae, the spicules are elongate, and the gubernaculum is usually complex. Xyalidae usual has six outer labial setae and four cephalic setae in one circle. However, with a few exceptions, Gnomoxyala and Retrotheristus Lorenzen, 1977 have only four cephalic setae in one circle, and the outer labial setae are absent. Thus, by this character, the new genus is also similar to Gnomoxyala and Retrotheristus. It differs from Retrotheristus which has a conoid buccal cavity, arcuate spicules and a gubernaculum, cuticle with faint striations, no amphidial fovea, and does have cervical setae. Based on these features, which are regarded as characteristic of the above genera, we propose Paragnomoxyala as a new genus. Paragnomoxyala gen. nov. differs from other genera of Xyalidae by the combination of a large funnel-shaped buccal cavity which is extended anteriorly, by lacking subcephalic setae and cervical setae and by having straight spicules without a gubernaculum. The type species of this new genus is Paragnomoxyala breviseta sp. nov.Published as part of Jiang, Weijun & Huang, Yong, 2015, Paragnomoxyala gen. nov. (Xyalidae, Monhysterida, Nematoda) from the East China Sea, pp. 467-474 in Zootaxa 4039 (3) on page 469, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4039.3.6, http://zenodo.org/record/24285
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