6,909 research outputs found
Figure 6 in Four new records and a new species of Dactylokepon Stebbing, 1910 (Epicaridea: Bopyridae: Ioninae) from Chinese waters
Figure 6. Dactylokepon barbuladigitus new species. (A–K) Holotype female: (A) dorsal view; (B) ventral view; (C) left antennae; (D) right maxilliped, external view; (E) barbula (right side); (F) right oostegite 1, external view; (G) right oostegite 1, internal view; (H) left pereopod 2; (I) right pleopod 3; (J) right pleopod 4; (K) right pleopod 5. (L) Allotype male (no. CIEX604502), dorsal view. Scale bar: 1 mm (A, B); 0.18 mm (C); 0.31 mm (D, E); 0.45 mm (F, G); 0.15 mm (H); 0.26 mm (I); 0.69 mm (J–L); 0.39 mm (M).Published as part of An, Jianmei, Yu, Haiyan & Williams, Jason D., 2007, Four new records and a new species of Dactylokepon Stebbing, 1910 (Epicaridea: Bopyridae: Ioninae) from Chinese waters, pp. 2063-2079 in Journal of Natural History 41 (33-36) on page 2074, DOI: 10.1080/00222930701554180, http://zenodo.org/record/523272
Figure 3. Pseudostegias setoensis Shiino, 1933 in Three abdominal parasitic isopods (Isopoda: Epicaridea: Bopyridae: Athelginae) on hermit crabs from China and Hong Kong
Figure 3. Pseudostegias setoensis Shiino, 1933. (A–I) Female (CIEA920301): (A) dorsal view; (B) ventral view; (C) right antennule and antennae; (D) right maxilliped, external view; (E) right side of barbula; (F) right oostegite 1, external view; (G) right oostegite 1, internal view; (H) right pereopod 1; (I) right pereopod 6. (J–M) Male (CIEA920302): (J) dorsal view; (K) ventral view; (L) right antennule and antennae; (M) left pereopod 5. Scale bars: 1 mm for A, B; 0.17 mm for C, H, I; 0.35 mm for D; 0.40 mm for E, F, G; 0.30 mm for J, K; 0.12 mm for L, M.Published as part of An, Jianmei, Williams, Jason D. & Yu, Haiyan, 2011, Three abdominal parasitic isopods (Isopoda: Epicaridea: Bopyridae: Athelginae) on hermit crabs from China and Hong Kong, pp. 2901-2913 in Journal of Natural History 45 (47-48) on page 2907, DOI: 10.1080/00222933.2011.621037, http://zenodo.org/record/520486
Figure 1. Athelges takanoshimensis Ishii, 1914 in Three abdominal parasitic isopods (Isopoda: Epicaridea: Bopyridae: Athelginae) on hermit crabs from China and Hong Kong
Figure 1. Athelges takanoshimensis Ishii, 1914. (A–H) Female (CIEA109801): (A) dorsal view; (B) ventral view; (C) left antennule and antennae; (D) left side of barbula; (E) left maxilliped, external view; (F) left oostegite 1, external view; (G) left oostegite 1, internal view; (H) right pereopod 5. (I–M) Male (CIEA109802): (I) Dorsal view; (J) ventral view; (K) left antennule and antennae; (L) left pereopod 3; (M) left pereopod 7. Scale bars: 1 mm for A, B; 0.08 mm for C, K, M, L; 0.38 mm for D; 0.33 mm for E; 0.50 mm for F, G; 0.14 mm for H; 0.28 mm for I, J.Published as part of An, Jianmei, Williams, Jason D. & Yu, Haiyan, 2011, Three abdominal parasitic isopods (Isopoda: Epicaridea: Bopyridae: Athelginae) on hermit crabs from China and Hong Kong, pp. 2901-2913 in Journal of Natural History 45 (47-48) on page 2903, DOI: 10.1080/00222933.2011.621037, http://zenodo.org/record/520486
Figure 1. Athelges takanoshimensis Ishii, 1914 in Three abdominal parasitic isopods (Isopoda: Epicaridea: Bopyridae: Athelginae) on hermit crabs from China and Hong Kong
Figure 1. Athelges takanoshimensis Ishii, 1914. (A–H) Female (CIEA109801): (A) dorsal view; (B) ventral view; (C) left antennule and antennae; (D) left side of barbula; (E) left maxilliped, external view; (F) left oostegite 1, external view; (G) left oostegite 1, internal view; (H) right pereopod 5. (I–M) Male (CIEA109802): (I) Dorsal view; (J) ventral view; (K) left antennule and antennae; (L) left pereopod 3; (M) left pereopod 7. Scale bars: 1 mm for A, B; 0.08 mm for C, K, M, L; 0.38 mm for D; 0.33 mm for E; 0.50 mm for F, G; 0.14 mm for H; 0.28 mm for I, J.Published as part of An, Jianmei, Williams, Jason D. & Yu, Haiyan, 2011, Three abdominal parasitic isopods (Isopoda: Epicaridea: Bopyridae: Athelginae) on hermit crabs from China and Hong Kong, pp. 2901-2913 in Journal of Natural History 45 (47-48) on page 2903, DOI: 10.1080/00222933.2011.621037, http://zenodo.org/record/520486
Multi-layer mucilage of Plantago ovata seeds: Rheological differences arise from variations in arabinoxylan side chains
Abstract not availableLong Yu, Gleb E. Yakubov, Wei Zeng, Xiaohui Xing, John Stenson, Vincent Bulone, Jason R. Stoke
Marine algal flora of Pengchia Yu and its special place in the marine phytogeography of Taiwan
A total of 52 taxa of marine benthic algae is reported from Pengchia Yu, a remote islet located off northeastern Taiwan. Two taxa represent new records for the marine flora of Taiwan, three taxa show their range extension. This islet acts as a tropical refugium in a region that is widely known to have cold water floristic affinities. The effects of the sea surface-water temperature and current on the distribution of algae are also discussed.TR: CS9510874Source type: Electronic(1
Yu. M. Lotman Forever Turned the Idea of the Text
An interview with O. A. Kling is presented, revealing the significance of Yu. M. Lotman’s works for literary criticism of the XX–XXI centuries. Oleg Alekseevich Kling is a Russian literary critic, Doctor of Philology, Professor, Head of the Department of Literary Theory of the Faculty of Philology of Lomonosov Moscow State University, winner of the magazine award “Questions of Literature”. The areas of scientific interests are Russian literature, the history of Russian literary studies, symbolism and post-symbolism, the Silver Age. He is the author of many works in these fields, including books: “Alexander Blok: The Structure of the Novel in Verse”, “Russian Poetry: The poem ‘Twelve’” (2004), “The Poetic World of Marina Tsvetaeva” (2004), “The Influence of Symbolism on Post-Symbolist Poetry in Russia of the 1910s: Problems of Poetics” (2010), “‘The Platinum Age’ in Russian Literature” (2017), editor-in-chief of the encyclopedia “Russian Literary Critics of the twentieth Century: BioBibliographic Dictionary. Vol. I: A–L” (2017)
Voice Compression and Communications: Principles and Applications for Fixes and Wireless Channels
Up-to-date, expert coverage of topics in wireless voice communications Voice communication is the most important facet of mobile radio service. Even when the predicted surge of wireless data and Internet services becomes a reality, voice will remain the most natural means of human communication. Voice Compression and Communications details issues in wireless voice communications and treats compression, channel coding, and wireless transmission as a joint subject. Part I covers background material, whereas Part II provides detailed information on both proprietary and standardized analysis-by-synthesis codecs, including the speech codecs of virtually all existing wireline-based and wireless systems. Parts III and IV discuss mainly research-based wideband, audio, as well as very low-rate schemes likely to find their way into future standards. Voice Compression and Communications describes fundamental concepts in a non-mathematical way early in the book for those with only a background knowledge of signal processing and communications. More advanced readers will find detailed discussions of theoretical principles, future concepts, and solutions to various specific wireless voice communications problems
Author correction to "Enhanced property of thin cuprous oxide film prepared through green synthetic route"(Vol 32, 365, 2019)
El Kasmi A, Vieker H, Wu L-nan, Beyer A, Chafik T, Tian Z-yu. Author correction to "Enhanced property of thin cuprous oxide film prepared through green synthetic route"(Vol 32, 365, 2019). Chinese Journal of Chemical Physics. 2024;37(4):571.This correction adds some information to our publication [Chin. J. Chem. Phys. 32, 365-372 (2019)] that we previously missed to include
Correction to: Long-term changes in rainfed olive production, rainfall and farmer’s income in Bailén (Jaén, Spain) (Euro-Mediterranean Journal for Environmental Integration, (2021), 6, 2, (58), 10.1007/s41207-021-00268-1)
The article Long‐term changes in rainfed olive production, rainfall and farmer’s income in Bailén (Jaén, Spain), written by Jesús Rodrigo‐Comino, José María Senciales‐Gonzalez, Yang Yu, Luca Salvati, Antonio Gimenez‐Morera and Artemi Cerdà, was originally published electronically on the publisher’s internet portal on 18 June 2021 without open access. With the author(s)’ decision to opt for Open Choice the copyright of the article changed on 3 July 2021 to © The Author(s) 2021 and the article is forthwith distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http:// creat iveco mmons. org/ licen ses/ by/4.0. The original article has been corrected
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