133,655 research outputs found

    Bactericera sarahae Kwon & Kwon 2020

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    Bactericera sarahae Kwon & Kwon, 2020 Bactericera (Klimaszewskiella) sarahae Kwon & Kwon, 2020: 214. Distribution in Korea. GB (Kwon & Kwon 2020, as Bactericera (Klimaszewskiella) sarahae). Host plant. Adults were collected on Salix L. (Salicaceae) (Kwon & Kwon 2020) which needs to be confirmed as host.Published as part of Cho, Geonho, Burckhardt, Daniel & Lee, Seunghwan, 2022, Check list of jumping plant-lice (Hemiptera: Psylloidea) of the Korean Peninsula, pp. 1-91 in Zootaxa 5177 (1) on page 66, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5177.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/702193

    Cacopsylla yunae Kwon & Kwon 2020

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    Cacopsylla yunae Kwon & Kwon, 2020 Cacopsylla (Hepatopsylla) yunae Kwon & Kwon, 2020: 186. Distribution in Korea. GB, GW (Kwon & Kwon 2020, as Cacopsylla (Hepatopsylla) yunae). Host plant. Adults were collected on Malus baccata (L.) Borkh. (Rosaceae) (Kwon & Kwon 2020) which needs to be confirmed as host.Published as part of Cho, Geonho, Burckhardt, Daniel & Lee, Seunghwan, 2022, Check list of jumping plant-lice (Hemiptera: Psylloidea) of the Korean Peninsula, pp. 1-91 in Zootaxa 5177 (1) on page 60, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5177.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/702193

    Cacopsylla longiventris Kwon & Kwon 2020

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    Cacopsylla longiventris Kwon & Kwon, 2020 Cacopsylla (Hepatopsylla) longiventris Kwon & Kwon, 2020: 163. Distribution in Korea. GW (Kwon & Kwon 2020, as Cacopsylla (Hepatopsylla) longiventris). Host plant. Salix L. (Salicaceae) (Kwon & Kwon 2020). Comments. According to Kwon & Kwon (2020), C. longiventris is close to C. arcuata Loginova, 1965, reported from Kazakhstan, Mongolia and Russia (Primorsky Krai, Siberia) (Labina 2008), but differs in the more reduced surface spinules of the forewings. If this difference justifies species status should be examined with additional material.Published as part of Cho, Geonho, Burckhardt, Daniel & Lee, Seunghwan, 2022, Check list of jumping plant-lice (Hemiptera: Psylloidea) of the Korean Peninsula, pp. 1-91 in Zootaxa 5177 (1) on page 49, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5177.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/702193

    Bactericera miyatakei Kwon & Lee 1981

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    Bactericera miyatakei Kwon & Lee, 1981 Bactericera (Smirnovia) miyatakei Kwon & Lee, 1981: 158. Eubactericera miyatakei; Li (1995: 321, 325). Bactericera miyatakei; Burckhardt & Lauterer (1997a: 116). Bactericera (Klimaszewskiella) miytakei; Kwon et al. (2016: 135), Kwon & Kwon (2020: 211). Distribution in Korea. GB, JB (Kwon & Lee 1981, as B. (Smirnovia) miyatakei; Kwon 1983, as B. (S.) miyatakei; Park 1996, as Eubactericera miyatakei; Paek et al. 2010, as E. miyatakei; Kwon et al. 2016, as B. (Klimaszewskiella) miyatakei; Kwon & Kwon 2020, as B. (K.) miyatakei). Host plant. Salix L. (Salicaceae) (Kwon & Lee 1981).Published as part of Cho, Geonho, Burckhardt, Daniel & Lee, Seunghwan, 2022, Check list of jumping plant-lice (Hemiptera: Psylloidea) of the Korean Peninsula, pp. 1-91 in Zootaxa 5177 (1) on page 65, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5177.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/702193

    Tae Kwon Do demostration

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    L to R: Anthony Anderson; Marvin Neal; Edward Fox; and Sanjay Patel demonstrating Tae Kwon Do

    Tae Kwon Do demostration

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    L to R: Anthony Anderson; Marvin Neal; Edward Fox; and Sanjay Patel demonstrating Tae Kwon Do

    Tae Kwon Do demostration

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    L to R: Anthony Anderson; Marvin Neal; Edward Fox; and Sanjay Patel demonstrating Tae Kwon Do

    Limassolla koreana Hossain & Kwon & Suh & Kwon 2019, sp. nov.

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    <i>Limassolla koreana</i> sp. nov. <p>(Figs. 12 ‾23, 47‾50)</p> <p> <b>Description.</b> Body slender, general coloration milky white to yellowish white, mottled with conspicuous orange to yellowish orange patches on crown, pronotum, scutellum and forewing. Crown subtriangularly produced anterad, with two yellowish white stripes on anterior margin, and prominent stripe along midline. Face shiny, pale yellow to whitish, without any spot or streak; rostrum orange, with dark brown apex. Pronotum and scutellum with irregular whitish stripes; scutellum with dark brown spot near apex, with big triangular white stripe, two distinct whitish longitudinal patches at posterior corners. Forewing subhyaline, with orange to yellowish orange patterns, and several black to dark brown spots on costal margin. Hindwing subhyaline. Venter and legs concolorous, whitish. Second sternal apodeme with posterior lobes large, parallel sided, ovoid at apex, reaching to hind margin of 5th sternite.</p> <p> <b>Male genitalia.</b> Pygofer with apical margin dorso-caudad; dorsal margin slightly concave; ventral margin armed with long slender process, arising from caudoventral side, directed dorsally, gently tapered apically. Subgenital plate short and broad, with small apical part, with 2 macrosetae subbasally. Aedeagal shaft almost straight, narrowing terminally, armed with 3 apical slender processes, comprising terminal one directing apically, and two subterminal ones directing basally; gonopore subapical on ventral surface. Style long, slightly curved, with several microsetae medially; apex with sharp angled edge subapically. Connective Y-shaped, with small central lobe.</p> <p> <b>Body length.</b> Male 2.8‾ 3.1mm, female 3.0‾ 3.3mm.</p> <p> <b>Type material.</b> Holotype male, Korea: Chungbuk Province, Jincheon, on <i>Diospyros kaki</i>, 14.VIII.2008, Y.J. Kwon; Paratypes, 8 males & 14 females, same data as holotype; Gyeonggi Province: 2 males, Camp Humphreys, 23. VI.2016, H.C. Kim; Jeonnam Province: 9 males & 6 females, Illimsan, on <i>Diospyros kaki</i>, 23.VIII.2018, Y.J. Kwon.</p> <p> <b>Distribution.</b> Korea (South, Central).</p> <p> <b>Host plant.</b> <i>Diospyros kaki</i> (Persimmon).</p> <p> <b>Remarks.</b> This species is similar to <i>L. kakii</i> Chou et Ma, 1981, but differs in having the aedeagus shaft with 3 apical processes. The new species is the second one known to dwell on persimmon trees in Asia, and it is considered as an occasional pest with sporadic occurrence in Korea so far.</p>Published as part of <i>Hossain, Md. Shamim, Kwon, Jin Hyung, Suh, Sang Jae & Kwon, Yong Jung, 2019, Taxonomic revision of the microleafhopper genus Limassolla Dlabola from Korea (Hemiptrea: Cicadellidae: Typhlocybinae), pp. 549-558 in Zootaxa 4603 (3)</i> on page 552, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4603.3.7, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/2702383">http://zenodo.org/record/2702383</a&gt

    Lucasioides Kwon 1993

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    Lucasioides Kwon, 1993 Protracheoniscus (Lucasioides) Arcangeli, 1952: 298, nomen nudum. Lucasioides Vandel, 1969: 159, nomen nudum. Lucasioides Kwon, 1993: 142. Type species: Porcellio (Lucasius) gigliotosi Arcangeli, 1927. Diagnosis (from Kwon 1993). Flat body granulated dorsally, gland pores absent. Cephalon with frontal line separated by groove, bearing well-developed median and lateral lobes. Epimeron of pereonite 1 bent outwards. Noduli laterales on pereonites 2̄4 farther from lateral margin than ones on pereonites 1 and 5̄7. Male pereopods 1̄4 merus and carpus with brush of long setae on sternal margins. Pleopodal exopods 1̄5 with Protracheoniscus - type pseudotrachea. Remarks. Lucasioides is close to Protracheoniscus Verhoeff, 1917 and Mongoloniscus Verhoeff, 1930. It can be distinguished from Protracheoniscus by the granulated dorsum and triangular median lobe of cephalon; in Protracheoniscus, the dorsal surface of body is smooth, and the median lobe of cephalon is less-developed. It differs from Mongoloniscus by the noduli laterales on pereonites 2̄4 farther from lateral margin than ones on pereonites 1 and 5¯7, and the epimeron of pereonite 1 bent outwards; in Mongoloniscus, the noduli laterales generally at the same distance from lateral margin, and the evenly convex pereonite 1 is not bent outwards. Distribution. China, Japan and Korea. L. longicaudatus Yunnan, Tengchong, Gaoligongshan (Nunomura & Xie 2000) 98.7000 27.1167 Administrative divisions given in bold and geographical coordinates in decimal system.Published as part of Li, Weichun, 2017, A new species of Lucasioides Kwon (Isopoda: Oniscidea: Agnaridae) from China, pp. 495-500 in Zootaxa 4216 (5) on pages 495-496, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.24237

    Professor Nam-Kyu Park and Dr Sunju Kwon, 1994

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    Professor Park and Dr Kwon visited Swinburne and met with staff across both the Higher Education and TAFE Divisions. Dr Seo acted as interpreter. L - R: Dr Sunju Kwon, Chang-Won University (Korea); Professor Les Kilmartin, Pro Vice-Chancellor (Academic) International Office; Dr Seo, Swinburne; Professor Iain Wallace, Vice Chancellor. Swinburne Staff News 23 June 1994
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