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Oregon Cascades forest carnivore research, final progress report, Jun 2014
Jamie E. McFadden-Hiller, Tim L. Hiller.This archived document is maintained by the State Library of Oregon as part of the Oregon Documents Depository Program. It is for informational purposes and may not be suitable for legal purposes.Includes bibliographical references (pages 9-10).Mode of access: Internet from the Oregon Government Publications Collection.Text in English
Petrolisthes aegyptiacus Werding & Hiller, 2007, n.sp.
4. Petrolisthes aegyptiacus n.sp. (Fig. 4) Material examined. Holotype: Ψ (ov) (SMNS from ZIa 3365), Egypt, Red Sea, Koseir, leg. Klunzinger, 1883. Paratypes: 1 ɗ, 1 Ψ (ov) (SMNS from ZIa 3365), same data as holotype; 6 ɗ, 4 Ψ (ov) (SMNS from ZIa 3375), Egypt, Red Sea, Koseir, leg. Klunzinger; 1 ov Ψ (SMNS from ZIa 3375), Egypt, Red Sea, Koseir, leg. Klunzinger; 1 ɗ (SMNS from ZIa 3374), Egypt, Red Sea, Koseir, leg. Klunzinger, 1884; 1 ɗ (from SMNS ZIa 3370) (one cheliped missing), Egypt, Red Sea, Koseir, leg. Klunzinger. Other material. 1 ɗ (SMF 25678) (without walking legs), Red Sea, Sudan, Sanganeb, S-Jetty, SAN 119, from living Acropora, leg. Hamza, 30 Sep. 1992; 1 ɗ (SMF 16926), Indo-Pacific. Measurements. Largest ɗ 4.2 x 3.8 mm; largest Ψ 4.3 x 4.3 mm. Diagnosis. Carapace slightly longer than broad, with a few transverse ridges on anterior region. Front trilobate. One supraocular spine, one epibranchial spine and two mesobranchial spines present. Chelipeds with transverse ridges on surface; anterior margin of carpus with four serrate-edged teeth. Manus with a conspicuous longitudinal ridge. Description. Carapace slightly longer than broad, widest on mesobranchial region. Front broad, slightly produced beyond the eyes and noticeably trilobate, median lobe produced beyond the right-angled lateral lobes. Supraorbital spine present, infraorbital angles rounded. One epibranchial spine, two additional spines on mesobranchial margin, the first one usually prominent, the second one occasionally inconspicuous. Posterior region of front with continuing transverse ridges; additional transverse ridges upon gastric region and lateral parts of metabranchial regions. A deep horizontal groove limits frontal and gastric regions. First movable segment of antenna with a narrow, anteriorly-directed tooth. Chelipeds slender, merus armed with 1 or 2 forwardly-directed spines on anterior margin, an additional one on dorsal surface; the inner edge produced into a spine-tipped tooth; ventral side with 2 or 3 marginal spines. Carpus with 4, spine-tipped, serrated teeth on anterior margin, the foremost distal edge forming an additional blunt tooth. Posterior margin with a row of scale-like granules, the distal ones produced forming a row of 4 or 5 spines (seldom 3 or 6), the posterodistal spine bifid. Dorsal surface of carpus with a longitudinal ridge, formed by a row of oblique, scale-like elevations. Manus subequal, outer margin serrated, with 4–7 curved spines, and with a fringe of feathered setae reaching the base of pollex. Dorsal surface of manus densely covered with minute scale-like granules and scattered cone-tipped granules, and a longitudinal ridge of scales, similar to that of carpus, extending to the dactylus. Gape of fingers without setation. Walking legs slender, covered with irregular transverse ridges; merus with scattered feathered setae, and with spines on anterior margin, distributed as follows: L 1 3–5, L 2 3 or 4, L 3 2 or 3. Merus of L 1 and L 2 with posterodistal spine; carpus with scattered long setae, dorsodistal edge produced into a spine in L 1. Propodus with similar setation, ventrally with a triplet of movable distal spinules, L 1 with 2 and L 2 and L 3 with 1 additional spine. Dactylus with 4 movable spines on inner margin. Remarks. Petrolisthes aegyptiacus is closely related to the West-Pacific P. heterochrous Kropp. Characters shared by the two species include the form of the body, particularly the trilobate front, the sculpturing of the carapace’s surface consisting of transverse ridges, and the presence of spines on the supraorbital, epibranchial, and mesobranchial regions. The cheliped’s spination and sculpturing, and the walking legs’ spination are, to a great extent, identical in the two species. In general, P. aegyptiacus has fewer spines on the extremities than P. heterochrous. The two species are clearly distinguishable by the presence of only one epibranchial spine in P. aegyptiacus versus two in P. heterochrous. An additional distinguishing feature seems to be the spination of the propodi of the walking legs. The propodus in P. aegyptiacus bears two spines on L 1, and one on L 2 and L 3 in addition to the three terminal spines, whereas the compared paratypes of P. h e t e ro c h ro u s show two such spines on L 1 and on L 2, and L 3 is only armed with one additional spine. Altogether, the body form of P. aegyptiacus appears more compact than that of P. heterochrous, because of a narrower front and more slender walking legs. Other closely related species are P. militaris (Heller) and P. scabriculus (Dana), distinguished from the new species by a triangular front lacking laterally produced lobes, and two epibranchial spines. The character combination consisting of one epibranchial spine and further additional mesobranchial spines is not found in the genus in any other Indo-West Pacific species, but is observed in P. amoenus (Guérin) from the western Atlantic, as well as in P. sanfelipensis Glassell from the eastern Pacific. These species are not closely related to each other (see Hiller et al. 2006) or to the new species. It is remarkable that P. aegyptiacus, which is well represented in the material of the Stuttgart museum, was not found in other collections. Previously, only one additional specimen of unknown origin was found in the collections of the Senckenberg Museum. Another specimen was found in a living Acropora colony on the coasts of Sudan as part of a study on fauna associated with corals (see above, leg. Hamza). The material collected by Klunzinger has no specific collection data. Distribution. The species was found only in the northern and central Red Sea, what suggests that it is endemic to this region. Nevertheless, the specimen found in the collection of the Senckenberg Museum (SMF 16926) had the locality specification “Indo-West Pacific”. Etymology. The name of the species is derived from Egypt, the country where the type locality of P. aegyptiacus is situated.Published as part of Werding, Bernd & Hiller, Alexandra, 2007, The Porcellanidae (Crustacea: Decapoda: Anomura) of the Red Sea with description of a new species of Petrolisthes, pp. 1-24 in Zootaxa 1460 on pages 5-7, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.17638
Petrolisthes sanmartini Werding & Hiller 2002
Petrolisthes sanmartini Werding & Hiller, 2002 Petrolisthes sanmartini Werding & Hiller 2002: 849, figs. 1–3; Rodríguez et al. 2005: 566; (?) Poupin 2018: 151. Material examined. None. Previous records from Panama. Rodríguez et al. (2005). Distribution. West Atlantic: Belize, E Lesser Antilles (Saint Martin, but see below), Panama (Bocas del Toro) and Colombia (Werding & Hiller 2002; Rodríguez et al. 2005; Poupin 2018). Ecology. Shallow subtidal, known depth range: 2–3 m, probably deeper; seems to prefer deeper and more exposed parts of reef formations, compared to other species of the P. galathinus complex; typically in interstices of dead Porites corals (Werding & Hiller, 2002; Poupin 2018). Remarks. Petrolisthes sanmartini can be distinguished from all other currently described species of the P. galathinus complex by its relatively more slender extremities and the presence of five movable spines on the P2–P4 dactyli. Poupin’s (2008) record of P. sanmartini from Saint Martin, French Antilles (not to be confused with Isla San Martín, Colombia, the type locality), needs confirmation as the author stated: “there are four spines on P3 dactyl for this species; determination is from Hiller/Werding”. Werding & Hiller (2002) described the colouration of P. sanmartini as striped all over the carapace, with P1 having narrow and partly interrupted darker lines, alternating with fine whitish lines, and P2–P4 having irregular brown and olive patches on the ischia and meri, and whitish with narrow darker longitudinal stripes on the carpi, propodi and dactyli. The species appears to be uncommon in Panama, presently known only from Bocas del Toro area.Published as part of Ferreira, Luciane Augusto De Azevedo & Anker, Arthur, 2021, An annotated and illustrated checklist of the porcelain crabs of Panama (Decapoda: Anomura), pp. 1-154 in Zootaxa 5045 (1) on page 118, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5045.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/553217
Hiller Wright Bibliography
Working bibliography of assessment publications and presentations by UW Libraries author
Susan Hiller
FAMU Department of Photography Final masters thesis reflecting life and work of photographer and famous artist Susan Hiller (*1940), american-british author, in context of her experiences and life period. This work includes main works, an interview with author's close friend and colleague Simon Read. As well with an analysis of Hiller's last project "Gedanken sind frei" (Thoughts are free) presented in dOCUMENTA(13) in Kassel, Germany. To this Master thesis is attached audiovisual documentation of Susan Hiller's conceptual project from Kassel which was made directly for purposes of this text
F. Hiller von Gaertringen et H. Lattermann, Arkadische Forschungen (extrait des Abhandlungen der Königl. preuss. Akademie der Wissenschaften de 1911)
L. G. F. Hiller von Gaertringen et H. Lattermann, Arkadische Forschungen (extrait des Abhandlungen der Königl. preuss. Akademie der Wissenschaften de 1911). In: Revue des Études Anciennes. Tome 15, 1913, n°3. p. 341
F. Hiller von Gaertringen et H. Lattermann, Arkadische Forschungen (extrait des Abhandlungen der Königl. preuss. Akademie der Wissenschaften de 1911)
L. G. F. Hiller von Gaertringen et H. Lattermann, Arkadische Forschungen (extrait des Abhandlungen der Königl. preuss. Akademie der Wissenschaften de 1911). In: Revue des Études Anciennes. Tome 15, 1913, n°3. p. 341
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