12,757 research outputs found
Annales
Vorlageform des Erscheinungsvermerks: Petropoli Sumtibus Editoris. Lipsiae In Commissis Apud Leopoldum Voss. MDCCCXLIV. - Rückseite der Haupttitelseite: Lipsiae, Typis Guilielmi Vogelii, Filii.In arab. Schr., arab. - Einf. in lat
Marmosops (Marmosops) creightoni Voss 2004
Marmosops (Marmosops) creightoni Voss et al., 2004 TYPE MATERIAL AND TYPE LOCALITY: CBF 6552, the holotype by original designation, consists of the fluid-preserved body and extracted skull of an adult male collected at the Saynani electrical generating station (ca. 16.12° S, 68.08° W; 2500 m) in the valley of the Río Zongo, La Paz department, Bolivia. SYNONYMS: None. DISTRIBUTION: Marmosops creightoni is known to occur only in montane forests above 2000 m on the eastern slopes of the Andes in La Paz department, Bolivia. REMARKS: Phylogenetic analyses of multilocus sequence datasets (Díaz-Nieto et al., 2016a, 2016b) suggest that Marmosops creightoni is the sister species of M. noctivagus.Published as part of Voss, Robert S., 2022, An Annotated Checklist Of Recent Opossums (Mammalia: Didelphidae), pp. 1-77 in Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 2022 (455) on page 46, DOI: 10.1206/0003-0090.455.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/716137
Marmosa (Micoureus) jansae Voss and Giarla 2021
Marmosa (Micoureus) jansae Voss and Giarla, 2021 TYPE MATERIAL AND TYPE LOCALITY: ROM 118880, the holotype by original designation, consists of the skin, skull, postcranial skeleton, and frozen tissues of an adult male collected 42 km south and 1 km east of Pompeya Sur (0.68° S, 76.47° W), Parque Nacional Yasuní, Orellana province, Ecuador. SYNONYMS: None. DISTRIBUTION: Marmosa jansae is currently known from the Amazonian lowlands of southeastern Colombia (Putumayo), eastern Ecuador (Orellana, Pastaza), and northeastern Peru (Loreto, north of the Amazon) (Voss and Giarla, 2021: fig. 2). REMARKS: Specimens of Marmosa jansae were identified by Tate (1933) as M. germana germana or as M. g. rutteri, and subsequently collected specimens have often been identified as M. regina (e.g., by Hice and Velazco, 2012). Voss and Giarla (2021) provided a morphological description, measurement data, taxonomic comparisons, and other relevant information about this species.Published as part of Voss, Robert S., 2022, An Annotated Checklist Of Recent Opossums (Mammalia: Didelphidae), pp. 1-77 in Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 2022 (455) on pages 17-18, DOI: 10.1206/0003-0090.455.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/716137
Marmosops (Sciophanes) magdalenae Diaz-Nieto and Voss 2016
<i>Marmosops</i> (<i>Sciophanes</i>) <i>magdalenae</i> Díaz-Nieto and Voss, 2016 <p>TYPE MATERIAL AND TYPE LOCALITY: ICN 19924, the holotype by original designation, consists of the skin and skull of an adult female collected at the Reserva Biológica Cachalú (6.12° N, 73.13° W; 1940 m), Santander department, Colombia.</p> <p>SYNONYMS: None.</p> <p> DISTRIBUTION: <i>Marmosops magdalenae</i> is known from lowland and montane forests (from ca. 100 to 1900 m) in the valley of the Río Magdalena and in the Cordillera Oriental (eastern Andes) of Colombia (Díaz-Nieto and Voss, 2016: fig. 28).</p> <p> REMARKS: For illustrations, description, measurement data, and morphological comparisons with closely related congeners, see Díaz-Nieto and Voss (2016), who assigned <i>Marmosops magdalenae</i> to the Bishopi Group based on phylogenetic analyses of DNA sequence data previously reported by Díaz-Nieto et al. (2016b).</p>Published as part of <i>Voss, Robert S., 2022, An Annotated Checklist Of Recent Opossums (Mammalia: Didelphidae), pp. 1-77 in Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 2022 (455)</i> on page 51, DOI: 10.1206/0003-0090.455.1.1, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/7161371">http://zenodo.org/record/7161371</a>
Marmosops (Sciophanes) chucha Diaz-Nieto and Voss 2016
<i>Marmosops</i> (<i>Sciophanes</i>) <i>chucha</i> Díaz-Nieto and Voss, 2016 <p>TYPE MATERIAL AND TYPE LOCALITY: CTUA 434, the holotype by original designation, consists of the skin, skull, fluid-preserved carcass, and frozen tissues of an adult female collected at Hacienda Vegas de La Clara (6.58° N, 75.20° W; 1120 m), Antioquia department, Colombia.</p> <p>SYNONYMS: None.</p>Published as part of <i>Voss, Robert S., 2022, An Annotated Checklist Of Recent Opossums (Mammalia: Didelphidae), pp. 1-77 in Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 2022 (455)</i> on page 49, DOI: 10.1206/0003-0090.455.1.1, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/7161371">http://zenodo.org/record/7161371</a>
Synorchestes grisescens Voss
Synorchestes grisescens Voss (Figs. 5 –8, 19–20, 25– 26) Synorchestes grisescens Voss, 1958: 103 (habitus illustration; China); Morimoto & Miyakawa, 1996: 76 (habitus photo and figures of ventral body, head and rostrum, hind leg and its femoral apodeme, antenna of male; Taiwan); Kojima & Morimoto, 1996: 116 (figures of male tergite, metendosternite, spermatheca and spiculum ventrale). Description See Voss (1958) and Morimoto & Miyalawa (1996) for description except genitalia (Figs. 5 –8, 9–12, 19–20, 25– 26): aedeagus with short setae on anterior margin (as in S. indicus); spiculum gastrale longer than aedeagal body; bladal part of female sternite 8 longer than apodeme; spermatheca with ramus not developed. This species is very similar to S. indicus except for the characters provided in the key. Specimens examined. 1 male, Holotype (preserved in the Zoologisches Forschungsmuseum Alexander Koenig, Bonn); 1 female, Shi Nan Shanm near Liu Kui, S-Taiwan, 29.IV. 1986, K. Baba (ELKU); 1 male, Shan Piug (1000 m), nea Liu Kui, S-Taiwan, 29.IV. 1986, K. Baba (ELKU); 1 female, near Liukuei, Kaosiung Hs., Taiwan, 5–9.iv. 1995, H. Kojima (ELKU). Distribution. China (Fukien), Taiwan.Published as part of Ayri, Shaloo, Kojima, Hiroaki & Y, R A M A M U Rt H, 2012, Flea weevils of the genus Synorchestes Voss (Coleoptera, Curculionidae, Curculioninae, Rhamphini), with description of a second species from India, pp. 74-80 in Zootaxa 3568 on page 80, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.21381
Nancy Voss
Nancy Voss of Wichita Falls, forgot about her cancer, as she receives a big slice of birthday cake from her mother, Mrs. H. M. Voss, at a party in her honor. Published in Fort Worth Star-Telegram evening edition July 19, 1951.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_startelegram1950s/13723/thumbnail.jp
M. H. van Voss. Ägypten. Die 21. Dynastie
Leclant Jean. M. H. van Voss. Ägypten. Die 21. Dynastie. In: Revue de l'histoire des religions, tome 201, n°2, 1984. pp. 198-199
Veronika Voss: luci e ombre di una diva
Scheda del film "Veronika Voss" ("Die Sehnsucht der Veronika Voss", Rainer Werner Fassbinder, 1982)
Synorchestes Voss
Genus Synorchestes Voss Synorchestes Voss, 1958: 103 (type species: Synorchestes grisescens Voss, 1958; China: Fukien; Anthonominae: Rhynchaenini); Morimoto & Miyakawa, 1996: 75 (Rhamphini); Kojima & Morimoto, 1996: 110 (key), 115; Alonso- Zarazaga & Lyal, 1999: 82 (Curculioninae: Rhamphini: Rhamphina). The diagnosis of this genus given by Morimoto & Miyakawa (1996) holds for the new species except that the following features should be modified to include the second species: Rostrum shorter than (male) or nearly as long as (female) pronotum, antennae with scape and basal four segments of funicle flattened dorso-ventrally, apical segment of club longer in male than that in female and, mesosternal process nearly as wide as or a little narrower than middle coxa. Remarks. This genus is characterized by the following combination of features: Antennae with club loosely segmented; pygidium (female) (Fig. 28) and propygidium (male) (Fig. 29) broadly exposed; tibiae unarmed at apex, tarsal groove not ascended; hind femora weakly swollen, relatively more slender than those of other genera in this tribe; 7 th tergite with pair of files for stridulation at anterior margin (Fig. 30); bladal part of 8 th sternite bilobed in female, and spermatheca with gland close to duct. Kojima (2011) proposed that Megorchestes was probably related to Synorchestes, but the former differs in having the fore and middle tibiae armed at apex and the prosternum is deeply emarginate and depressed in front of the coxae. Distribution. China, Taiwan, India (new country record).Published as part of Ayri, Shaloo, Kojima, Hiroaki & Y, R A M A M U Rt H, 2012, Flea weevils of the genus Synorchestes Voss (Coleoptera, Curculionidae, Curculioninae, Rhamphini), with description of a second species from India, pp. 74-80 in Zootaxa 3568 on page 75, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.21381
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