2 research outputs found
UvA-DARE (Digital Academic Repository) Link to publication Citation for published version (APA): A SHORT-TERM TRIAL OF TACROLIMUS OINTMENT FOR ATOPIC DERMATITIS A BSTRACT
A short-term trial of tacrolimus ointment for atopic dermatitis Ruzicka, T.; Bieber, T.; Schopf, E.; Rubins, A.; Dobozy, A.; Bos, J.D.; Jablonska, S.; Ahmed, I.; Thestrup-Pedersen, K.; Daniel, F.; Finzi, A.; Reitamo, S
Brachymeria amenocles Walker 1846, stat. rev.
<i>Brachymeria amenocles</i> (Walker, 1846) stat. rev. <p> <i>Chalcis Amenocles</i> Walker 1846b: 84. Original deScription ♀. Sierra Leone. Lectotype by BoUček 1972: 241 bUt type locality erroneoUSly qUoted aS Hong-Kong by thiS aUthor.</p> <p> <i>Brachymeria amenocles</i> (Walker): ThompSon 1955: 195 (earlieSt knoWn USe of combination <i>vide</i> NoyeS 2016).</p> <p> <i>=</i> <i>Chalcis varipes</i> Walker 1871: 48. Original deScription ♀. SoUth Africa. <b>Syn. rev</b>.</p> <p> <i>= Brachymeria Beccarii</i> MaSi 1929: 142 <b>–</b> 144. Original deScription ♀. Kenya. <b>Syn. rev</b>.</p> <p> <b>Type material.</b> <i>Chalcis Amenocles</i>. Lectotype, a ♀ on a minutien pin, designated by Bouček (1972), this designation being validated here (Fig. 32) (BMNH, Hym. type 5.440).</p> <p> <i>Chalcis varipes</i>. Lectotype, a ♀ on a minutien pin, the designation of which by Bouček (1971) is also validated (Fig. 31) (BMNH, Hym. type 5.441).</p> <p> <i>Brachymeria Beccarii</i>. Holotype ♀, by monotypy (Fig. 39) (MCSN).</p> <p> <b>Other material. IVORY COAST.</b> Bouaké, Malaise trap in rice field, 28.i.1978, P. Cochereau leg. (1 ♀ CIRAD). <b>GUINEA</b>. Koliegbé, 01.iii.1992, J.-F. Vayssières leg. (13 ♀ CIRAD).</p> <p> <b>Diagnosis.</b> Mainly as <i>B. podagrica</i> but separated from it by its flagellum being clearly fusiform and having long erect setae (Fig. 25); the mesonotum having much sparser puncturation with numerous interspaces being broader than the points (Fig. 26); the metafemur having much sparser punctulation, basally the femur having the interspaces between the piliferous points much larger than their own diameter (Fig. 28); and the gaster being lanceolate and relatively longer, at least 2× as long as broad (Fig. 27).</p> <p> <b>Hosts and Biology.</b> In Namibia and Zimbabwe, <i>B. amenocles</i> [as <i>B. varipes</i> or <i>B. podagrica</i>] develops at the expense of <i>Sarcophaga inzi</i> Curran, 1834, infesting corpses of <i>Triaenostreptus heros</i> Porat, 1872 [quoted as <i>Spirostreptus triodus</i> (Attems, 1909)] (Diplopoda, Spirostreptidae) (Curthbertson 1932 & 1938; Kirk-Spriggs 1999). The female oviposits below the cuticle of the third instar larvae before these move within the ground for pupation. <i>Brachymery amenocles</i> may also parasitize the larvae of <i>Glossina morsitans</i> Westwood, 1851 (Glossinidae) following the same behavioural pattern (Curthbertson 1932).</p>Published as part of <i>Delvare, Gérard & Huchet, Jean-Bernard, 2017, Brachymeria mochica, a new Neotropical species of Chalcididae (Hymenoptera: Chalcidoidea) discovered on the archaeological site of Huacas de Moche, Peru with a review of related species, pp. 43-60 in Zootaxa 4290 (1)</i> on pages 56-57, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4290.1.2, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/828897">http://zenodo.org/record/828897</a>
