1,729,427 research outputs found
Triatoma cavernicola Else, Cheong, Mahadevan and Zarate
Species. T. cavernicola Else, Cheong, Mahadevan and Zárate Etymology. No etymological description is given in the paper (Else, Cheong, Mahadevan & Zárate 1977).Published as part of Gonçalves, Teresa Cristina Monte, Novo, Shênia Patrícia Corrêa, Lopes, Catarina Macedo & Santos-Mallet, Jacenir Reis Dos, 2009, Etymology of Triatomine Species (Hemiptera: Reduviidae: Triatominae), pp. 1-26 in Zootaxa 2148 on page 12, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.18869
jhe64/V1.0: PSOM v1.0-c He & Mahadevan experiments
PSOM v1.0 with source code for He & Mahadevan (in prep
T. M. P. Mahadevan. Gaudapada, a study in early Advaita
Filliozat Jean. T. M. P. Mahadevan. Gaudapada, a study in early Advaita. In: Revue de l'histoire des religions, tome 142, n°2, 1952. p. 246
K. Mahadevan (ed), Fertility Policies of Asian Countries
Raulot J. Y. K. Mahadevan (ed), Fertility Policies of Asian Countries. In: Tiers-Monde, tome 30, n°119, 1989. L'Inde : libéralisation et enjeux sociaux, sous la direction de Bernadette Madeuf et Philippe Cadène. pp. 718-719
Proposals for International Support to an Intercountry Cooperative Research Programme on the Water Buffalo
Report of P. Mahadevan, a consultant commissioned by TAC to prepare proposals for an international water buffalo program. Based on an analysis of the world distribution of water buffalo and their economic importance, and an assessment of current national research on buffalo nutrition, reproduction, breeding, health problems and production systems, the author identifies priority areas for research. Consideration of a number of institutional and organizational alternatives leads to the recommendation for an international network of cooperating national institutions for buffalo research. Agenda document presented at the seventeenth meeting of TAC, September 1977
Not Available
Not AvailableIN a recent communication (Mahadevan 1959) attention was drawn to an interesting
association of the pearl fish Fierasfer homei (Richardson) with the wing mussel Pteria
sp., * * found in the Gulf of Mannar off Tuticorin. A re -examination of the pearl
fish showed that the position of the vent is at the base of a line just behind pectoral
origin and the origin of the dorsal is in a line above the middle of pectoral (Plate,
1, Fig. C). Further, other distinguishing characters of this fish described elsewhere
in this account justified the earlier doubts (Mahadevan op. cit.) of the likelihood
of its coming under Carapus (syn : Fierasfer) margaritiferae (Rendahl), a brief
account of which is given by de Beaufort (1951) based on specimens collected from
Pulu Punga, Pulu Missa, coast of Flores and Cape Jaubert N. W. Australia, mostly
in association with the wing mussel or sometimes with a holothurian. Smith (1955),
while reviewing the family Carapidae has mentioned the occurrence of C margaritiferae
in South African waters also where three specimens, 75 -93 mm. in length, were
' taken from inside clams at Durban.' The data on two specimens of 63.5 and 85.0
mm. examined by the present author indicate differences in some of the characteristics
as compared with the South African form described by Smith. In order to facilitate
comparison of the Indian form with others occurring elsewhere a detailed
description of the material in hand is given below.Not Availabl
The Pearl fish Carapus margaritiferae (Rendahl), a new record for the Indian waters
IN a recent communication (Mahadevan 1959) attention was drawn to an interesting
association of the pearl fish Fierasfer homei (Richardson) with the wing mussel Pteria
sp.,** found in the Gulf of Mannar off Tuticorin. A re-examination of the pearl
fish showed that the position of the vent is at the base of a line just behind pectoral
origin and the origin of the dorsal is in a line above the middle of pectoral (Plate,
1, Fig. C). Further, other distinguishing characters of this fish described elsewhere
in this account justified the earlier doubts (Mahadevan op. cit.) of the likelihood
of its coming under Carapus (syn : Fierasfer) margaritiferae (Rendahl), a brief
account of which is given by de Beaufort (1951) based on specimens collected from
Pulu Punga, Pulu Missa, coast of Flores and Cape Jaubert N. W. Australia, mostly
in association with the wing mussel or sometimes with a holothurian. Smith (1955),
while reviewing the family Carapidae has mentioned the occurrence of C margaritiferae
in South African waters also where three specimens, 75-93 mm. in length, were
' taken from inside clams at Durban.' The data on two specimens of 63.5 and 85.0
mm. examined by the present author indicate differences in some of the characteristics
as compared with the South African form described by Smith. In order to facilitate
comparison of the Indian form with others occurring elsewhere a detailed
description of the material in hand is given below
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