308,295 research outputs found

    L'emploi des mathematiques en economie politique / par Jacques Moret

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    L'emploi des mathematiques en economie politique / par Jacques Moret Paris : M. Giard & E. Briere, 1915 271 p. : ill. ; 23 cm

    Dyscolus sulcipedis Moret 2020, sp. nov.

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    Dyscolus sulcipedis Moret sp. nov. urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: 611661EF-D8A2-4E28-8622-349EC9F6C992 Figs 20, 23 Etymology Compound Latin adjective meaning ‘with sulcate feet’ (i.e., tarsi). Type material Holotype ECUADOR • ♂; Loja Province, Parque Nacional Yacuri, Waypoint 167; 4.711861º S, 79.440355º W; 3240 m a.s.l.; 4 Aug. 2016; P. Moret, S. Aguirre and E. Moreno leg.; QCAZ. Paratypes (2 ♂♂, 2 ♀♀) ECUADOR • 1 ♂; same collection data as for holotype; MNHN • 2 ♀♀; same collection data as for holotype; CPM • 1 ♂; same collection data as for holotype; COI voucher PM167-09, BOLD sequence SUM061-18; CPM. Diagnostic description Habitus: Fig.20.Wingless.Body length: 10.6–11.5mm.Body colour variable,from brunneous to brownish black; femora and tibiae brownish; tarsi, antennae and mouthparts reddish brown. Elytral microsculpture transverse, weakly impressed. Head moderately broad, constricted basally, eyes moderately bulging, genae flat. Pronotum subcordiform, transverse, sides arcuate anterad, markedly sinuate posterad; hind angles slightly obtuse or almost right angled; two pairs of lateral setae. Elytra elongate-ovoid, slightly convex; striae entire, well impressed; intervals variable, flat to slightly convex in basal half, convex at apex. Third elytral interval with three setae. Last visible abdominal ventrite with two pairs (♂) or four pairs (♀) of setae along its apical margin. Legs: tarsi smooth dorsally, metatarsomeres 1–3 bisulcate, fourth metatarsomere with one pair of dorsolateral subapical setae, apical lobes moderately long, the external lobe 1.5 times longer than the inner lobe; fifth metatarsomere convex dorsally, asetose ventrally. Male genitalia: Fig. 23. Median lobe weakly arcuate, apex short, acute, endophallus without sclerotized structure. Female genitalia: unstudied. Comparisons Dyscolus sulcipedis Moret sp. nov. belongs to the marini clade along with D. marini Moret sp. nov., D. ruizi Moret sp. nov., D. arborarius Moret sp. nov., D. moretianus and D. rugitarsis Moret sp. nov. Based on external morphology (not on molecular data), its closest relative is D. rugitarsis Moret sp. nov., from which it differs mainly in the following characters: elytral microsculpture transverse, weakly impressed (coarser and mostly isodiametric in D. rugitarsis Moret sp. nov.); head slightly narrower; latero-posterior sinuation of the pronotum deeper; last visible abdominal ventrite with two pairs (♂) or four pairs (♀) of apical setae (one and two pairs in D. rugitarsis Moret sp. nov.); tarsi not rugose; fifth metatarsomere plesiomorphic, not broadened and dorsally depressed. Habitat Upper montane forest, at around 3240 m a.s.l. Active at the beginning of the night on the surface of the leaf litter and on tree trunks 2 m above ground. Geographic distribution Only known from the type locality in Southern Ecuador, in Parque Nacional Yacuri. Probably microendemic.Published as part of Moret, Pierre & Murienne, Jérôme, 2020, Integrative taxonomy of the genus Dyscolus (Coleoptera, Carabidae, Platynini) in Ecuadorian Andes, pp. 1-55 in European Journal of Taxonomy 646 on pages 26-27, DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2020.646, http://zenodo.org/record/382968

    Dyscolus arauzae Moret 2020, sp. nov.

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    <i>Dyscolus arauzae</i> Moret sp. nov. <p>urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: B992F8BA-69F8-4591-A010-440432759483</p> <p>Figs 36, 39</p> Etymology <p>Noun in the genitive case, dedicated to María de los Ángeles Aráuz who took part in the discovery of this species.</p> Type material <p> <b>Holotype</b></p> <p>ECUADOR • ♂; Pichincha Province, Volcán Cayambe SW, Waypoint 73; 0.006962º N, 78.020278º W; 4405 m a.s.l.; 30 Oct. 2015; P. Moret and M. Aráuz leg.; QCAZ.</p> <p> <b>Paratypes</b> (6 ♂♂, 6 ♀♀)</p> <p> ECUADOR – <b>Pichincha Province</b> • 1 ♂; same collection data as for holotype; MNHN • 1 ♂, 1 ♀; same collection data as for holotype; CPM • 1 ♀; same collection data as for holotype; COI voucher PM073-03, BOLD sequence SUM020-18; CPM • 1 ♂; Volcán Cayambe SW, Waypoint 77; 0.007724º N, 78.023350º W; 4300 m a.s.l.; 30 Oct. 2015; P. Moret and M. Aráuz leg.; COI voucher PM077-01, BOLD sequence SUM099-18; CPM • 3 ♂♂, 2 ♀♀; Volcán Cayambe SW, Waypoint 267; 0°00.415′ N, 78°1.338′ W; 4294 m a.s.l.; 4 Mar. 2017; P. Moret and M. Gobbi leg.; CPM • 1 ♀ (in ethanol); Volcán Cayambe SW, Waypoint 76; 0.006860º N, 78.020714º W; 4390 m a.s.l.; 18 Jul. 2016; P. Moret and E. Moreno leg.; CPM • 1 ♀ (in ethanol); same collection data as for preceding; 4 Mar. 2017; P. Moret and M. Gobbi leg.; CPM.</p> Diagnostic description <p> Habitus: Fig. 36. Wingless. Body length: 8.5–10.9 mm. Antennae unicoloured, testaceous, as in <i>D. hirsutus</i> (apical part of the antennomeres darker in <i>D. piscator</i> Moret sp. nov. and <i>D. placitus</i> Moret sp. nov.). Colour of the ventral face variable. Dimensions of the head intermediate between <i>D. piscator</i> Moret sp. nov. and <i>D. placitus</i> Moret sp. nov. (length of the right mandible / width of the frons between the anterior setae = 1.05). Apex of the labrum straight. Lateroposterior seta of the pronotum close to the hind angle (slightly shifted forward in <i>D. piscator</i> Moret sp. nov. and <i>D. placitus</i> Moret sp. nov.). Third elytral interval with 4–7 setae, fifth interval with 2–4 setae, seventh interval normally without setae, only one paratype with one seta; 15–17 umbilicate setae along the lateral margin (11–13 in <i>D. piscator</i> Moret sp. nov., 17–20 in <i>D. placitus</i> Moret sp. nov.). <i>Male genitalia</i>: Fig. 39. Apex of the median lobe bent downwards, resembling that of <i>D. placitus</i> Moret sp. nov.; apical part of the endophallus covered with sclerotized squamae (unarmed in <i>D. piscator</i> Moret sp. nov. and <i>D. placitus</i> Moret sp. nov.).</p> Habitat <p>Riparian along glacier-fed streams in the humid superpáramo at 4300–4400 m a.s.l.</p> Geographic distribution <p>Microendemic species, presumably restricted to the Cayambe mountain.</p>Published as part of <i>Moret, Pierre & Murienne, Jérôme, 2020, Integrative taxonomy of the genus Dyscolus (Coleoptera, Carabidae, Platynini) in Ecuadorian Andes, pp. 1-55 in European Journal of Taxonomy 646</i> on pages 38-40, DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2020.646, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/3829682">http://zenodo.org/record/3829682</a&gt

    Dyscolus verecundior Moret 2020, sp. nov.

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    Dyscolus verecundior Moret sp. nov. urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: DAB1A22E-25D1-438C-AE2E-25542AF7E50F Figs 54, 58 Dyscolus verecundus Moret, 1998: 20, pro parte. Dyscolus (Dyscolus) verecundus – Moret 2005: 142, pro parte. Etymology Comparative form of the Latin adjective ‘ verecundus ’, which is the name of a closely related species. Type material Holotype ECUADOR • ♂; Pichincha Province, Volcán Illiniza, ENE slope, Waypoint 136; 0.644404º S, 78.703469º W; 4335 m a.s.l.; 15 Jul. 2016; P. Moret and A. Barragán leg.; COI voucher in ethanol PM136-04, BOLD sequence SUM062-18; MNHN. Paratypes (2 ♂♂) ECUADOR – Pichincha Province • 1 ♂ (red printed label: “ Dyscolus verecundus Moret, 1998, Paratype”); Volcán Illiniza, NE slope; 4080 m a.s.l.; 7 Aug. 1985; P. Moret leg.; Polylepis forest; CPM • 1 ♂ (red printed label: “ Dyscolus verecundus Moret, 1998, Paratype”); E slope of Volcán Corazón; 4450 m a.s.l.; 24 Jan. 1986; P. Moret leg.; CPM. Diagnostic description Habitus: Fig. 54. Wingless. Body length: 10.8–11.0 mm. Body colour variable, from reddish brown to piceous black, the vertex and the sutural zone of the elytra reddish; legs, antennae and mouthparts reddish. Elytral microsculpture isodiametric, distinctly impressed. Head robust, convex, neck strongly constricted, eyes moderately bulging, genae almost flat in dorsal view; antennae short. Pronotum transverse, subquadrate; sides moderately arcuate distally, weakly sinuate in basal third; hind angles variable, obtuse or almost quadrate, but always blunt; two pairs of lateral setae. Elytra subparallel, disc almost depressed; humeri rounded but not effaced, subapical sinuation obsolete; striae thin, shallowly impressed; intervals flat; third elytral interval with 3–5 discal setae. Fourth metatarsomere triangular, with one pair of lateroapical setae and without subapical dorsolateral setae; apical lobes very short, the inner one not extending beyond the insertion point of the lateroapical seta; fifth metatarsomere asetose ventrally. Last visible abdominal ventrite of the male with one pair of setae along its apical margin (♂). Male genitalia: Fig. 58. Median lobe weakly arcuate; apical blade bluntly triangular in dorsal view; endophallus with two sclerotized squamose areas, ovoid in shape, median and subapical. Female genitalia: unknown. Comparisons This species closely resembles D. verecundus, now restricted to Mt Pichincha, its type locality. Dyscolus verecundior Moret sp. nov. differs from D. verecundus in a few external and genital characters: genae almost flat (convex in D. verecundus); antennae slightly thicker, the second antennomere of the male 1.41 to 1.49 times as long as wide (1.50 to 1.65 times in D. verecundus); fourth metatarsomere thinner, 1.16 to 1.20 times as long as wide (1.07 to 1.13 times in D. verecundus); apical blade of the median lobe thinner in lateral view (compare Figs 56–57 and 58); sclerotized areas of the endophallus bigger. Habitat Lower superpáramo from 4080 to 4450 m a.s.l. Geographic distribution Microendemic species, restricted to the Illiniza and Corazón volcanoes in the Western Cordillera.Published as part of Moret, Pierre & Murienne, Jérôme, 2020, Integrative taxonomy of the genus Dyscolus (Coleoptera, Carabidae, Platynini) in Ecuadorian Andes, pp. 1-55 in European Journal of Taxonomy 646 on pages 47-48, DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2020.646, http://zenodo.org/record/382968

    Título: Un menestral en Santiago a comienzos del siglo XIX

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    Moret trabaja en La Coruña ca. 1925-1958Datos del impresor: Moret traballa en A Coruña ca. 1925-195

    Fuentes para la historia del Monasterio de San Martín Pinario de Santiago, durante los siglos XV y XVI. I, Reconstrucción del libro becerro de Francisco Grolo

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    Moret trabaja en La Coruña ca. 1925-1958Datos del impresor: Moret traballa en A Coruña ca. 1925-195

    Chlo-e (Song of the Swamp) / music by Neil Moret; words by Gus Khan

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    Cover: drawing of a swamp; photo inset of Ethel Waters; Publisher: Villa Moret (San Francisco)https://egrove.olemiss.edu/sharris_d/1080/thumbnail.jp

    Dyscolus rugitarsis Moret 2020, sp. nov.

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    <i>Dyscolus rugitarsis</i> Moret sp. nov. <p>urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: 924335EA-EF3D-4630-8607-DE9A9749EEFA</p> <p>Figs 19, 22</p> Etymology <p>Compound Latin adjective meaning ‘with rugose tarsi’.</p> Type material <p> <b>Holotype</b></p> <p>ECUADOR • ♂; Loja Province, Parque Nacional Yacuri, Waypoint 167; 4.711861º S, 79.440355º W; 3240 m a.s.l.; 4 Aug. 2016; P. Moret, S. Aguirre and E. Moreno leg.; QCAZ.</p> <p> <b>Paratypes</b> (9 ♂♂, 5 ♀♀)</p> <p> ECUADOR – <b>Loja Province</b> • 1 ♀; same collection data as for holotype; CPM • 1 ♂; same collection data as for holotype; COI voucher PM167-05, BOLD sequence SUM060-18; CPM • 4 ♂♂, 3 ♀♀; Cordillera Lagunillas, Waypoint 3; 4.71198º S, 79.44045º W; 3240 m a.s.l.; 11 Aug. 2013; P. Moret leg.; CPM • 1 ♂; same collection data as for preceding; MNHN • 2 ♂♂, 1 ♀; same collection data as for preceding; QCAZ • 1 ♂; Cordillera Lagunillas, Vía Jimbura–Zumba; 3200 m a.s.l.; 15 Jul. 2001; P. Moret leg.; CPM.</p> Diagnostic description <p>Habitus: Fig. 19. Wingless. Body length: 10.1–11.0 mm. Body colour variable, from brunneous to brownish black; femora brownish; rest of the legs, antennae and mouthparts reddish brown. Elytral microsculpture variable, mostly isodiametric in the middle part of the intervals, oblong near the striae. Head broad, weakly constricted basally, eyes moderately bulging, genae flat. Pronotum transverse, sides slightly arcuate anterad, weakly sinuate posterad; hind angles obtuse; two pairs of lateral setae. Elytra ovoid, slightly convex; striae entire, well impressed, relatively broad; intervals variable, flat to slightly</p> <p> convex. Third elytral interval with 2–3 setae (two specimens lack the anterior seta on one elytron only). Last visible abdominal ventrite with one pair (♂) or two pairs (♀) of setae along its apical margin. Legs: tarsi rugose dorsally, metatarsomeres 1–4 bisulcate, fourth metatarsomere with one pair of dorsolateral subapical setae, apical lobes moderately long, the external lobe two times longer than the inner lobe; fifth metatarsomere broadened and dorsally depressed in basal half, ventrally asetose. <i>Male genitalia</i>: Fig. 22. Median lobe arcuate, apex relatively large, very thin in lateral view, endophallus with one subapical sclerotized structure. <i>Female genitalia</i>: unstudied.</p> Comparisons <p> <i>Dyscolus rugitarsis</i> Moret sp. nov. is closely related, within the <i>D. marini</i> Moret sp. nov. clade, to <i>D. moretianus</i> which inhabits the western part of the Loja Province in the Parque Podocarpus, 70 km northwest from the type locality of this new species. <i>Dyscolus rugitarsis</i> Moret sp. nov. differs from the latter by the blunter hind angles of the pronotum, the presence of at least one seta in the basal half of the third elytral interval (third interval asetose in <i>D. moretianus</i>), slightly longer antennae and tarsi, and a markedly longer external lobe at the apex of the fourth metatarsomere. For comparison with <i>D. sulcipedis</i> Moret sp. nov., see below (p. 27).</p> Habitat <p>Upper montane forest, at around 3200–3250 m a.s.l. Active at the beginning of the night on the surface of the leaf litter.</p> Geographic distribution <p>Only known from the type locality in Southern Ecuador, in Parque Nacional Yacuri. Probably microendemic.</p>Published as part of <i>Moret, Pierre & Murienne, Jérôme, 2020, Integrative taxonomy of the genus Dyscolus (Coleoptera, Carabidae, Platynini) in Ecuadorian Andes, pp. 1-55 in European Journal of Taxonomy 646</i> on pages 24-26, DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2020.646, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/3829682">http://zenodo.org/record/3829682</a&gt

    Dyscolus gobbii Moret 2020, sp. nov.

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    <i>Dyscolus gobbii</i> Moret sp. nov. <p>urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: 787DC50E-8874-4E7F-BCAD-FE33230508A1</p> <p>Fig. 42</p> Etymology <p>Noun in the genitive case, dedicated to Mauro Gobbi, specialist of the ecology of glacier-foreland invertebrates, who took part in the discovery of this species.</p> Type material <p> <b>Holotype</b></p> <p>ECUADOR • ♀; Pichincha Province, Guamaní, Paso de la Virgen, Waypoint 210; 0°19′18.3″ S, 78°11′54.8″ W; 4230 m a.s.l.; 27 Feb. 2017; P. Moret and M. Gobbi leg.; COI voucher PM210-16, BOLD sequence SUM228-18; QCAZ.</p> <p> <b>Paratype</b></p> <p>ECUADOR • 1 ♀; Pichincha Province, Volcán Antisana NW, B1C3; 0.457780º S, 78.167970º W; 4401 m a.s.l.; 22 Apr. 2016; E. Moreno leg.; COI voucher in ethanol PM188-01, BOLD sequence SUM183-18; CPM.</p> Diagnostic description <p> Habitus: Fig. 42. Wingless. Body length: 10.2 mm (holotype) to 12.3 mm (paratype). Body piceous black, legs brownish with reddish-brown femora. Elytral microsculpture made of oblong sculpticells, shallowly impressed. Head big, convex dorsally; mandibles long and sharp, as long as the length of the head from base to apex of the labium; eyes moderately bulging, genae oblique, slightly convex in dorsal view. Pronotum transverse, subquadrate, narrower at base than at apex; lateroapical lobes broadly rounded; hind angles obtusely rounded; two pairs of lateral setae. Elytra oval-shaped, convex, with effaced humeri. Striae weakly impressed, with traces of punctuation; intervals 1–4 slightly convex, 5–8 flat; third interval with five or six discal setae. Last visible abdominal ventrite of the female with two pairs of setae along its apical margin. Legs slender but short; fourth metatarsomere with convex sides, without subapical dorsolateral setae (holotype) or with weak and short subapical dorsolateral setae (paratype), apical lobes ovoid, the outer lobe slightly longer than the inner lobe. Male genitalia: unknown. <i>Female genitalia</i>: unstudied.</p> Comparisons <p> This isolated species remotely resembles <i>Dyscolus segnipes</i> Moret, 1990, with which it coexists in the Guamaní páramo. <i>Dyscolus segnipes</i> has much shorter mandibles and well developed subapical dorsolateral setae on the fourth metatarsomere. The COI tree places <i>gobbii</i> and <i>segnipes</i> in two clades far apart from each other.</p> Habitat <p>Humid superpáramo, from 4200 to 4400 m a.s.l. The Guamaní specimen was collected under a stone on the shore of a small lake; the Antisana specimen was collected by pitfall trapping in a mesic environment, 20 metres from a glacier-fed stream.</p> Geographic distribution <p>Microendemic species, restricted to the Antisana and Guamaní areas in the Eastern Cordillera.</p>Published as part of <i>Moret, Pierre & Murienne, Jérôme, 2020, Integrative taxonomy of the genus Dyscolus (Coleoptera, Carabidae, Platynini) in Ecuadorian Andes, pp. 1-55 in European Journal of Taxonomy 646</i> on pages 40-42, DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2020.646, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/3829682">http://zenodo.org/record/3829682</a&gt
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