175 research outputs found
Rhenefictus wandae Caleb & Sanap & Tripathi & Sampathkumar & Dharmaraj & Packiam 2022, comb. n.
Rhenefictus wandae (Wang & Li, 2021) comb. n. Rhene wandae Wang & Li, 2021: 149, figs 16A–C, 17A–D (D ♂). Rhenefictus tropicus Logunov, 2021: 1044, figs 120–126 (D ♂); holotype ♂ in MMUE, not examined; syn. n. Comments. Rhene wandae Wang & Li, 2021 was described based on the holotype male and the paratype male from Xishuangbanna, Yunnan, China. Rhenefictus tropicus Logunov, 2021 was described based on the holotype male from the Tuyen Quang Province in northern Vietnam. While comparing the illustrations of both species, it is evident that they depict the same species. The unique male palp with the long whip-like, coiled embolus lacking a terminal apophysis (cf. figs 120–126 in Logunov (2021) with figs 16A–C, 17A–D in Wang & Li (2021)) is a diagnostic characteristic of the newly erected genus Rhenefictus Logunov, 2021. Despite both descriptions being published in 2021, the paper by Wang & Li appeared in October, whereas that of Logunov in November. Therefore, the name Rhene wandae has a priority over R. tropicus Logunov, 2021, and the latter is to be considered a junior synonym of the former. Yet, the validity of the newly erected, monotypic genus Rhenefictus remains unquestioned, and thus Rhene wandae is to be transferred to this genus: Rhenefictus wandae (Wang & Li, 2021) comb. n. Finally, despite the newly established synonymy and based on Article 67.1.2 of the ICZN, Rhenefictus tropicus Logunov, 2021 remains the type species of Rhenefictus, and is now regarded as a synonym of Rhene wandae Wang & Li, 2021. Distribution. China, northern Vietnam (Wang & Li, 2021; Logunov 2021: sub Rhenefictus tropicus; WSC, 2022) (Fig. 72).Published as part of Caleb, John T. D., Sanap, Rajesh V., Tripathi, Rishikesh, Sampathkumar, M., Dharmaraj, Jayaraman & Packiam, Soosaimanickam Maria, 2022, Taxonomic notes on some South and Southeast Asian members of the genus Rhene Thorell, 1869 (Aranei, Salticidae, Dendryphantini), pp. 389-407 in Zootaxa 5125 (4) on page 403, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5125.4.3, http://zenodo.org/record/645090
Rhene pallida Caleb & Sanap & Tripathi & Sampathkumar & Dharmaraj & Packiam 2022, comb. n.
Rhene pallida (Thorell, 1895) comb. n. Figs 42–56, 72 Zeuxippus pallidus Thorell, 1895: 333 (D ♀); Prószyński, 1984: 123 (♀); Żabka, 1985: 456, figs 639–645 (♀, D ♂). Rhene argentata Wesołowska, 1981: 47, figs 5–8 (D ♀). Rhene decoratus Tikader, 1977: 276, figs 4–6 (D ♀); holotype ♀ in NZC-ZSI, examined; syn. n. Rhene pantharae Biswas & Biswas, 1992: 399, figs 29–31 (D ♀); holotype ♀ in the NZC-ZSI, examined; syn. n. For a complete list of taxonomic references see WSC (2022). Types. Rhene decoratus Tikader, 1977: Holotype ♀ (NZC-ZSI) from INDIA, Maharashtra, Poona (presently Pune) Distr., Karla Govt. Rest House, 04.11.1963, leg. B.K. Tikader. Paratype: 1 ♀ (NZC-ZSI), together with the holotype. Rhene pantharae Biswas & Biswas, 1992: Holotype ♀ (NZC-ZSI 5369/18) from INDIA, West Bengal, Nadia Distr., Ranaghat, 16.02.1986, leg. K. Biswas. Comments. R. decoratus Tikader, 1977 was originally described from Maharashtra and was later recorded from West Bengal (Tikader & Biswas, 1981; Roy et al., 2016) and R. pantharae Biswas & Biswas, 1992 was described from West Bengal (Biswas & Biswas, 1992). Based on the detailed examination of the types of both species, they were found to be identical to Rhene pallida (Thorell, 1895) comb. n. in the following characters: the abdominal colour pattern with transverse black streaks and the genitalia morphology with comma-shaped sclerotized rims and central epigynal pocket; proximal portion of insemination ducts membraneous and bent S-like, mid-portion strongly sclerotized, running parallel along the median portion longitudinally; small spermathecae (cf. Figs 42–48 and Figs 51–55 with figs 5–8 in Wesołowska (1981), illustrations in Proszynski (1984: 123) and figs 643–645 in Zabka (1985)). Therefore, both the species R. decoratus and R. pantharae are treated as junior synonyms of R. pallida. Distribution. Bangladesh, Myanmar, China, Vietnam (WSC, 2022), India (Maharashtra, West Bengal) (Fig. 72).Published as part of Caleb, John T. D., Sanap, Rajesh V., Tripathi, Rishikesh, Sampathkumar, M., Dharmaraj, Jayaraman & Packiam, Soosaimanickam Maria, 2022, Taxonomic notes on some South and Southeast Asian members of the genus Rhene Thorell, 1869 (Aranei, Salticidae, Dendryphantini), pp. 389-407 in Zootaxa 5125 (4) on pages 398-402, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5125.4.3, http://zenodo.org/record/645090
Preparation and Quality Characteristics of Semolina from Foxtail Millet.
This Dissertation / Report is the outcome of investigation carried out by the creator(s) / author(s) at the department/division of Central Food Technological Research Institute (CFTRI), Mysore mentioned below in this page
Preparation of Ready-to-Eat Weaning Food
This Dissertation / Report is the outcome of investigation carried out by the creator(s) / author(s) at the department/division of Central Food Technological Research Institute (CFTRI), Mysore mentioned below in this page
High protein ready to eat flakes.
This Dissertation / Report is the outcome of investigation carried out by the creator(s) / author(s) at the department/division of Central Food Technological Research Institute (CFTRI), Mysore mentioned below in this page
Nutritional significance and nutraceutical potentials of millets and pseudo cereals
This Dissertation / Report is the outcome of investigation carried out by the creator(s) / author(s) at the department/division of Central Food Technological Research Institute (CFTRI), Mysore mentioned below in this page
Effect of Hydrothermal Treatment on Dehydration Characteristics of Finger Millet.
This Dissertation / Report is the outcome of investigation carried out by the creator(s) / author(s) at the department/division of Central Food Technological Research Institute (CFTRI), Mysore mentioned below in this page
Rhene rubrigera Simon 1889
Rhene rubrigera Simon, 1889 Figs 57–64, 72 Homalattus rubriger Thorell, 1887: 347 (D ♂). Rhene rubigera Żabka, 1985: 444, figs 544–562 (♂ ♀). Rhene rubrigera Sen et al., 2015: 30, figs 67–71, pl. 12 (♀). Material. INDIA: Karnataka; 1 ♀, Bhairapura (13.01956°N, 75.57277°E), 983 m a.s.l., 06.03.2021, leg. A.P.C. Abhijith & P. Ramachandra; Kerala: 1 ♀ (RTC), Wayanad, Valad (11.8046°N, 75.9253°E), 800 m a.s.l., 18.10.2021, leg. A. Jose; Uttarakhand: 1 ♀ (RTC), Dehradun (30.28313°N, 77.97427°E), 598 m a.s.l., 15.07.2017, leg. R. Tripathi; West Bengal: 1 ♂ (NZC-ZSI 6859/18), Tardaha (22.4591°N, 88.5218°E), 7 m a.s.l., 26.04.2019, leg. K. Valarmathi & party. Distribution. India (Karnataka, Kerala, Nicobar Islands, Uttarakhand, West Bengal (Caleb, 2019; 2020; present data) to Vietnam, China, Taiwan, Indonesia (Sumatra) (WSC, 2022) (Fig. 72).Published as part of Caleb, John T. D., Sanap, Rajesh V., Tripathi, Rishikesh, Sampathkumar, M., Dharmaraj, Jayaraman & Packiam, Soosaimanickam Maria, 2022, Taxonomic notes on some South and Southeast Asian members of the genus Rhene Thorell, 1869 (Aranei, Salticidae, Dendryphantini), pp. 389-407 in Zootaxa 5125 (4) on pages 402-403, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5125.4.3, http://zenodo.org/record/645090
Rhene Thorell 1869
Rhene Thorell, 1869 Rhene Thorell, 1869: 37 (replacement name for Rhanis C.L. Koch, 1846, preoccupied; type species: Rhanis flavigera C.L. Koch, 1846). Zeuxippus Thorell, 1891: 109 (type species: Zeuxippus histrio Thorell, 1891, examined based on illustrations and images of the type species kept at the Zoological Museum, Copenhagen, http://www.daim.snm.ku.dk/The-digitized-type-collection). syn. n. Justification of synonymy. The morphology and copulatory organs of Zeuxippus Thorell, 1891 appear similar to that of Rhene Thorell, 1869. Based on a detailed comparison of the illustrations of the generotype, Zeuxippus histrio Thorell, 1891 (Prószyński, 1984), it is evident that it has all the diagnostic features of Rhene as illustrated for Rhene flavigera (C.L. Koch, 1846). The palp with short, curved embolus accompanied by a hook-shaped terminal apophysis; simple pointed RTA; bag-like tegulum and sperm duct of the palp with retromarginal loop are diagnostic for Rhene. Expect the longer, more obtuse abdomen, characteristic differences in palpal structure are not seen. Therefore, Zeuxippus is considered a junior synonym of Rhene. The synonymy has resulted in four new combinations: Rhene atellana (Thorell, 1895) comb. n., Rhene histrio (Thorell, 1891) comb. n., Rhene pallida (Thorell, 1895) comb. n., and Rhene yunnanensis (Peng & Xie, 1995) comb. n..Published as part of Caleb, John T. D., Sanap, Rajesh V., Tripathi, Rishikesh, Sampathkumar, M., Dharmaraj, Jayaraman & Packiam, Soosaimanickam Maria, 2022, Taxonomic notes on some South and Southeast Asian members of the genus Rhene Thorell, 1869 (Aranei, Salticidae, Dendryphantini), pp. 389-407 in Zootaxa 5125 (4) on page 390, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5125.4.3, http://zenodo.org/record/645090
Rhene flavicomans Simon 1902
Rhene flavicomans Simon, 1902 Figs 1–4, 72 Rhene flavicomans Simon, 1902: 33 (D ♂); Prószyński, 1984: 119–121 (♂, D ♀); Jastrzębski, 1997: 51, figs 9–11 (♀). Rhene biembolusa Song & Chai, 1991: 23, figs 14A–E (D ♂); holotype ♂, in the Institute of Zoology, Beijing, not examined; syn. n. For a complete list of taxonomic references see WSC (2022). Material. INDIA: Kerala: 1 ♂ (RTC), Trivandrum (8.56408°N, 76.89197°E), 39 m a.s.l., 20.06.2019, leg. R. Tripathi; Assam: 1 ♀ (NZC-ZSI/AA383), Sontipur, Biswanath Charali (26.6739°N, 92.8577°E), 69 m a.s.l., 29.05.2016, leg. S. Kundu & D. Singha. Comments. Rhene biembolusa Song & Chai (1991) was described based on a holotype male from Bawangling, Hainan, China. The species was later discovered from mainland China and both sexes were illustrated (Peng et al., 1994; Song et al., 1999; Peng, 2020). Based on the original and subsequent illustrations, the species shows clear resemblance in genital morphology to R. flavicomans. The male palp with short, ventrally curved embolus accompanied with slightly broad terminal apophysis resembling the embolus; epigyne with medially placed pair of oval openings; copulatory ducts broad, subparallel (cf. Figs 1–4, illustrations in Prószyński (1984: 119–121), figs 9–11 in Jastrzębski (1997), figs 14A–E in Song & Chai (1991), figs 5–9 in Peng et al. (1994) and figs 280a–i in Peng et al. (2020)). Therefore, here R. biembolusa is considered as a junior synonym of R. flavicomans. Distribution. India (Assam, Kerala (present data), West Bengal (Caleb, 2019)), Nepal, Bhutan, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Vietnam, China (WSC, 2022) (Fig. 72).Published as part of Caleb, John T. D., Sanap, Rajesh V., Tripathi, Rishikesh, Sampathkumar, M., Dharmaraj, Jayaraman & Packiam, Soosaimanickam Maria, 2022, Taxonomic notes on some South and Southeast Asian members of the genus Rhene Thorell, 1869 (Aranei, Salticidae, Dendryphantini), pp. 389-407 in Zootaxa 5125 (4) on pages 390-392, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.5125.4.3, http://zenodo.org/record/645090
- …
