305,991 research outputs found

    Formica exsecta Nylander 1846

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    Formica exsecta Nylander, 1846 Formica exsecta Nylander, 1846b: 909. MATERIAL EXAMINED. — Turkey • 1 ☿; Gümüşhane, Kelkit, Gürüzdağı Mt.; 40°15’57”N, 39°28’58”E; 1871 m; 02.VII.2004; A. Beyarslan leg.; EMTU 04 /0371. DISTRIBUTION IN TURKEY. — Ağrı, ArdahanPublished as part of Kiran, Kadri & Karaman, Celal, 2020, Additions to the Ant Fauna of Turkey (Hymenoptera, Formicidae), pp. 285-329 in Zoosystema 42 (18) on page 295, DOI: 10.5252/zoosystema2020v42a18, http://zenodo.org/record/392226

    Nomada obtusifrons NYLANDER 1848

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    Nomada obtusifrons NYLANDER, 1848 M a t e r i a l e x a m i n e d: Russia: Altai Rep.: 80 km SSE Ust' - Koksa, Zaichikha River, 25- 28.VII.2013, MP, VL, 3 [FCBV]; Irkutsk Prov.: Irkutsk, VY, ♀, 3 [ZISP]. P u b l i s h e d r e c o r d s: PROSHCHALYKIN (2010: 25): Eastern Siberia; PROSHCHALYKIN & LELEJ (2010: 8): Irkutsk Prov. D i s t r i b u t i o n i n S i b e r i a: * Altai Rep., Irkutsk Prov. G e n e r a l d i s t r i b u t i o n: Russia (European part, Ural, Siberia); Europe, Kazakhstan.Published as part of E, Russia., 2017, The genus Nomada (Hymenoptera: Apidae) in Siberia, pp. 985-1006 in Linzer biologische Beiträge 49 (1) on page 996, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.540992

    Bombus (Bombus) patagiatus Nylander, s. l.

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    39. Bombus (Bombus) patagiatus Nylander s. l. (Fig. 42) Bombus patagiatus Nylander, 1848: 234, type not found (Tkalců, 1967). Russia: ‘E Sibiria’. Bombus terrestris var. patagiatus Nylander; Morawitz, 1890: 349. China: ‘Sse-tschuan’, probably Qinghai. Bombus lucorum var. lan-tschouensis Vogt, 1908: 101, syntype queen ZMA examined. Regarded as conspecific with Bombus patagiatus Nylander by Tkalců (1967). China: Gansu. Bombus vasilievi Skorikov, 1913: 172, type not seen. Regarded as conspecific with Bombus patagiatus Nylander by Tkalců (1967). China: Gansu and Heilongjiang. Bombus lucorum ssp. beickianus Bischoff, 1936: 2, type not seen. Regarded as conspecific with Bombus patagiatus Nylander by Tkalců (1967). China: Gansu. Bombus lucorum ssp. pseudosporadicus Bischoff, 1936: 2, type not seen. Regarded as conspecific with Bombus patagiatus Nylander by Tkalců (1967). China: Gansu. Bombus (Bombus) patagiatus ssp. minshanensis Bischoff, 1936: 3, type not seen. China: Gansu. Material examined. 2 queens 132 workers 61 males (IAB). Distribution in Gansu. Abundant at low to high elevations of the eastern loess plateau, Qinghai-Tibetan plateau in the southwest, western mountains and northwestern Qilianshan mountains (Fig. 42); 31 localities between 1193 and 3963 m (IAB). Distribution in China. Beijing, Hebei, Shanxi, Neimenggu, Jilin, Heilongjiang, Sichuan, Shaanxi, Gansu, Qinghai, Ningxia (IAB). Forage plants. ASTERACEAE: Carduus crispus, Cirsium japonicum, C. setosum, Ligularia sagitta, Ligularia sp., Olgaea tangutica, Saussurea amara, Saussurea sp., Stemmacantha uniflora; BORAGINACEAE: Symphytum officinale; CRASSULACEAE: Sedum sp.; FABACEAE: Astragalus adsurgens, Hedysarum gmelini, Medicago sativa, Melilotus albus, M. officinalis; LAMIACEAE: Dracocephalum heterophyllum, Elsholtzia densa, E. fruticosa, Salvia sp., Thymus mongolicus; ONAGRACEAE: Epilobium angustifolium; ROSACEAE: Potentilla fruticosa; SCROPHULARI- ACEAE: Euphrasia pectinata.Published as part of An, Jiandong, Williams, Paul H., Zhou, Bingfeng, Miao, Zhengying & Qi, Wenzhong, 2011, The bumblebees of Gansu, Northwest China (Hymenoptera, Apidae), pp. 1-36 in Zootaxa 2865 on page 20, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.20440

    Debating (International) Comparative Adult Education Research: Reflections on Conceptual Clarity and Methodological Challenges

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    This chapter reflects on the main arguments pursused by Field, Künzel and Schemmann in Chap. 10. In the first section I interrogate the ways concepts used to frame a particular research field (e.g. Comparative Adult Education) conditions how we construe a field of academic knowledge and its positioning within the adult education research landscape. In so doing, I take a point of departure in what Field, Künzel and Schemmann (see Chap. 10) term as International Comparative Adult Education versus Comparative Adult Education. This has the scope of shedding light on the complexities entrenched in pairing terms and concepts, and especially so in adult education scholarship that adopts a comparative mind-set (or assumptions about what ‘comparative’ means, and what research methods allow for valid, reliable, and significant comparative research). Such considerations contribute to wider reflections on the way research fields, in the Bourdieusian sense of social (and academic) milieus, are deliberately or accidentally construed (cf. among others: Milana et al. 2018; Nylander et al. 2018; Rubenson and Elfert 2015; Schemmann 2017). In extreme synthesis, in this section I argue that to flank one qualifier (international) with another (comparative), as in International Comparative Adult Education, raises problems that are worth attention when performing a cartography of research on the education and learning of adults. The problems with flanking or connecting qualifiers are well known in the academic field of Comparative and International Education, from which International Comparative Adult Education has historically emerged (cf. Chap. 10)

    Nomada fuscicornis NYLANDER 1848

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    <i>Nomada fuscicornis</i> NYLANDER, 1848 <p>M a t e r i a l e x a m i n e d: Russia: Tomsk Prov.: Chernyshovka, 21.VII.1997, OK, 3♀♀ [ZISP]; Tomsk, Potapovy luzhki, 24.VII.1998, OK, ♀ [ZISP]; c: 8 km S Biisk, Uat' -Katun', 7.VII.2007, SB, 233 [ZISP].</p> <p>P u b l i s h e d r e c o r d s: -</p> <p>D i s t r i b u t i o n i n S i b e r i a:*TomskProv.,*AltaiskiyTerr.</p> <p>G e n e r a l d i s t r i b u t i o n: Russia (European part, Ural, Western Siberia); Europe.</p>Published as part of <i>E, Russia., 2017, The genus Nomada (Hymenoptera: Apidae) in Siberia, pp. 985-1006 in Linzer biologische Beiträge 49 (1)</i> on page 991, DOI: <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/5409924">10.5281/zenodo.5409924</a&gt

    Coelioxys mandibularis NYLANDER 1848

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    Coelioxys mandibularis NYLANDER, 1848, Mandibel-Kegelbiene N a c h w e i s: 21. Bez., Stammersdorf, Alte Schanze XII, N 48°19,00′, E 16°25,15′, 222 m SH, F&B-A15, 14.VIII.2017, 1♀, ldcHZ.Published as part of Zettel, Herbert, Ockermüller, Esther, Schoder, Sabine & Seyfert, Franz, 2022, Zur Verbreitung der Wildbien en (Hymenoptera, Apidae) in Wien, Österreich, pp. 351-396 in Linzer biologische Beiträge 54 (1) on page 365, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.750760

    Myrmica scabrinodis Nylander 1846

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    Myrmica scabrinodis Nylander, 1846 Myrmica scabrinodis Nylander, 1846b: 930. MATERIAL EXAMINED. — Turkey • 1☿; Bursa, İnegöl, Tahtaköprü Vill.; 39°55’606”N, 29°39’183”E; 834 m; 14.VIII.2014; C. Karaman leg.; EMTU 07 / 2366g • 11 ☿; İstanbul, Çatalca, Celepköy; 41°22’48”N, 28°30’47”E; 16 m; 23. V.2011; K. Kiran leg.; EMTU 11 /0192 • 14 ♀, 21 ☿; İnceğiz Vill.; 41°11’N, 28°24’E; 01.VII.2009; K. Kiran leg.; EMTU 09 /0125a • 41 ☿; Kütahya, Altıntaş, Aykırıkçı Vill.; 39°08’768”N, 30°10’617”E; 1048 m; 18.VIII.2014; C. Karaman leg.; EMTU 08 /2064 • 9 ☿; same collection data as for preceding; K. Kiran leg.; EMTU 08 /2065. DISTRIBUTION IN TURKEY. — Afyonkarahisar, Ağrı, Ankara, Ardahan, Artvin, Edirne, Erzincan, Erzurum, Hakkari, İzmir, Kırıkkale, Kırklareli, Rize, Trabzon.Published as part of Kiran, Kadri & Karaman, Celal, 2020, Additions to the Ant Fauna of Turkey (Hymenoptera, Formicidae), pp. 285-329 in Zoosystema 42 (18) on page 311, DOI: 10.5252/zoosystema2020v42a18, http://zenodo.org/record/392226

    Going Beyond Counting First Authors in Author Co-citation Analysis

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    The present study examines one of the fundamental aspects of author co-citation analysis (ACA) - the way co-citation counts are defined. Co-citation counting provides the data on which all subsequent statistical analyses and mappings are based, and we compare ACA results based on two different types of co-citation counting - the traditional type that only counts the first one among a cited work's authors on the one hand and a non-traditional type that takes into account the first 5 authors of a cited work on the other hand. Results indicate that the picture produced through this non-traditional author co-citation counting contains more coherent author groups and is therefore considerably clearer. However, this picture represents fewer specialties in the research field being studied than that produced through the traditional first-author co-citation counting when the same number of top-ranked authors is selected and analyzed. Reasons for these effects are discussed

    Coelioxys mandibularis NYLANDER 1848

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    Coelioxys mandibularis NYLANDER 1848 P r e v i o u s r e c o r d s:Tăşnad (MOCSÁRY 1897), Cheia (AFTENE 1995). N e w m a t e r i a l s t u d i e d:13, Pasărea Forest, 13.VI.1999 (Fig. 43).Published as part of Ban, C. & Ljubomirov, T., 2009, New data on the distribution of some Megachilinae (Hymenoptera: Apoidea: Megachilidae) in Romania, pp. 1803-1816 in Linzer biologische Beiträge 41 (2) on page 1811, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.528019

    Nomada fuscicornis NYLANDER 1848

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    Nomada fuscicornis NYLANDER, 1848, Schwarzfühler-Wespenbiene N a c h w e i s: 21. Bez., Stammersdorf, Kallusweg, N 48°19′, E 16°24,0′, ca. 230 m SH, F&B-B14, 23.VII.2014, 2♀♀, 1♁, leg. W. Barrries, dcHZ. A n m e r k u n g: Dieser Nestparasit der im Pannonikum eher häufigen Zottelbiene Panurgus calcaratus wurde bisher in Wien nur in Stammersdorf vereinzelt nachgewiesen.Published as part of Zettel, Herbert, Ockermüller, Esther, Schoder, Sabine & Seyfert, Franz, 2022, Zur Verbreitung der Wildbien en (Hymenoptera, Apidae) in Wien, Österreich, pp. 351-396 in Linzer biologische Beiträge 54 (1) on page 383, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.750760
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