92,658 research outputs found

    Cearagrylloides Martins-Neto

    No full text
    <i>Cearagrylloides</i> Martins-Neto n. gen. <p> <b>Etymology.</b> A quite <i>Cearagryllus</i>.</p> <p> <b>Type species.</b> <i>Cearagryllus perforatorius</i> Martins-Neto, 1991, designated here. <b>Diagnosis</b> (female). Robust cearagryllids with relatively small head. forewing length equal to the body length; ovipositor long and setiform, longer than the forewing/body length.</p> <p> <b>Discussion.</b> The Araripe female cearagryllines, although reasonably similar to the male ones, cannot be confidently placed in any of the genera <i>Cearagryllus</i>, <i>Notocearagryllus, Allocearagryllus</i> or <i>Cryptocearagryllus</i>. The generic separation is necessary, although artificial, to prevent mistakes of interpretation. The new genus is useful for paleoecological purposes, as discussed below.</p>Published as part of <i>Martins-Neto, Rafael Gioia & Tassi, Lara Vaz, 2009, The Orthoptera (Ensifera) from the Santana formation (Early Cretaceous, Northeast Brazil): A statistical and paleoecological approach, with description of new taxa, pp. 21-37 in Zootaxa 2080</i> on page 27, DOI: <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/187344">10.5281/zenodo.187344</a&gt

    António Martins da Cruz, um Homem singular!

    No full text
    Estudos em homenagem ao professor António Martins da Cruz / coord. José de Matos Correia, Ricardo Leite Pinto. - Lisboa : Universidade Lusíada, 2020. - P. 1095-1096

    Os acervos literários e a construção do texto biográfico: o caso Cyro Martins / The Literary Collections and the Construction of the Biographical Text: The Case Cyro Martins

    No full text
    Resumo: Este trabalho aborda a relevância dos acervos literários no processo de construção de textos biográficos – especialmente no caso da escrita da biografia do psicanalista e escritor gaúcho Cyro Martins (1908-1995). Em um primeiro momento, o foco do artigo recai sobre a importância dos materiais preservados no Acervo Cyro Martins, localizado no Delfos – Espaço de Documentação e Memória Cultural da Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul –, para a escrita de uma futura biografia. Depois, são ressaltadas as potencialidades de outros acervos guardados no Delfos, pois Cyro Martins se relacionou de alguma forma com figuras intelectuais cujos arquivos também estão preservados na instituição: Dyonélio Machado, Lila Ripoll, Moysés Vellinho, Manoelito de Ornellas e João Otávio Nogueira Leiria.Palavras-chave: acervos literários; construção biográfica; Cyro Martins.Abstract: This work deals with the relevance of literary collections in the process of constructing biographical texts – especially in the case of writing the biography of psychoanalyst and writer Cyro Martins (1908-1995). At first, the article focuses on the importance of the materials preserved in the Cyro Martins Collection, located at Delfos – Espaço de Documentação e Memória Cultural of the Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul, for writing a biography in the future; secondly, the potentialities of other collections stored in Delfos are highlighted, as Cyro Martins has related in some way to intellectual figures whose archives are also preserved in the institution: Dyonélio Machado, Lila Ripoll, Moysés Vellinho, Manoelito de Ornellas and João Otávio Nogueira Leiria.Keywords: literary collections; biographical construction; Cyro Martins

    Allocearagryllus leipnitzi Martins-Neto, n. comb.

    No full text
    <i>Allocearagryllus leipnitzi</i> Martins-Neto, n. comb. <p>(Fig. 1 C)</p> <p> 1. <i>Notocearagryllus leipnitzi</i> Martins-Neto, 2002 b</p> <p> <b>Etymology.</b> In honor of the foraminiferologist Prof. Dr. Itamar Ivo Leipnitz (UNISINOS-RS).</p> <p>Holotype. RGMN-T029, Martins-Neto Collection, housed at the Sociedade Brasileira de Paleoartropodologia – SBPr.</p> <p> Type locality, type stratum and age. As for <i>Notocearagryllus dutrae</i> Martins-Neto.</p> <p> <b>Diagnosis.</b> As for the genus.</p> <p> <b>Description</b> (Holotype, Fig. 1 C). Male tegmen 25 mm long as preserved (around 2/3 of the probable total length). <b>RP</b>, <b>CuA</b> and pre-lanceolate cell partially preserved. Speculum fairly square, with the anterior margin slightly curved than the posterior one. Anterolateral margin as long as the posterolateral one. <b>sp1</b> reaches the distal part of the posterior margin and the apical part of the anterolateral margin, parallel to the anal margin, converging on <b>sp2</b>; <b>sp2</b> reaches the distal part of the posterolateral margin and the apical part of the anterolateral margin, close to the <b>sp1</b> extremity. <b>CuA</b> secondary branches beginning above the speculum, and zigzag-shaped at their base, perpendicularly deflecting toward the apical margin, then running, slightly convergent, alongside the anal margin. Intraspecular cells numerous immediately under the speculum and also after it. Chords notably curved. The <b>d</b> vein partially fused to <b>CuP</b>, converging towards <b>CuA</b>. The <b>d-am</b> crossvein situated at the boundary of both anterior and anterolateral margins of the speculum. Apical part of <b>d</b> connected to the apical part of the posterolateral margin of the speculum by a long cross-vein. The area below the posterior margin of the speculum of similar width to the adjacent areas (area below the anterolateral margin of the speculum and area between the posterolateral margin of the speculum and the most proximal <b>CuA</b> secondary branch) and filled by parallel cross-veins.</p> <p> <b>Remarks.</b> This specimen was originally described by Martins-Neto (2002b) under the collection number RGMN-3000, now removed to a definitive collection number RGMN-T029 at the same Institution (SBPr).</p>Published as part of <i>Martins-Neto, Rafael Gioia & Tassi, Lara Vaz, 2009, The Orthoptera (Ensifera) from the Santana formation (Early Cretaceous, Northeast Brazil): A statistical and paleoecological approach, with description of new taxa, pp. 21-37 in Zootaxa 2080</i> on page 25, DOI: <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/187344">10.5281/zenodo.187344</a&gt

    Flora Zambesiaca. Mozambique, Malawi, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Botswana. Volume 12, part 2.

    No full text
    List of families included in volume 12, part 2. Alismataceae / E.S. Martins & L. Catarino. Limnocharitaceae / E.S. Martins. Hydrocharitaceae / J.J. Symoens. Najadaceae / J.J. Symoens & L. Triest. Aponogetonaceae / E.S. Martins. Juncaginaceae / E.S. Martins. Potomogetonaceae / J.J. Symoens. Zosteraceae / S.O. Bandeira. Zannichelliaceae / M.C. Duarte. Cymodoceaceae / M.C. Duarte. Dioscoridaceae / P. Wilkin. Burmanniaceae / M. Cheek. Pandanaceae / H.J. Beentje. Velloziaceae / A.C. Gonçalves. Colchicaceae / I. la Croix. Liliaceae sensu stricto / P. Wilkin. Smilacaceae / M.A. Diniz

    Parathyone itapuaensis Martins & Tavares 2021

    No full text
    <i>Parathyone itapuaensis</i> Martins & Tavares, 2021 Fig. 2C <p> <i>Parathyone itapuaensis</i> Martins & Tavares, 2021: 246-248, figs. 1-4.</p> <p> <b>Type locality:</b> Itapuã beach (12°57′S, 38°21′W), Salvador, Bahia, Brazil, intertidal.</p> <p> <b>Type material:</b> <i>Holotype</i> – MZUSP 2089: 40 mm long, Itapuã beach (12°57′S, 38°21′W), Salvador, Bahia, Brazil, intertidal, 21.iv.2011. <i>Paratype</i> – UFBA 631: 1 specimen, 40 mm long, same collection data as holotype; UFPB ECH 438: 1 specimen, 40 mm long, (07°04′S; 34°49′W), João Pessoa, Paraíba, Brazil; MZUSP 2103: 5 specimens, 10-25 mm long, Ubatuba, São Paulo, Brazil.</p> <p> <b>Distribution:</b> Paraíba, Bahia and São Paulo (Brazil).</p>Published as part of <i>Martins, Luciana, Marques, Alexandre Oliveira, Fukuda, Marcelo Veronesi & Tavares, Marcos, 2022, An annotated catalogue of Echinodermata types in the Museu de Zoologia, Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil, pp. 1-11 in Papéis Avulsos de Zoologia 62</i> on pages 4-6, DOI: 10.11606/1807-0205/2022.62.015, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/7177498">http://zenodo.org/record/7177498</a&gt

    Tropidiina Galileo & Martins 2010

    No full text
    Subtribe Tropidiina Galileo & Martins, 2010 <p> <i>Alcyopis</i> Pascoe, 1866b: 484</p> <p> Type-species: <i>Alcyopis cyanoptera</i> Pascoe, 1866 (by monotypy).</p> <p> <i>Diasporidion</i> Martins, 1968a: 515</p> <p> Type-species: <i>Ibidion (Brydaeon) duplicatum</i> Gounelle, 1909 (by original designation).</p> <p> <i>Gnomibidion</i> Martins, 1968a: 580</p> <p> Type-species: <i>Ibidion digrammum</i> Bates, 1870 (by original designation).</p> <p> <i>Homaloidion</i> Martins, 1968a: 506</p> <p> Type-species: <i>Ibidion pinacopterum</i> Martins, 1962 (by original designation).</p> <p> <i>Megapedion</i> Martins, 1968a: 573</p> <p> Type-species: <i>Heterachthes lefebvrei</i> Gounelle, 1909 (by original designation).</p> <p> <i>Minibidion</i> Martins, 1968a: 335</p> <p> Type-species: <i>Ibidion minusculum</i> Martins, 1962 (by original designation).</p> <p> <i>Neotropidion</i> Martins, 1968a: 609</p> <p> Type-species: <i>Gnoma nodicollis</i> Dalman, 1823 (by original designation).</p> <p> <i>Opacibidion</i> Martins, 1968a: 498</p> <p> Type-species: <i>Ibidion sulcicorne</i> White, 1855 (by original designation).</p> <p> <i>Perissomerus</i> Gounelle, 1909: 684</p> <p> Type-species: <i>Perissomerus hilairei</i> Gounelle, 1909 (by monotypy).</p> <p> <i>Phocibidion</i> Martins, 1968a: 625</p> <p> Type-species: <i>Octoplon pulcherrimum</i> Martins, 1962 (by original designation).</p> <p> <i>Psiloibidion</i> Martins, 1968a: 511</p> <p> Type-species: <i>Cosmius leucogramma</i> Perty, 1832 (by original designation).</p> <p> <i>Smaragdion</i> Martins, 1968a: 605</p> <p> Type-species: <i>Smaragdion viride</i> Martins, 1968 (by original designation).</p> <p> <i>Thoracibidion</i> Martins, 1960b: 105</p> <p> Type-species: <i>Compsa flavopicta</i> Perty, 1832 (by original designation).</p> <p> <i>Tropidion</i> Thomson, 1868a: 134</p> <p> Type-species: <i>Ibidion (Tropidion) flavipes</i> Thomson, 1868 (by subsequent designation Martins, 1968a: 355).</p>Published as part of <i>Monné, Miguel A., 2012, Catalogue of the type-species of the genera of the Cerambycidae, Disteniidae, Oxypeltidae and Vesperidae (Coleoptera) of the Neotropical Region 3213, pp. 1-183 in Zootaxa 3213 (1)</i> on pages 38-39, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3213.1.1, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/10096127">http://zenodo.org/record/10096127</a&gt

    As máscaras modernistas: Adalgisa Nery e Maria Martins na vanguarda brasileira

    Get PDF
    Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Centro de Comunicação e Expressão. Programa de Pós-Graduação em Literatura.Certa tradição analisa as obras do modernismo brasileiro recorrendo à institucionalização nacionalista do movimento e pautando-se, muitas vezes, numa concepção materialista da história. Afora isso, esse olhar crítico é mediado pela percepção da forma como matéria a ser analisada, o que pressupõe um parâmetro que, na literatura brasileira, estaria na Semana de Arte Moderna. Este trabalho se propõe a focar duas autoras modernistas não-canônicas: Maria Martins (1890-1973) e Adalgisa Nery (1905-1980). Supõe-se que ambas as autoras passaram incólumes pelo movimento por adotarem uma concepção nietzscheana de tempo, circular. Deuses Malditos I (1965), biografia de Nietzsche escrita por Maria Martins e A imaginária (1959), romance autobiográfico de Adalgisa Nery, são analisados a partir da tese de que a biografia e a autobiografia são máscaras textuais. A máscara é matéria que revela pelo disfarce, que preenche os vazios diversos - a ausência de Maria e de Adalgisa na crítica, as lacunas presentes em ambos os livros e a impossibilidade de representação das autoras pelo texto. Tratar do modernismo por meio de máscaras permite pensá-lo a partir do texto e de um começo, ou de um re-começo, que pode existir ainda hoje. A determinate critical tradition analyses Brazilian modernist works considering the nationalist aspect of this movement. This tradition is based, most of the times, on a materialistic conception of history. Besides that, this critical perspective takes into account the structure as the main aspect to be analyzed in a literary work and considers the authors who took part in the Modern Week, in 1922, as patterns to read others modernist writers and texts. This paper focuses on two modernist non-canonical writers, Maria Martins (1890-1973) and Adalgisa Nery (1905-1980) assuming that they were not suitably considered as part of that literary movement because they have embraced a Nietzschean conception of time, an understanding of history as a cyclical movement. Deuses Malditos I (1965), Nietzsche's biography by Maria Martins and A imaginária (1969), Adalgisa's Nery autobiographical novel, will be analyzed departing from the theses that biography and autobiography are textual masks. Mask is the substance that reveals when hiding, which fills various vacuities - Maria's and Adalgisa's absence in literary criticism, the gaps present in both books and the textual impossibility of representing these writers. To deal with modernism by means of masks also allows to consider the notion of text and to depart from a beginning or from a reopening to think about this movement, what may be possible still nowadays

    Luzaridella susurra Martins

    No full text
    <i>Luzaridella susurra</i> Martins & da Silva, sp. nov. <p> <b>Etymology.</b> The specific name is derived from the Latin <i>susurra</i> (= whisper) and refers to the very low calling song of the males.</p> <p> <b>Diagnosis.</b> This species can be distinguished from congeners by the following combination of characters: (i) male tegmina short not surpassing the forth tergite posterior margin; (ii) teeth present only on the initial portion of stridulatory file, not exceeding 12 teeth; (iii) male genitalia: sclerite A of pseudepiphallic arm curved inward with rounded apex and proximal portion with dorsal expansion; sclerite B of pseudepiphallic arm with strong notch in median portion; (iv) ovipositor straight, shorter than femur III in length; (v) copulatory papilla: rectangular, slightly concave at apex; proximal portion with v-shaped margin, in ventral view.</p> <p> <b>Description.</b> Male Holotype (Figs. 24, 26, 27, 30–38). Measurements (mm): body length, 12.72; pronotum length, 2.35; pronotum width, 3.23; head width, 2.59; length of femur III, 9.28; length of tibia III, 8.58; tegmen length, 5.28; tegmen width, 4.85; dorsal field width, 3.47; lateral field width, 1.38. <b>Head</b>. Vertex brown with five yellow longitudinal stripes, the median one narrower (Fig. 30). Occiput yellow dorsally with fine pubescence. Eyes black outlined of light brown. Three ocelli arranged in triangle, the lateral ones slightly farther. Apical portion of gena and adjacent occiput brown (Fig. 31). Median and basal portion of gena yellow whitish with a transverse dark brown band separating them (Fig. 31). Fastigium brown with a light yellow central spot. Frons brown with three light yellow triangular spots. Scape light yellow with brown markings. Pedicel light brown. First articles of flagellum light brown darkening towards the apex. Clypeus whitish with two brown basal-center spots and a brown lateral band. Labrum whitish. Pleurostoma brown. Mandible yellow-whitish outlined of dark brown. Maxillary palpus whitish with brow spots laterally, fifth segment whitish with apical oblique truncation. Labial palpus whitish with third segment rounded at apex. <b>Thorax</b>. Pronotal disc slightly concave anteriorly and convex posteriorly (Fig. 30). Pronotal disc with light brown broad longitudinal band situated in central region sculptured with brown, and light yellow lateral band (Fig. 30). Pronotal lateral lobe light yellow with long bristles, its superior portion with dark brown longitudinal band (Fig. 31). Antero-basal portion of lateral lobe rounded and ascending upward, visible dorsally (Fig. 30). Pronotum outlined of brown. Legs yellow, pubescent; legs I and II with brown rings; tibia I with a oval tympanum on outer face and an elongated and larger one on inner face; femur III sculptured in brown; outer face with oblique striae and brown apex (Fig. 32); inner face with two spots in the distal third, light yellow proximal third, and brown apex; tibia III with a brown ring in proximal portion, brown apex; four dorsal spurs and three apical ones on both faces of tibiae III; denticles presents on almost the entire length of tibia III, absents on proximal portion; first tarsomere light yellow in proximal portion and dark brown in distal portion, two rows of denticles: seven in inner face and 11 in outer one. Right tegmen (Fig. 33), light brown, stridulatory apparatus reduced to few light yellow veins; dorsal field with a light yellow band adjacent to median vein, and a brown band along the median vein; lateral field with three dark brown longitudinal veins; stridulatory file strongly reduced with nine spaced teeth on inner portion of the vein. <b>Abdomen</b> from yellow to light brown with transversally elongated spots in tergites three (14), four (13), five (13), six (11) and seven (2); apex of supra-anal plate subtruncated (Fig. 34); subgenital plate rectangular and truncated at apex (Fig. 35). Cerci yellow. <b>Male genitalia</b> (Figs. 36–38), sclerite A of pseudepiphallic arm curved inward (Fig. 36), with rounded apex and proximal portion with dorsal expansion (Fig. 38); sclerite B of pseudepiphallic arm with strong notch in median portion (Fig. 38). <b>Observations in paratypes.</b> Male genitália with two arrangement patterns of the sclerite A of pseudepiphallic arm: extended sclerite (as in Holotype, see Fig. 36) and flexed sclerite (Fig. 39). Stridulatory file of right tegmen with 4–12 spaced teeth (n=9) in inner portion of the vein. Dorsal field of left tegmen almost all hyaline, well marked veins (Fig. 40), without stridulatory file. Hindwings absent. Metanotal gland with wide depression (Fig. 41). Female (Figs. 25, 28, 29, 42–47), body shape and color pattern very similar to Holotype, showing only the following differences: tegmina reduced, covering only the first two tergites, dorsal field with seven veins little marked, lateral field with four dark brown well marked veins (Fig. 42) and dark brown longitudinal band in its superior portion continuous to the dark brown band of pronotal lateral lobe (Fig. 25); distal margin of supra-anal plate rounded (Fig. 43); distal margin of subgenital plate v-shaped (Fig. 44); ovipositor brown, shorter than femur III, straight, ventral valves slightly longer than the dorsal ones; <b>Copulatory papilla</b> (Figs. 45–47) rectangular, distal margin slightly concave, and proximal margin with v-shaped notch, seen in ventral view (Fig. 46).</p> <p> <b>Calling song</b> (n=2, 24.2 and 25.3°C, Fig. 23): quite low intensity sound, that renders detection of singing males in the field extremely difficult. Chirp duration of 35.73 ± 3.16 ms (29–38, n=11). Each chirp with five to seven very briefs pulses, pulse duration of 2.45 ± 0.50 ms (2–3, n=38). Inter-chirp interval of 2138 ± 1195 ms (1115–4837, n=11) and inter-puse interval of 3.97 ± 0.47 ms (3–5, n=32). Extremely broad frequency band, ranging from 2.3 kHz to more than 10 kHz. Chirp rate ranged from 24 to 42 chirps/min and pulse rate from 142 to 167 pulses/s.</p> <p> <b>Habitat and male calling site.</b> Males and females live in litter. The calling song recorded specimens were stridulating in litter on dry leaves; some males were found on litter with raised tegmina, but no apparent sound emission.</p> <p> <b>Measurements (mm).</b> Male (n=9, excluding holotype). body length, 12.59 ± 0.80 (11.48–13.68); pronotum length, 2.64 ± 0.26 (2.40–2.85); pronotum width, 3.17 ± 0.26 (2.82–3.65); head width, 2.72 ± 0.17 (2.51–3.02); length of femur III, 9.93 ± 0.89 (8.75–11.44); length of tibia III, 9.06 ± 0.68 (8.09–9.93); tegmen length, 5.49 ± 0.26 (5.14–5.81); tegmen width, 4.73 ± 0.30 (4.24–5.18); dorsal field width, 3.30 ± 0.19 (2.92–3.55); lateral field width, 1.43 ± 0.13 (1.30–1.63). Female (n=9): body length, 14.43 ± 1.16 (13.01–16.09); pronotum length, 3.43 ± 0.28 (3.04–3.72); pronotum width, 3.89 ± 0.23 (3.65–4.25); head width, 3.05 ± 0.15 (2.86–3.23); length of femur III, 12.04 ± 0.71 (10.56–12.63); length of tibia III, 10.71 ± 0.92 (9.42–11.81); ovipositor length, 10.91 ± 0.92 (10.05–11.58).</p> <p> <b>Type material.</b> Holotype 3: BRASIL, AM[azonas], Manaus, R[eserva] F[lorestal] Adolpho Ducke, AM-010, 26-31.viii.2011, 02º55’49”S, 59°58'31"W. Coleta ativa. L. P. Martins & V. Linard (INPA). Holotype condition: detached left tegmen and right leg II; genitalia placed in microvial with glycerin; all parts are maintained in holotype's tube. Paratypes: same data of Holotype (13, 1Ƥ, MZUSP). <i>idem</i> 23-28.ix.2011 (23 INPA). <i>idem</i> 01- 03.xi.2010 L. P. Martins & D. Mendes (23 INPA). <i>idem</i> 15-19.xii.2010 (63, 6Ƥ INPA). <i>idem</i> 21-24.iv.2011. L. P. Martins (3Ƥ INPA, 2Ƥ MZUSP). <i>idem</i> / 89PROSET (13 INPA). <i>idem</i> 23-28.ix.2011 (13, 1Ƥ INPA; 23 MZUSP). <i>idem</i> 14-19.x.2011. L. P. Martins & A. Souza / 147PROSET (13 INPA).</p> <p> <b>Other material examined (INPA).</b> Same data of Holotype (33). <i>idem</i> 01-03.xi.2010. L. P. Martins & D. Mendes (33, 5Ƥ). <i>idem</i> 15-19.xii.2010 (13, 3Ƥ). <i>idem</i> 21-24.iv.2011. L. P. Martins (53, 3Ƥ). <i>idem</i> 23-28.ix.2011 (13). <i>idem</i> 14-19.x.2011. L. P. Martins & A. Souza (63, 3Ƥ).</p>Published as part of <i>Martins, Luciano De P., Da Silva, Luciene G., Henriques, Augusto L. & Zefa, Edison, 2013, First record of the genera Luzarida Hebard, 1928 and Luzaridella Desutter- Grandcolas, 1992 (Orthoptera, Gryllidae, Phalangopsinae) from Brazil, including a new species and description of the female of Luzarida lata Gorochov, 2011, pp. 421-430 in Zootaxa 3609 (4)</i> on pages 426-429, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3609.4.4, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/219773">http://zenodo.org/record/219773</a&gt
    corecore