1,721,001 research outputs found
FIGURE 26 in An annotated and illustrated catalogue of the Osmylidae collection (Neuroptera) at the Natural History Museum, London
FIGURE 26. Holotype of Osmylus pryeri McLachlan, 1875 (NHMUK010594264, male). Labels: (1) printed on white circular paper with a red edge: "Type"; (2) printed on faded white paper: "Japan. Pryer."; (3) handwritten on faded white paper: "Osmylus pryeri, ML."; (4) printed on blue paper: "McLachlan Coll. B.M.1938-674."; (5) printed on white paper: "NHMUK010594264/ also encoded in one datamatrix barcode".Published as part of Martins, Caleb Califre & Price, Benjamin W., 2020, An annotated and illustrated catalogue of the Osmylidae collection (Neuroptera) at the Natural History Museum, London, pp. 1-61 in Zootaxa 4883 (1) on page 27, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4883.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/429604
Revision of the Megaloptera (Insecta: Neuropterida) of Madagascar
Liu, Xingyue, Price, Benjamin W., Hayashi, Fumio, Moor, Ferdinand De, Yang, Ding (2014): Revision of the Megaloptera (Insecta: Neuropterida) of Madagascar. Zootaxa 3796 (2): 320-336, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3796.2.
Eidoporisminae Esben-Petersen 1917
Subfamily Eidoporisminae Esben-Petersen, 1917: 3 Original combination: Eidoporismus pulchellus Esben-Petersen, 1917: 4 Current combination: Eidoporismus pulchellus Esben-Petersen, 1917 Type locality: [“ Sydney”], Australia, New South Wales (state), Sydney (city) (3°51’54”S, 151°12’35”E). Holotype ♀ (by monotypy) with labels: (Fig. 1) Condition of type: good condition, meso- and metathorax glued on the pin, apex of right hindwing damaged. Missing parts: left flagellomeres, apical right flagellomeres. Comments: Esben-Petersen (1917) incorrectly attributed Eidoporismus to Kr̹ger (in litt.) when describing E. pulchellus. The author mentioned that the specimen was collected by Tillyard (Robert “Robin” John Tillyard), who was his friend and also forwarded to him a small lot of interesting material (see introduction of Esben-Petersen 1917). The specimen was part of Tillyard’s collection, which was donated to the NHM by Mrs Patricia “Pattie” Tillyard in 1939.Published as part of Martins, Caleb Califre & Price, Benjamin W., 2020, An annotated and illustrated catalogue of the Osmylidae collection (Neuroptera) at the Natural History Museum, London, pp. 1-61 in Zootaxa 4883 (1) on pages 8-9, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4883.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/429604
Protosmylinae Kruger 1913
Subfamily Protosmylinae Krüger, 1913: 29 Original combination: Chrysopa pubicosta Walker, 1860: 183 Current combination: Gryposmylus pubicosta (Walker, 1860) Type locality: [“Hindostan”], India, northern (no further locality data). Lectotype (sex undetermined) with labels: (Fig. 29) Condition of type: bad condition, costal region of right forewing and radial region of left forewing damaged. Missing parts: scape, pedicel and flagellomeres of both antennae, medial right tarsomeres, posterior right tarsomeres. Comments: Winterton & Wang (2016) revised the genus Gryposmylus Kr ̹ger, 1913 and designated this speci-men as lectotype of this species. In the original description Walker (1860) described this species as belonging to Chrysopa Leach, 1815 (a Chrysopidae genus), however Kr̹ger in 1913 added this species to the genus Gryposmylus (Osmylidae).Published as part of Martins, Caleb Califre & Price, Benjamin W., 2020, An annotated and illustrated catalogue of the Osmylidae collection (Neuroptera) at the Natural History Museum, London, pp. 1-61 in Zootaxa 4883 (1) on page 29, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4883.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/429604
Data from Wilson et al.: Applying computer vision to digitised natural history collections for climate change research: temperature-size responses in British butterflies
This dataset supports the publication: Wilson et al. "Applying computer vision to digitised natural history collections for climate change research: temperature-size responses in British butterflies". These are the data used for the data figures (Fig 3-6, SI Figs 1-2) and the supplementary information tables.</span
Data supporting: Insect body size changes under future warming projections: a case study of Chironomidae (Insecta: Diptera)
Processed images, data and R scripts supporting the publication: Insect body size changes under future warming projections: a case study of Chironomidae (Insecta: Diptera). Hydrobiologia. Original wing images available via NHM data portal: https://data.nhm.ac.uk/</span
Images used to investigate the temperature-body size responses in British Odonata
Images of the left (L) or right (R) hindwing of 5331 specimens of 14 species of British Odonata, on a white background with the corresponding landmark coordinates in TPS format. Image names include the specimen number (NHMUK xxxxxx) of the corresponding specimen, which can be examined on the NHM data portal: https://data.nhm.ac.uk/</span
Representative images of Lepidoptera from the Natural History Museum (NHMUK)
Up to 10 representative images for each species of Lepidoptera from the Natural History Museum (NHMUK) iCollections project. Dataset comprises 463 taxa and 4293 images. Original iCollections dataset: https://doi.org/10.5519/0038559</span
Gatzara benaci Navas 1935
Gatzara benaci Navás, 1935 Gatzara benaci Navás 1935: 47. Type locality: India (West Bengal: Darjeeling: Kurseong); holotype depository unknown. Diagnosis. Medium-sized (forewing length 36 mm, hindwing length 36 mm). Vertex with a pair of transversal bands and a pair of spots, posterior margin with a pair of black transversal bands. Pronotum longer than wide, medially with a black stripe, laterally with a pair of black lines. Wings with distal part concaved posteriorly, generally transparent, with many scattered minute black markings (Navás 1935).Published as part of Zheng, Yuchen, Hayashi, Fumio, Price, Benjamin W. & Liu, Xingyue, 2022, Unveiling the Evolutionary History of a Puzzling Antlion Genus Gatzara Navás (Neuroptera: Myrmeleontidae: Dendroleontinae) Based on Systematic Revision,, pp. 1-22 in Insect Systematics and Diversity 6 (3) on page 8, DOI: 10.1093/isd/ixac00
Gumillinae Navas 1912
Subfamily Gumillinae Navás, 1912: 58 Original combination: Osmylus longicornis Walker, 1853: 235 Current combination: Gumilla longicornis (Walker, 1853) Type locality: [“ Georgia ”], country unknown (probably in South America). Holotype (sex undetermined) (by monotypy) with labels: (Fig. 2) Condition of type: bad condition, abdominal apex and genitalia lost and could not be located, some flagellomeres are glued on the double mounted platform, there is glue on dorsal region of mesothorax, apex of left forewing damaged, ventral region of thorax is glued on the double mounted platform. Missing parts: scapes, pedicels, flagellomeres except for some that are glued on the double mounted platform, right forewing, apical part of right hindwing, apex of abdomen. Comments: Type locality is unknown. In the original description Walker cited that the type locality was Georgia, however no geographic locality in South America matches that name. Martins et al. (2016) recently outlined the confusion regarding the type locality of G. longicornis, and concluded it is considered likely a mislabelling with the actual type locality being in northern South America. In the original description Walker mentioned that the specimen is from “ Mr. Abbot’s collection” (John Abbot) who was entomologist and ornithologist (Calhoun & Johnston, 2010), who’s specimens were later deposited in the British Museum.Published as part of Martins, Caleb Califre & Price, Benjamin W., 2020, An annotated and illustrated catalogue of the Osmylidae collection (Neuroptera) at the Natural History Museum, London, pp. 1-61 in Zootaxa 4883 (1) on pages 9-10, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4883.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/429604
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