126,455 research outputs found
Protapanteles Gupta, Churi, Sengupta & Mhatre, 2014, n. sp.
Protapanteles spp. (Hymenoptera: Braconidae) Plates. XV (Figs 54−57); XVI (Figs 58−60). Brief diagnosis. Mason (1981) mentioned characters separating it from Cotesia – Smoothness of propodeum and latero distal excavation of female fore tarsi as the key characters. Metasomal second tergum with median tergite, usually subtriangular, narrower in the anterior region than posterior. Propodeum with medium sculpture and rugosity (rugosity lesser in Cotesia and more in Glyptapanteles) without median longitudinal carina. Fore tarsus with apico ventral margin of apical segment excavated, with conspicuous seta. Host. Tarucus balkanicus nigra on the host plant Ziziphus mauritiana Lam. (host of Protapanteles sp.01) and Tarucus callinara on the host plant Ziziphus jujube Mill. (host of Protapanteles sp.02). PLATE X. Charops obtusus obtusus Morley . Figs 35−36. 35 —Habitus. 36 — Mesosoma & first tergite (dorsally). PLATE XI. Tajuria cippus (Fabricius) . Figs 37−41. 37 —Unparasitized caterpillar. 38 —Cocoon of P. regale n. sp. with caterpillar. 39 —Cocoons of A. folia with caterpillars. 40 & 41 —Adults of T. cippus, male. PLATE XII. Brachymeria lasus (Walker) . Figs 42−47. 42 —Habitus. 43 — Anthene lycaenina (Felder) caterpillar. 44. Parasitized pupa (right) of A. lycaenina. 45 —Parasitized caterpillar of A. lycaenina. 46 & 47. Adult butterfly, A. lycaenina. PLATE XIII. Apanteles folia Nixon . Figs 48−51. 48 —Dorsal view. 49 — Mesosoma. 50 —Wings. 51 —Metasoma. PLATE XIV. Rathinda amor (Fabricius) . Figs 52−53. 52 —Caterpillars. 53 —Adult butterfly. PLATE XV. Protapanteles sp.01. Figs 54−57. 54 —Dorsal view. 55 —Wings. 56 — Mesosoma with first mediotergite. 57 —Metasoma. PLATE XVI. Figs 58−60. 58 —Cocoon of Protapanteles sp. 0 1. 59—Caterpillar of Tarucus balkanicus nigra Bethune-Baker. 60 —Adult butterfly, Tarucus b. nigra. PLATE XVII. Figs 61−64. Protapanteles sp. 0 2 . 61—Habitus. 62 —Solitary cocoon. 63 —Caterpillar of Tarucus callinara Butler. 64 —Adult butterfly mating pair of T. callinara. PLATE XVIII. Figs 65−66. Apanteles sp. 65 —Dorsal view, female. 66 —Propodeum with metasoma. 67 —Host caterpillar Jamides celeno (Cramer) with solitary Apanteles cocoon. PLATE XIX. Arhopala amantes Hewitson . Figs 67−72. 67 —Healthy caterpillars. 68 —Parasitized caterpillar. 69 —Pupa. 70. Adult butterfly. 71 —Female adult. 72 —Male adult. PLATE XX. Spindasis vulcanus (Fabricius) . Figs 73−76. 73 —Caterpillar. 74 —Parasitized caterpillar. 75 —Pupa. 76 —Adult butterfly. PLATE XXI. Ovipositors. Figs 77−80. 77 — Parapanteles eros n. sp. 78 — Parapanteles arka n. sp. 79 — Parapanteles esha n. sp. 80 — Parapanteles regale n. sp. TABLE 1. List of the Lycaenidae host species, associated parasitoids, stage of parasitism, nature of cocoon, and associated host plant. S. No. Lycaenid host species Parasitoid species Stage of Nature of Host plant parasitism Cocoon 1. Chilades pandava Parapanteles eros n. larval Solitary Cycas revoluta Thunb. (Cycadaceae) (Horsfield) sp. 2. Curetis thetis (Drury) Parapanteles arka n. Larval Gregarious Millettia (= Pongamia) pinnata sp. (L.) Panigrahi (Fabaceae) 3. Curetis thetis (Drury) Brachymeria lasus Pupal Solitary Millettia (= Pongamia) pinnata (Walker) (Fabaceae) 4. Prosotas dubiosa (Semper) Parapanteles esha n. Larval Solitary Pithecellobium dulce (Fabaceae) sp. 5. Tajuria cippus (Fabricius) Parapanteles regale Larval Solitary Loranthus sp. Jacq. (Loranthaceae) n. sp. 6. Tajuria cippus (Fabricius) Apanteles folia Larval Solitary Dendrophthoe falcata Nixon (L.f.) Ettingsh (Loranthaceae) 7. Tajuria cippus (Fabricius) Charops obtusus Pupal Solitary Loranthus sp. (Loranthaceae) obtusus Morley 8. Anthene lycaenina (Felder) Brachymeria lasus Pupal Solitary Drypetes roxburghii (Euphorbiaceae) (Walker) 9. Rathinda amor (Fabricius) Apanteles folia Larval Solitary Ixora brachiata (Rubiaceae) Nixon 10. Tarucus balkanicus nigra Protapanteles sp. 0 1 Larval Solitary Ziziphus mauritiana Lam. (Rhamnaceae) Bethune-Baker (code: 25113) 11. Tarucus callinara Butler Protapanteles sp. 0 2 Larval Solitary Ziziphus jujuba (code: 10613) Mill. (Rhamnaceae) 12. Jamides celeno (Cramer) Apanteles sp. Larval Solitary Millettia (= Pongamia) pinnata (L.) Panigrahi (Fabaceae) 13. Arhopala amantes Hewitson Apanteles folia Larval Gregarious Lagerstroemia speciosa L. (Lythraceae) Nixon 14. Spindasis vulcanus Apanteles folia Larval Solitary Ziziphus mauritiana Lam. (Rhamnaceae) (Fabricius) Nixon Species Parapanteles eros n. sp. Parapanteles arka Parapanteles esha n. sp. Parapanteles regale n. Parapanteles echeriae n. sp. sp. Gupta et al. Host caterpillar Chilades pandava Curetis thetis Prosotas dubiosa Tajuria cippus Abisara echeria Stoll (Horsfield) Lycaenidae (Drury) Lycaenidae (Semper) Lycaenidae (Fabricius) Lycaenidae Riodinidae Cocoon solitary gregarious solitary solitary gregarious Female body length in Angle between veins 2 Rs Number of costulae in 10 12 11 12 8 scuto-scutellar groove Antenna colour Scape, pedicel and scape distinctly antenna scape brown antenna scape brown scape brownish black, flagellum black yellowish brown in basal 1 / 3 rd, apical apically and ventrally (pedicel dark 1 / 3 rd yellow yellowish brown; pedicel brown yellow brown; flagellar segments brownish black Ratio of 1 r and 2 Rs vein 1.52 2 1 1.52 1.27 of fore wing General body colour Black Black Black Black except Black metasoma mix of yellow brown and black; first and second tergites black T 2 /T 3 (median length) 0.72 subequal 1.18 0.76 0.72 Material examined. Protapanteles sp. 0 1 —One female, INDIA, Maharashtra, Chinchoti, Naigon, 25.i. 2013, coll. Paresh V. Churi, ex. Tarucus balkanicus nigra on the host plant Ziziphus mauritiana Lam., NBAII //Bra/Prot/ sp/ 25113. Protapanteles sp. 0 2 —one female, Madhya Pradesh, Jabalpur, 10.vi. 2013, coll. Ashok Sengupta, ex. Tarucus callinara Butler on the host plant Ziziphus jujube Mill., NBAII //Bra/Prot/sp/ 10613. Remarks. Both the species were different but species identity could not be ascertained as single wasps were reared from their respective hosts.Published as part of Gupta, Ankita, Churi, Paresh V., Sengupta, Ashok & Mhatre, Sarang, 2014, Lycaenidae parasitoids from peninsular India with description of four new species of microgastrine wasps (Hymenoptera: Braconidae) along with new insights on host relationships, pp. 439-470 in Zootaxa 3827 (4) on pages 455-470, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3827.4.2, http://zenodo.org/record/25237
An O(n log n) algorithm for finding dissimilar strings
Let be a finite alphabet and . A string is said to be -dissimilar to , if no length substring of is equal to any length substring of . We present an algorithm which on input and an integer outputs an integer and such that:
- is -dissimilar to .
- There does not exist a string of length which is dissimilar to .Technical report LCSR-TR-26
Uniform Bounds on Product Sylvester-Gallai Configurations
In this work, we explore a non-linear extension of the classical Sylvester-Gallai configuration. Let be an algebraically closed field of characteristic zero, and let ℱ = {F_1, …, F_m} ⊂ [x_1, …, x_N] denote a collection of irreducible homogeneous polynomials of degree at most d, where each F_i is not a scalar multiple of any other F_j for i ≠ j. We define ℱ to be a product Sylvester-Gallai configuration if, for any two distinct polynomials F_i, F_j ∈ ℱ, the following condition is satisfied: ∏_{k≠i, j} F_k ∈ rad (F_i, F_j) .
We prove that product Sylvester-Gallai configurations are inherently low dimensional. Specifically, we show that there exists a function λ : ℕ → ℕ, independent of , N, and m, such that any product Sylvester-Gallai configuration must satisfy: dim(span_(ℱ)) ≤ λ(d).
This result generalizes the main theorems from (Shpilka 2019, Peleg and Shpilka 2020, Oliveira and Sengupta 2023), and gets us one step closer to a full derandomization of the polynomial identity testing problem for the class of depth 4 circuits with bounded top and bottom fan-in
U.S. domestic airline tickets are 12 percent cheaper on average when bought online
One of the Internet’s major influences on our daily lives is in the way that we buy, making shopping much more convenient and bringing greater choice to consumers. But how has online shopping influenced how much we pay? Using data from nearly 1/3 of U.S. domestic airline ticket transactions Anirban Sengupta and Steven N. Wiggins find that buying an airline ticket online is about 12 percent cheaper than buying the same ticket offline
High Economic Growth, Equity and Sustainable Energy Development of India
India has been experiencing sustained high economic growth in the recentyears. However, there exists substantial amount of unacceptable poverty among the people in the country. The expressions of symptoms of such poverty include among others inadequate educational and health attainment of the people and lack of access to basic amenities like modern clean energy, safe water and sanitation which are crucial determinants of capability development. There exists in fact significant amount of energy poverty among the people, particularly in the rural India which has more than 70% share of its population, in the form of use of traditional inefficient biomass as the primary fuel with injurious health effect and the lack of connectivity of the households with electricity. The eleventh five year plan of India which has recently been initiated has taken the approach of inclusive faster growth for the development of the Indian economy. This paper analyses the implications of this high inclusive growth in respect of the twin challenges of environmental sustainability of the energy use required by such growth and the removal of energy poverty, which have to be addressed in India's energy planning. The paper defines the concept of sustainable development and points out its resource accounting implications in respect of energy related resource use. It focuses in this context on the instrumental role of the efficiency of energy use and energy supply, fuel composition and technology in determining the strength of the linkage between the GDP growth and the growth of energy use and that between the energy use and the pollution intensity of energy. The paper also defines, on the other hand, the notion of energy poverty and discusses the problem of equity and energy development in a dual society like that of India. It then reviews the past trend and pattern of energy use and the future projections of energy requirement and supply with special reference to the twin issues of equity and environmental sustainability. In this context it makes a decomposition analysis of the past energy use and CO2 emissions in India for examining its environmental sustainability and if economic reforms of India could make any impact on it. It makes further a brief review of the methodologies of projections and policy planning for the future energy sector development in India as existing in the recent literature. Finally, the paper discusses certain selected issues of energy security and macroeconomic viability of such energy development in the background of the sustained steep rise of oil prices and high cost of carbon free new technologies. It concludes by highlighting certain policy issues relating to pricing, technology and institution for the attainability of inclusive growth and particularly for meeting the gaps in such attainment that would possibly remain as per the existing alternative projections for the future. However, this paper does not pay any special attention to the climate change related global policy issues that would affect India and gives priority to the national level issues relating to energy equity and energy related environmental sustainability of Indian development.
A Multi-Language Comparison of Influences on Author Verification using Character N-Grams
We create a new multi-language corpus for author verification based on Wikipedia talkpages, and evaluate the influence that differences in topic and time have on character n-gram author profiles. Topic alignment between two texts is found to increase author verification precision, and an authors writing style is found to change over time, but not more significantly after 3 years than after 1 year.Information ArchitectureWISElectrical Engineering, Mathematics and Computer Scienc
Graph Reconstruction from Random Subgraphs
We consider the problem of reconstructing a graph G in two natural sampling models: 1) each sample corresponds to a random induced subgraph and 2) for a fixed adjacency matrix A_G for G, each sample corresponds to a random principal submatrix (i.e., a submatrix formed by deleting the same set of rows and columns) of A_G. We refer to these models as the "unordered" and "ordered" models respectively. The two models are motivated by work on the reconstruction conjecture in combinatorics and trace reconstruction in theoretical computer science. Despite the superficial similarities between the models, we show that the sample complexity of reconstruction can be exponentially different. Our main results are as follows:
- In the unordered model, we show that almost all graphs can be reconstructed with Θ(p^{-2} log n) samples if each node is included in the random subgraph with any constant probability p; this is optimal. We show our upper bound extends to smaller values of p as well. In contrast, for arbitrary graphs, we show that exp(Ω(n)) samples are required for reconstruction even for 2-regular graphs. One of the key technical steps in the first result is showing that, with high probability, any subgraph isomorphism in a random graph has at most O(log n) non-fixed points.
- In the ordered model, we show that any graph with constant arboricity or degeneracy (i.e., every induced subgraph has constant average degree) can be reconstructed with exp(Õ(n^{1/3})) samples and that arbitrary graphs can be reconstructed with exp(Õ(n^{1/2})) samples. The results about almost all graphs in the first model carry over to the second. One of the key technical steps in the first result is showing that reconstruction of low degeneracy graphs can be reduced to learning a small number of moments of sets of the form {i-j: j < i,(i,j) ∈ E} and {j-i: i < j,(i,j) ∈ E} where G = ([n],E) is the unknown graph
Assessment of dopaminergic neuron degeneration in a C. elegans model of Parkinson's disease
Transgenic Caenorhabditis elegans that expresses the full-length wild-type human α-synuclein in dopaminergic neurons provides a well-established Parkinson's disease (PD) nematode model. Here, we present a detailed protocol to monitor and dissect the molecular underpinnings of age-associated neurodegeneration using this PD nematode model. This protocol includes preparation of nematode growth media and bacterial food sources, as well as procedures for nematode growth, synchronization, and treatment. We then describe procedures to assess dopaminergic neuronal death in vivo using fluorescence imaging. For complete details on the use and execution of this protocol, please refer to SenGupta et al. (2021). © 2022 The Author(s
Appropriate Similarity Measures for Author Cocitation Analysis
We provide a number of new insights into the methodological discussion about author cocitation analysis. We first argue that the use of the Pearson correlation for measuring the similarity between authors’ cocitation profiles is not very satisfactory. We then discuss what kind of similarity measures may be used as an alternative to the Pearson correlation. We consider three similarity measures in particular. One is the well-known cosine. The other two similarity measures have not been used before in the bibliometric literature. Finally, we show by means of an example that our findings have a high practical relevance.information science;Pearson correlation;cosine;similarity measure;author cocitation analysis
The vanishing author in computer-generated works: a critical analysis of recent Australian case law
Abstract
The use of software is ubiquitous in the creation of many copyright works, yet the requirement in copyright law that every work have a human author who engages in independent intellectual effort means that its use may prevent copyright subsistence. Several recent Australian cases have refocused attention on authorship as an essential criterion of copyright subsistence, and these cases suggest that much computer-produced output may be authorless and thus lack copyright protection. This article, the first in a two-part series, analyses how each case deals with the question of authorship of computer-produced works and why the use of software diminishes copyright protection for a significant number of computer-generated works. The article critiques the application of conventional notions of human authorship developed in the pre-computer age to modern productions and suggests alternative approaches to authorship that satisfy both the major objectives of copyright policy and the need to adapt to the computer age. The article argues that, without a broader judicial approach to authorship of computer-generated works, Parliament must remedy the lacuna in protection for these ‘authorless’ works. Possible solutions for reform are suggested. In a forthcoming article, the author comprehensively examines those reform proposals
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