87,004 research outputs found
Folsomia ksenemani Stach 1947
Folsomia ksenemani Stach, 1947 * Folsomia ksenemani Stach, 1947: 134. Folsomia pseudodiplophthalma Stach, 1947: 162. DISTRIBUTION. — Bouches-du-Rhône. Plateaudu Petit Arboisprès de Calas (Poinsot-Balaguer 1976c). Corse. Poinsot 1970?, 1978. Gard. Malons, 850 m (Stomp etal. 1982, F. pseudodiplophthalma). Haute-Garonne. Forêtde Bouconne (Cassagnau 1954d). Provence. Poinsot 1972b. Sud-Ouest de la France. En plaine (Cassagnau 1961). Tarn, Aude. Montagne Noire (Cassagnau 1965). Tarn. Forêtde Ramondens (Cassagnau 1954d). TAXONOMIE. — Poinsot 1972b (redescription). ÉCOLOGIE. — Cassagnau 1965 (écologie, sol); Poinsot-Balaguer 1976c (écologie méditerranéenne).Published as part of Thibaud, Jean-Marc, 2017, Catalogue des collemboles de France, pp. 297-436 in Zoosystema 39 (3) on pages 353-354, DOI: 10.5252/z2017n3a1, http://zenodo.org/record/549627
Friesea albida Stach 1949
Friesea albida Stach, 1949 * Friesea albida Stach, 1949: 294. Friesea albida atypica Cassagnau, 1958b: 21. Friesea albida pyrenaica Cassagnau, 1958b: 21. DISTRIBUTION. — Ariège. Massif del’Arize, 400- 1400 m (Deharveng & Lek 1995, F. atypica). Hautes-Pyrénées. Massif du Néouvielle, valléesde l’Ouleet de l’Estibère, Orédon (Cassagnau 1958b, 1961, F.a. atypica et F. a. pyrenaica). — Hautevalléedel’Aureetmassif du Néouvielle (Lauga- Reyrel & Lauga 1995). — Montagned’Arize (Deharveng 1996). Tarn, Aude. Montagne Noire (Cassagnau 1965). ÉCOLOGIE. — Cassagnau 1965 (écologie, sol); Deharveng & Lek 1995 (F. atypica); Deharveng 1996 (déboisement, reboisement).Published as part of Thibaud, Jean-Marc, 2017, Catalogue des collemboles de France, pp. 297-436 in Zoosystema 39 (3) on page 315, DOI: 10.5252/z2017n3a1, http://zenodo.org/record/549627
Folsomia inoculata Stach 1947
F. inoculata Stach, 1947 – Folsomia inoculata Stach, 1947: 34 BC Cannings & Scudder 2005; Cannings 2010 General distribution: Holarctic; in North America the species appears to be uncommon, although it occurs on the Pacific coast (Potapov et al. 2018a).Published as part of Babenko, Anatoly, Stebaeva, Sophya & Turnbull, Matthew S., 2019, An updated checklist of Canadian and Alaskan Collembola, pp. 1-125 in Zootaxa 4592 (1) on page 55, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4592.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/265692
Folsomides parvulus Stach 1922
Folsomides parvulus Stach, 1922 Folsomides parvulus Stach, 1922: 17. CITATIONS FROM ALGERIA OUTSIDE COLLO. — Cassagnau (1963: 198, as Folsomides parvus Folsom, 1934); Thibaud & Massoud (1980: 517, as F. parvus); Hamra-Kroua & Cancela da Fonseca (2009: 36). DISTRIBUTION. — Cosmopolitan (Potapov 2001). REMARK Rather frequent in our samples.Published as part of Bendjaballah, Mohamed, Zoughailech, Abdelmalek, Brahim-Bounab, Hayette, Hamra-Kroua, Salah, Bedos, Anne & Deharveng, Louis, 2018, Annotated checklist of the springtails (Hexapoda: Collembola) of the Collo massif, northeastern Algeria, pp. 389-414 in Zoosystema 40 (16) on page 403, DOI: 10.5252/zoosystema2018v40a16, http://zenodo.org/record/433596
Folsomides parvulus Stach 1922
F. parvulus Stach, 1922 – Folsomides parvulus Stach, 1922: 17 – Folsomides americanus Denis, 1931: 126 – Folsomides parvus Folsom in Mills, 1934: 43 NT Hammer 1953 as parvus; Christiansen & Bellinger 1980 as americanus; Skidmore 1995 as americanus; Christiansen & Bellinger 1998; Babenko & Fjellberg 2006 BC Cannings 2010 AB Berg & Pawluk 1984; Skidmore 1995; Lindo 2014 all as americanus MB Hammer 1953 as parvus; Mills & Sinha 1971; Christiansen & Bellinger 1980 as americanus; Skidmore 1995 as americanus; Christiansen & Bellinger 1998; Porco et al. 2014 ON Broadbent & Tomlin 1980 as parvus QC Therrien et al. 1999, 1999a; Chagnon et al. 2000; Rochefort 2006 General distribution: cosmopolitan.Published as part of Babenko, Anatoly, Stebaeva, Sophya & Turnbull, Matthew S., 2019, An updated checklist of Canadian and Alaskan Collembola, pp. 1-125 in Zootaxa 4592 (1) on page 58, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4592.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/265692
Folsomides parvulus Stach 1922
94. Folsomides parvulus Stach, 1922 * Name in source. Folsomides exiguus in Deharveng & Bedos (1988), in Deharveng et al. (1989), in Deharveng & Bedos (1993b) and in Bedos (1994), F. purvus in Takeda (1981) (misspelling), F. parvus in Deharveng (1986). Source: Takeda (1981), Deharveng (1986), Deharveng & Bedos (1988), Deharveng et al. (1989), Deharveng & Bedos (1993b), Bedos (1994), Wiwatwitaya & Takeda (2005). Distribution in Thailand. Chiang Mai (N), Khon Kaen, Nakhon Ratchasima (NE), Surat Thani, Phang Nga (P). Habitat: cave in Surat Thani and Phang Nga provinces; at 700–2500 m. in Doi Inthanon forest; soil s.l. in mixed dry deciduous forest and deforested area at 800 m. in Khon Kaen province (Takeda 1981) and in dry evergreen forest in Nakhon Ratchasima province (Wiwatwitaya & Takeda 2005). Distribution outside Thailand. Cosmopolitan.Published as part of Jantarit, Sopark, Bedos, Anne & Deharveng, Louis, 2016, An annotated checklist of the Collembolan fauna of Thailand, pp. 301-360 in Zootaxa 4169 (2) on page 327, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4169.2.4, http://zenodo.org/record/26580
Chain Transfer to 2-Mercaptoethanol in Methacrylic Acid Polymerization in Aqueous Solution
The chain-transfer constant, CS = ktr/kp, of 2-mercaptoethanol (ME) for methacrylic acid (MAA) polymerization in aqueous solution has been measured at MAA concentrations between 5 and 30 wt% to be 0.12 +/- 0.01 at 50 degrees C. Analysis has been carried out via both the Mayo and the chain-length distribution (CLD) methods. No change of CS with monomer concentration is observed. The chain-transfer rate coefficient, ktr, thus exhibits the same strong dependence on monomer concentration as the propagation rate coefficient, k(p)
Variations on the Author
“Variations on the Author” discusses two of Eduardo Coutinho’s recent films (Um Dia na Vida, from 2010, and Últimas Conversas, posthumously released in 2015) and their contribution to the general question of documentary authorship. The director’s filmography is characterized by a consistent yet self-effacing form of authorial self-inscription: Coutinho often features as an interviewer that rather than express opinions propels discourses; an interviewer that is good at listening. This mode of self-inscription characterizes him as an author who is not expressive but who is nonetheless markedly present on the screen. In Um Dia na Vida, however, Coutinho is completely absent form the image, while Últimas Conversas, on the contrary, includes a confessional prologue that moves the director from the margins to the center of his films. This article examines the ways in which these works stand out in the filmography of a director who offers new insights into the notion of cinematic authorship
Entomobrya unostrigata Stach 1930
Entomobrya unostrigata Stach, 1930 (Figs 3J, 6A, 41 A–F) Entomobrya unostrigata ab. astrigata Stach, 1930 Entomobrya unostrigata var. dorsosignata Stach, 1963 Drepanura kanaba Wray, 1953. Christiansen 1956 Type locality. Spain Material examined. Two females,ACT Canberra, CSIRO Entomology, ANIC building,- 35.2748°S, 149.1142°E, 500m asl, 14.i.1981; 4 female NSW, Armidale, Chisholm Close, - 30.5016°S, 151.6662°E, 980m asl, 1971; female, 3 juveniles, NSW, Cowra plots, Kurajong, - 33.8281°S, 148.6779°E, 310m asl, pitfalls, 5–8.iii.1993; thousands NSW, Myall Vale, Narrabri Agricultural Research Station, - 30.2044°S, 149.5975°E, 190m asl, pitfall traps; 2 females in two slides, NSW, West Ryde, Sydney, - 33.8082°S, 151.0835°E, 50m asl, 14.ii.?ca. 1990; 3 females, juvenile, QLD, Geraldton, Reserve St, - 28.7774°S, 114.6150°E, 12m asl, on sweet corn, 30.vi.1998, 10.ix.1998; 2 female 2 male in other slide, SA, Cambrai, - 34.6639°S, 139.3212°E, 305m asl, under stones, 1.xii.1971; female, juvenile?, SA, Cleve, Section 17, Hundred of Smeaton, - 30.0002°S, 136.2092°E, 50 m asl, 15.vi.1979, in dermatitis skin 15.vi.1979; 2 females, juvenile?, SA, Eyre Peninsula, Port Lincoln, - 34.7240°S, 135.8611°E, 31m asl, 5.ii.1973; female, SA, Glen Roy, south of Cambrai, - 34.6553°S, 139.3644°E, 70m asl, under damp stones, 24.xi.1971; female?, SA, Hallett Cove, - 35.0770°S, 138.5020°E, 100m asl, in school, “biting children” 17.xi.1975; 11 specimens in ethyl alcohol, SA, Hindmarsh Island, Grey revegetation plot, young, - 35.516°S, 138.866°E, 25m asl, pitfalls, 5.10.2013, PG, GH leg.; male, female, 3 juveniles, SA, Loch, - 33.5678°S, 135.7547°E, 123m asl, in garden, 26.xi.1979; female?, SA, Mt Lofty Botanical Garden, - 34.9880°S, 138.7183°E, 550m asl, iii. iv.1969; female, SA, Padthaway, - 36.6270°S, 140.4339°E, 37m asl, 11.ix.1969; male and Isotomurus also on slide, SA, Tarcowie, - 32.9588°S, 138.4441°E, 574m asl, invading house, xii.1978, J. Forrest leg.; male and 3 juveniles; TAS, Fort Direction, - 43.0400°S, 147.41000°E, pasture, 8.viii.1977; male TAS, Launceston, Carmelite Monastery, - 41.4317°S, 147.2083°E, 160m asl, 22.i.1976; 2 females, 2 juveniles Vic. Burnley, - 37.8299°S, 145.0176°E, 50m asl, in clover 8.iv.1946, Womersley det. as E. exoricarva; male, VIC, Blackburn, - 37.8260°S, 145.1510°E, 100m asl, on clover, 22.viii.1946, Womersley det. as E. exoricarva; male; VIC, Melbourne, - 37.8333°S, 144.9833°E, 31m asl, causing itch in Military Hospital, 23.i.1942; juvenile, VIC, Melbourne, private house, - 37.8333°S, 144.9833°E, 31m asl, 7.ix.1971; WA, Jarrahdale, Alcoa mine site, - 32.33692°S, 116.0676°E, 228m asl, soil, 1979, J.M. Majer leg.; juvenile, WA, 5 km N.E. Dardanup,- 33.39932°S, 115.7553°E, 30m asl, 24.i.1979; 2 males WA, Brookton, - 32.368°S, 117.006°E, 243m asl, 26.vi.1975,; female, WA, Carlisle, - 31.9770°S, 115.9160°E, 31m asl, litter, 22.iii.1972, all SAMA. Redescription based on Australian specimens. Size. Length up to 2.35 mm (n=20). Colour. Pattern as in Figs 6A. Head. Antennal length 1.167 mm (n=13) 2.5 times the length of the head, Ant IV with a bilobed apical vesicle. Four labral papillae with two or three projections (Fig. 41A). Four prelabral ciliated chaetae abd 5,5,4 labral smooth chaetae. 8 eyes, G and H smaller than E and F. External process of papilla E reaching the papilla tip. Posterior labial row with MREL 1 L 2 all ciliated chaetae, R smaller than M. Body. Ratio lengths of Abd IV/III=4 (n=20). Trochanteral organ from 14–30 spiny chaetae. Unguis with 4 teeth on internal edge, first pair at 55% from base of unguis, and of 2 unpaired teeth, first one at 71% from base and most distal one minute. Dorsal tooth intermediate between internal pair and base of the unguis. Unguiculus spike–like, with smooth external edge on leg III. Manubrial plate with 3 chaetae and 2 psp. Mucro with 2 teeth, subapical tooth smaller than the apical one. Mucronal spine present (Fig. 41F). Chaetotaxy. Simplified formula: 3,1,0,3,2/1,4/2,4/1,0,1/4(1),1 0 2(3–4),1 0 1(2),1 0 2(3),2 with frequent variations in the chaetotaxy of Abd IV. Head chaetotaxy H1 with An 2, An 3a1 and An 3; H2 with A 5; H3 without S’ 0; H4 with S 1, S 3 and S 4i Mc; H5 with Ps 2 and Ps 5. (Fig. 41B). Thoracic chaetotaxy (Figs 41C) with Th II area T1 with Mc m 2i, T2 area with a 5, m 4, m 4i and m 5.Abdomen (Figs 41D): Area A1 on Abd II with 2 Mc a 2 and a 3; A2 on Abd II with 3 or 4 Mc m 3, m 3e and m 3ea always present, m 3e as mesochaeta or absent, sometimes asymmetrically. Abd III with 1 Mc on areas A3 and A5. Abd IV (Figure 41E) with 29–31 Mc: A 03 –A 05, A 1, A 5 –A 6, B 1 –B 2, B 4 –B 6, B e2 –B e3, C 1 and E 1. Remarks. This species was described by Stach in 1930 from Spanish material. Later, Christiansen (1958) synonymised E. kanaba (Wray, 1953), originally described in the genus Drepanura, as a synonym of this species as did Greenslade (1995). More recently, Katz et al. (2015) redescribed American specimens and Australian specimens show some slight differences from them. For instance, the eyes G and H are similar in size to C and F in American specimens, but smaller in Australian and European individuals. There are 2 or 3 Mc in H4 area in American species, but always 3 Mc in European and Australian specimens. On Th 2 there is one Mc on area T 1 m 1 or possibly m 2i. Abd 2 has 4 or 5 Mc on A2 area in American specimens but 3 or 4 Mc in Australian and European specimens. Abd IV has bothriotricha in T2 and T4 location, but T2 anterior in relation to T4. In Australian and European specimens there are 3 unpaired Mc A 03 –A 05 that are not represented in American material. These differences could be attributed to the species cosmopolitan distribution where genetic drift or founder effect may have caused them to diverge in morphology, even so American, European and Australian specimens seem to be the same species. Greenslade (1995) described its distribution, abundance, seasonality, habitats and behaviour noting it as a pest in America and Australia but not in Europe. The species is largely but not exclusively restricted to Mediterranean climatic regions of the country.Published as part of Jordana, Rafael & Greenslade, Penelope, 2020, Biogeographical and ecological insights from Australasian faunas: the megadiverse collembolan genus, Entomobrya (Entomobryidae), pp. 1-104 in Zootaxa 4770 (1) on pages 77-78, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4770.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/379795
[Newspaper Clipping: Author Claims Evidence of Second JFK Assassin #1]
Newspaper article titled "Author Claims Evidence of Second JFK Assassin." The article states that author Richard J. Whalen concluded "that there is circumstantial evidence to support the theory of a second assassin in the shooting of President John F. Kennedy.
- …
