6,805 research outputs found
Data for Introducing The Foreign Exchange Reserve Demand – Inflation Buffer Hypothesis by the Author Omar Osman
This is the dataset used in the regression analysis for the paper "Introducing The Foreign Exchange Reserve Demand Inflation Buffer Hypothesis" published in Journal of Central Banking Theory and Practice by the author Omar Osman. Please refer to sheet 1
Eber Omar BETANZOS TORRES; María Alaide BRUNO TEIXEIRA y Claudia Cristina T.G. de ARAUJO COSTA (Coords.). El Derecho ante la Pandemia de la Covid-19
Es una reseña de la obra: Eber Omar BETANZOS TORRES; María Alaide BRUNO TEIXEIRA y Claudia Cristina T.G. de ARAUJO COSTA (Coords.). El Derecho ante la Pandemia de la Covid-19. México: Tirant lo Blanch, 2021. 283 pp. ISBN 9788413782249.It's a review of the work: Eber Omar BETANZOS TORRES; María Alaide BRUNO TEIXEIRA y Claudia Cristina T.G. de ARAUJO COSTA (Coords.). El Derecho ante la Pandemia de la Covid-19. México: Tirant lo Blanch, 2021. 283 pp. ISBN 9788413782249
León Torres, Omar Andrés Regulación jurídica de las actividades económicas en áreas silvestres protegidas (Librotecnia, Santiago, 2014) 248 pp.
Bajo el contexto de los constantes y recientes avances legislativos en materia medioambiental, se publica el libro d e Omar León Torres, quien aborda uno de los grandes desafíos al momento de establecer políticas públicas y crear normativa aplicable: conciliar la explotación de los recursos naturales –uno de los pilares de la actividad económica nacional– con el deber de tutelar la preservación de la naturaleza; lo que a largo plazo implica la protección de una garantía que no solo debe asegurarse a la población presente, sino que también a las generaciones futuras
First record of Macropholidus ruthveni Noble 1921 (Squamata: Gymnophthalmidae) from Ecuador
The gymnophthalmid lizard clade Macropholidus, traditionally ranked as a genus, was recently defined by Torres-Carvajal and Mafla-Endara (2013) as the largest crown clade containing Macropholidus ruthveni Noble1921, but not Pholidobolus montium Peters 1863. This phylogenetic definition (de Queiroz and Gauthier, 1994) is based on a phylogenetic tree obtained from analyses of mitochondrial DNA nucleotide sequence data (Torres-Carvajal and Mafla-Endara, 2013), and is in conflict with previous non-phylogenetic definitions of both Pholidobolus and Macropholidus (Montanucci, 1973; Reeder, 1996) based on morphological data. In contrast to Pholidobolus, members of Macropholidus have a single transparent palpebral disc in the lower eyelid and lack a lateral fold between fore and hind limbs (Torres-Carvajal and Mafla-Endara, 2013)
First record of Macropholidus ruthveni Noble 1921 (Squamata: Gymnophthalmidae) from Ecuador
The gymnophthalmid lizard clade Macropholidus, traditionally ranked as a genus, was recently defined by Torres-Carvajal and Mafla-Endara (2013) as the largest crown clade containing Macropholidus ruthveni Noble1921, but not Pholidobolus montium Peters 1863. This phylogenetic definition (de Queiroz and Gauthier, 1994) is based on a phylogenetic tree obtained from analyses of mitochondrial DNA nucleotide sequence data (Torres-Carvajal and Mafla-Endara, 2013), and is in conflict with previous non-phylogenetic definitions of both Pholidobolus and Macropholidus (Montanucci, 1973; Reeder, 1996) based on morphological data. In contrast to Pholidobolus, members of Macropholidus have a single transparent palpebral disc in the lower eyelid and lack a lateral fold between fore and hind limbs (Torres-Carvajal and Mafla-Endara, 2013)
Omar Abed: 2025 Irma Black Award Gold Medal Acceptance Speech
Author Omar Abed gives an acceptance speech for The Book That Almost Rhymed, illustrated by Hatem Aly (Dial Books for Young Readers)https://educate.bankstreet.edu/irma_black_awards/1015/thumbnail.jp
Video interview with author and manuscript owner Professor Sa’adiya Omar
Fieldwork Team: Dr. Mustapha Hashim Kurfi (Principal Investigator), Hauwa Usman (Local Project Manager), Alhaji Abubakar Maikudi Aishat (General Field Facilitator). Technical Team: Prof. Fallou Ngom (Project Director and former Director of the African Studies Center), and Eleni Castrol (Technical Lead, BU Libraries). These collections on Gender in Nigerian Ajami Manuscripts are copied as part of the African Studies Center’s African Ajami Library. Access Condition and Copyright: These materials are subject to copyright. All rights reserved to the author. For use, distribution or reproduction contact Professor Fallou Ngom ([email protected]). Required Citation: Kurfi, M. H., Hauwa U., Ngom, F., and Castro, E. (2020). African Ajami Library: Gender in Nigerian Ajami Manuscripts. Boston: Boston University Libraries: http://hdl.handle.net/2144/41953. For Inquiries: Please Contact Professor Fallou Ngom ([email protected]).Video interview with author and manuscript owner Professor Sa’adiya Omar. Professor Sa’adiya Omar, the most celebrated author of women in the Sokoto Caliphate of Northern Nigeria. Professor Sa’adiya currently occupies the position of Nana Asma’u and Modibbo Kilo, the leaders of the Yantaru movement, i.e. Uwartaru (the Mother of the Yantaru). Equally, she had served as the National Amirah (President) of the largest Muslim umbrella organization in Nigeria – Federation of Muslim Women’s Associations in Nigeria (FOMWAN). As at the present, she serves in many capacities and is a member of various Islamic committees in Sokoto state and in Nigeria in general
Synophis zamora Torres-Carvajal, Echevarria, Venegas, Chavez 2015
7. Synophis zamora Torres-Carvajal, Echevarría, Venegas, Chávez, & Camper, 2015 Range. Amazonian Andean slopes of southeastern Ecuador, Zamora and Morona-Santiago provinces, ~ 800– 1800m. Description. Adult size ~ 310–460mm SVL and ~ 150–210mm TL, keeled nuchal scales; no nuchal collar; intranasals in contact; 2 postoculars; 9–11 infralabials; 8–9 supralabials; 147–154 ventrals; 88–118 subcaudals; and (19–21)-(18–21)-(17–18) dorsal scale-rows with single, heavy keel. Notes. Includes several specimens referred to S. bicolor and S. lasallei by Pyron et al. (2015).Published as part of Pyron, R. Alexander, Arteaga, Alejandro, Echevarría, Lourdes Y. & Torres-Carvajal, Omar, 2016, A revision and key for the tribe Diaphorolepidini (Serpentes: Dipsadidae) and checklist for the genus Synophis, pp. 293-320 in Zootaxa 4171 (2) on page 308, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4171.2.4, http://zenodo.org/record/15888
Synophis insulomontanus Torres-Carvajal, Echevarria, Venegas, Chavez 2015
6. Synophis insulomontanus Torres-Carvajal, Echevarría, Venegas, Chávez, & Camper, 2015 Range. Amazonian Andean slopes of central Peru, ~ 1100–1800m. Description. Adult size ~ 340–380mm SVL and ~ 180–190mm TL (assuming> 340mm SVL is adult, and CORBIDI 10418 has a truncated tail), keeled nuchal scales; no nuchal collar; intranasals in contact; 2 postoculars; 10–11 infralabials; 8–9 supralabials; 147–152 ventrals; 103–109 subcaudals; and (20-22)–(19-21)-19 dorsal scalerows, with single, heavy keel. Notes. Known only from the holotype and paratypes.Published as part of Pyron, R. Alexander, Arteaga, Alejandro, Echevarría, Lourdes Y. & Torres-Carvajal, Omar, 2016, A revision and key for the tribe Diaphorolepidini (Serpentes: Dipsadidae) and checklist for the genus Synophis, pp. 293-320 in Zootaxa 4171 (2) on pages 307-308, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4171.2.4, http://zenodo.org/record/15888
On the origin of South American populations of the common house gecko (Gekkonidae: Hemidactylus frenatus)
Volume: 27Start Page: 69End Page: 7
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