186,755 research outputs found
Euphalerus tantillus Tuthill 1937, comb.n.
<i>tantillus</i> (Tuthill, 1937) comb.n. <p> <i>Euphalerus tantillus</i> Tuthill, 1937: 71</p> <p> <i>Type locality</i>: USA, Utah.</p> <p> <i>Additional distribution</i>: USA, California.</p> <p> <i>Host plant</i>: Unknown.</p> <p> <i>Remarks</i>: previously unpublished EMEC specimens were identified from California by D.D. Jensen.</p>Published as part of <i>Percy, Diana M., Rung, Alessandra & Hoddle, Mark S., 2012, An annotated checklist of the psyllids of California (Hemiptera: Psylloidea), pp. 1-27 in Zootaxa 3193</i> on page 20, DOI: <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/280093">10.5281/zenodo.280093</a>
Euphalerus jugonervosus Tuthill 1937, comb.n.
<i>jugonervosus</i> (Tuthill, 1937) comb.n. <p> <i>Euphalerus jugonervosus</i> Tuthill, 1937: 74 <i>Type locality</i>: USA, California.</p> <p> <i>Host plant</i>: Unknown.</p>Published as part of <i>Percy, Diana M., Rung, Alessandra & Hoddle, Mark S., 2012, An annotated checklist of the psyllids of California (Hemiptera: Psylloidea), pp. 1-27 in Zootaxa 3193</i> on page 19, DOI: <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/280093">10.5281/zenodo.280093</a>
Lanthanaphalara Tuthill 1959
<i>Lanthanaphalara</i> Tuthill <p>(Figs 11, 77)</p> <p> <b>Diagnosis:</b> Head as wide as mesoscutum; vertex longer than half its width, anteriorly projected into lobes on each side of the coronal suture (Fig. 11); occiput strongly developed below the eyes; genae not forming processes. Clypeus subspherical. Antenna twice as long as head width. Forewing with pterostigma wide and short; veins M+Cu1 and R subequal. Hind leg with small, nipple-like meracanthus; area beneath meracanthus forming a rounded swelling (Fig. 39); metatibia twice as long as femur, without genual spine and with a crown of 8 apical spurs. Male proctiger with well-developed posterior lobes.</p> <p> <b>Biology and damage:</b> Unknown.</p> <p> <b>Host-plant:</b> <i>Dunalia umbellata</i> (Solanaceae) (Tuthill 1959).</p> <p> <b>Distribution:</b> Endemic to the Neotropics (Burckhardt & Queiroz 2013).</p> <p> <b>Remarks:</b> This is the first record of this genus in Colombia.</p> <p> <b>Examined material:</b> <i>Lanthanaphalara</i> cf. <i>mira</i> Tuthill: <b>Nariño:</b> 5 (male, female) Pasto, 23-Aug-1961, shrubs (G. Bravo), CTNI 66.</p>Published as part of <i>Rendón-Mera, Diana Isabel, Serna, Francisco & Burckhardt, Daniel, 2017, Generic synopsis of the jumping plant-lice (Hemiptera: Sternorrhyncha: Psylloidea) from Colombia in Zootaxa 4350 (3)</i>, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4350.3.2, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/1059233">http://zenodo.org/record/1059233</a>
Marriage record of Tuthill, Archie H. and Livingstone, Donna
Marriage license for Archie H. Tuthill and Donna Livingstone. James P. Hoyt was the officiant
Mastigimas schwarzi Tuthill
Mastigimas schwarzi (Tuthill) (Figs 10, 19, 27, 35, 43, 48) Freysuila dugesii sensu Schwarz, 1899: 197, nec Aleman, 1887. Freysuila cohahuayanae Ferris, 1928: 111, p. p.; synonymised by Tuthill, 1950: 56. Coelocara schwarzi Tuthill, 1945: 237, replacement name for Freysuila dugesii sensu Schwarz nec Aleman. Material examined. Belize: 1 ♂, Toledo, Columbia River, 8.ii. 1962, Cedrela mexicana saplings in plantation (R. D. Toleman) (BMNH, dry mounted); 2 ♂, 2 ♀, Chiquibul Forest Reserve, 2.vii. 1968, on leaves of Cedrela (F. D. Bennett) (BMNH, dry mounted); 3 ♀, 12 immatures, Cayo, Chiquibul Forest, New Maria track, 29.xi. 1994, Cedrela (J. H. Martin) (BMNH, slide mounted); 1 ♀, 7 immatures, same but? Cedrela sp., sprouting trunc (BMNH, slide mounted; 11 ♂, 7 ♀, same data but San Pastor plot, 17.ii. 1996 (King & Howe) (BMNH, dry mounted).— Costa Rica: 12 ♂, 6 ♀, 12 immatures, San José, San Pedro, university campus, 1100 m, 17–18.i. 1993, Cedrela mexicana (D. Hollis) (BMNH, dry and slide mounted); 2 ♂, 1 ♀ same but San José, 20.x. 1932 (F. Nevermann) (MHNG, NHMB, dry mounted); 5 ♂, 6 ♀, 13 immatures, Cartago Province, 3 km North of Tres Rios, Finca Los Lotes, 1550 m, 10.iii. 1993, Cedrela ? tonduzii (D. Hollis) (BMNH, dry and slide mounted); 1 ♀, Coto Brus, Las Alturas, 1500 m, v. 1992 (P. Hanson); 3 ♂, 2 ♀, Ciudad Colo, El Rodeo, Finca Hamadryas, 800 m, 2.i. 2009, Cedrela odorata (D. Bolt) (NHMB, dry mounted).— Honduras: 1 ♀, Ocotopeque, 11 miles NE Nueva Ocotopeque, 6900 feet, 25.vii. 1974 (O'Biens & Marshall) (CAS, dry mounted).— Jamaica: 4 ♂, 1 ♀, Portland Parish, Caenwood, i–iii. 1981, yellow sticky band in coconut grove (BMNH, slide mounted).— Mexico: 1 ♀, 5 miles N Tamazunchale, 22.xii. 1948 (H. B. Lech) (CAS, dry mounted).— Panama: 1 ♀, Bocas de Toros, Miramar, 9 °N, 82 ° 15 ’W, 8.iii. 1979 (H. Wolda) (BMNH, slide mounted). Description of adult by Brown & Hodkinson (1988). Fifth instar immature. Antennal segments 3 / 4 length ratio 1.60–1.67. Forewing pad/ antennal segment 3 length ratio 2.25–2.47. Caudal plate (Fig. 48) angular posteriorly, 1.72–1.79 times as wide as long. Distance between anterior and posterior bands of caudal plate larger than distance between posterior band and anus, measured laterally. Circumanal ring very small, transverse diameter about 8–10 times as wide as on one side, consisting of 3–4 rows. Measurements (2 specimens, in mm). Length of antennal segment 3 0.75–0.80; forewing pad length 1.80–1.85; caudal plate length 1.40–1.45. Distribution. Recorded from Mexico (Schwarz 1899; Tuthill 1950), Costa Rica, Cuba and Mexico (Tuthill 1950), Panama, Mexico, Costa Rica and Jamaica (Brown & Hodkinson 1988), Costa Rica (Burckhardt et al. 2011), Venezuela, Belize and Cuba (Hodkinson & White 1981), and new for Honduras. Host plants. Cedrela odorata L. (= mexicana M. Roem.) and questionably C. tonduzii C. DC. Comments. Ferris (1928) listed Ficus sp. as host which is unlikely (Heslop-Harrison 1961; Brown & Hodkinson 1988).Published as part of Burckhardt, Daniel, Queiroz, Dalva L. & Drohojowska, Jowita, 2013, Revision of the neotropical jumping plant-louse genus Mastigimas (Hemiptera, Psylloidea) attacking Cedrela and Toona species (Meliaceae), pp. 1-18 in Zootaxa 3745 (1) on pages 13-14, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3745.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/28526
Trioza stygma Tuthill 1939
<i>stygma</i> Tuthill, 1939 <p> <i>Type locality</i>: USA, California <i>Host plant</i>: Unknown.</p>Published as part of <i>Percy, Diana M., Rung, Alessandra & Hoddle, Mark S., 2012, An annotated checklist of the psyllids of California (Hemiptera: Psylloidea), pp. 1-27 in Zootaxa 3193</i> on page 23, DOI: <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/280093">10.5281/zenodo.280093</a>
Cacopsylla curta Tuthill 1943
<i>curta</i> (Tuthill, 1943) <p> <i>Type locality</i>: USA, California, Colorado. <i>Additional distribution</i>: USA, Oregon. <i>Host plant</i>: <i>Salix eastwoodiae</i>.</p>Published as part of <i>Percy, Diana M., Rung, Alessandra & Hoddle, Mark S., 2012, An annotated checklist of the psyllids of California (Hemiptera: Psylloidea), pp. 1-27 in Zootaxa 3193</i> on page 9, DOI: <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/280093">10.5281/zenodo.280093</a>
sj-docx-1-spq-10.1177_01902725211037637 – Supplemental material for The Intersection of Sexual and Racial/Ethnic Identity Centrality and Mental Well-Being among Black and Latinx Sexual Minority Adults
Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-spq-10.1177_01902725211037637 for The Intersection of Sexual and Racial/Ethnic Identity Centrality and Mental Well-Being among Black and Latinx Sexual Minority Adults by Zelma Oyarvide Tuthill in Social Psychology Quarterly</p
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