94,554 research outputs found

    Calepitrimerus bungeanus Kuang, Luo & Wang 2005

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    Calepitrimerus bungeanus Kuang, Luo & Wang, 2005 Calepitrimerus bungeanus Kuang, Luo & Wang, 2005: 60. Host. Euonymus maackii Rupr. (Celastraceae). Relation to host. Vagrant on leaf undersurface, causing no apparent damage. Distribution. China (Beijing, Gansu).Published as part of Song, Zi-Wei, Xue, Xiao-Feng & Hong, Xiao-Yue, 2008, Eriophyoid mite fauna (Acari: Eriophyoidea) of Gansu Province, northwestern China with descriptions of twelve new species, pp. 1-48 in Zootaxa 1756 on page 19, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.18181

    Aculus leonuri Kuang, Luo & Wang 2005

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    Aculus leonuri Kuang, Luo & Wang, 2005 Aculus leonuri Kuang, Luo & Wang, 2005: 92–93. Host. Leonurus japonicus Houtt. (Lamiaceae). Relation to host. Vagrant. Distribution. China (Liaoning).Published as part of XUE, XIAO-FENG, GUO, JING-FENG & HONG, XIAO-YUE, 2013, Eriophyoid mites from Northeast China (Acari: Eriophyoidea) , pp. 1-123 in Zootaxa 3689 (1) on page 87, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3689.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/603121

    Frustulia hengduanensis Luo & You & Yu & Wang 2022, sp. nov.

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    Frustulia hengduanensis sp. nov. Fen Luo & Quanxi Wang (LM Figs 1–14, SEM Figs 15–24) Description:— LM: Valves elliptico-lanceolate or rhomboid with slightly undulate margins. Apices narrowly rounded and moderately protracted. Valve length 43–55 μm, breadth 11–14 μm (n=30). The longitudinal ribs slightly curved. On the valve face, the striation patterns are weakly discernible under LM. Striae absent within the central area, forming a dumbbell-shaped hyaline zone (Figs 1–14). SEM: External view, the striae parallel at the valve center and slightly convergent towards the apices, with 36–40 striae per 10 μm (Fig. 15). Striae wavy along the length of the valve (Figs 15–16). The valve ends circumradiated by one or two rows of areolae (Figs 18–19). Areolae rounded to elliptical at the valve center and more slit-like distally, with 33–36 areolae per 10 μm (Figs 17–18). Striae absent within the central area, forming a dumbbell-shaped hyaline zone (Figs 16–17). The raphe is filiform, and both the proximal and the terminal raphe ends are T-shaped (Figs 17–19). Internal view, areolae have circular to rectangular hymenes (Fig. 22). Both the longitudinal ribs and the raphe slightly curved (Fig. 20), while both proximal and terminal raphe ends are straight (Figs 21–24). At the apices, the longitudinal ribs and the helictoglossae fuse to form a small porte-crayon (Fig. 24). Type: — CHINA. Sichuan Province: Hengduan Mountains, Q.X. Wang, F. Luo and colleagues, August 2015 (holotype SHTU! SC201508131, Biology Department Diatom Herbarium, Shanghai Normal University, Shanghai, China = Fig. 2. Isotype YXNU! SC201508131, Biology Department Diatom Herbarium, Yuxi Normal University, Yuxi City, Yunnan Province, China). Etymology: —The species is named for its type locality in the Hengduan Mountains. Ecology: —All samples were collected from fen peat and a stream fen at elevations of 4160–4750 m asl in freshwater at 5.3–15.3 °C, with pH 6.9–8.1, salinity 0.01–0.08 ‰, and conductivity 20–91 μs∙ cm-1.. Distribution: —This species is known from five samples collected in the Haizi Mountain Reserve, Daocheng County, Sichuan Province, China (slide nos. SC201508127, SC201508128, SC201508131, SC201508132, and SC201508137) and from one sample collected in Zuogong County, Tibet (slide no. HDS201810304).Published as part of Luo, Fen, You, Qingmin, Yu, Pan & Wang, Quanxi, 2022, Frustulia hengduanensis sp. nov. a new diatom (Bacillariophyceae) from Hengduan Mountains, China, pp. 193-199 in Phytotaxa 559 (2) on pages 195-196, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.559.2.8, http://zenodo.org/record/702162

    Response to Wang and Luo

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    Abstract This article is a response to Wang and Luo. See correspondence article http://www.biomedcentral.com/1741-7007/10/30 and the original research article http://www.biomedcentral.com/1741-7007/9/24.</p

    Bai pin pu wang luo zhong de jing ji xue

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    Luo, Yuan.Thesis Ph.D. Chinese University of Hong Kong 2015.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 273-283).Abstracts also in Chinese.Title from PDF title page (viewed on 01, November, 2016).Luo, Yuan

    Hu lian wang luo shang de beng ta xing wei

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    Cheung, Wing Kai = 互連網絡上的崩塌行為 / 張永佳.Thesis M.Phil. Chinese University of Hong Kong 2015.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 96-99).Abstracts also in Chinese.Title from PDF title page (viewed on 14, September, 2016).Cheung, Wing Kai = Hu lian wang luo shang de beng ta xing wei / Zhang Yongjia

    Baiyuerius rugosus Luo & Lu & Zhang & Wang 2023, comb. nov.

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    &lt;p&gt;Baiyuerius rugosus (Wang, Peng &amp; Kim, 1996) comb. nov.&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;Figs 3, 7 (皱纹百越蛛)&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;Coras rugosus Wang et al. 1996: 78, figs 4-6 (&female;); Song et al. 1999: 388, fig. 229E, F (&female;); Yin et al. 2012: 999, fig. 513a-c (&female;).&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;Coelotes rugosus: Wang and J&auml;ger 2007: 33, figs 41-43; Wang and J&auml;ger 2010: 1176, fig. 2H (&female;); Zhu et al. 2017: 186, fig. 94A, B (&female;).&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;Material examined.&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;1 female (holotype, HNU): China, Hunan Province, Chenbu County, 1982, Y. Liu leg.&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;Diagnosis.&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt; Female resembles &lt;i&gt;B. yuelu&lt;/i&gt; sp. nov. in having atrium similar and conspicuous epigynal teeth (Fig. 6; Zhao et al. 2023: fig. 7A-C) but distinguished by the following: spermathecae highly convoluted (Fig. 3B) vs round in &lt;i&gt;B. yuelu&lt;/i&gt; sp. nov. (Fig. 6C); copulatory ducts with two turns (Fig. 3B) vs with one turn in &lt;i&gt;B. yuelu&lt;/i&gt; sp. nov. (Fig. 6C).&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;Description (partial).&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;Epigyne (Fig. 3A, B): atrium glasses-shaped, occupying 1/3 of epigyne; epigynal hood located laterally; epigynal teeth distinct; copulatory opening located mid-centrally; copulatory ducts originating centrally, sinuous; spermathecae fist-shaped; fertilization ducts transparent. Habitus as shown by Wang et al. (1996).&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;Male unknown.&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;Distribution.&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt;China (Hunan) (Fig. 7).&lt;/p&gt;Published as part of &lt;i&gt;Luo, Bin, Lu, Feng, Zhang, Zhi-Sheng &amp; Wang, Lu-Yu, 2023, A further study on the spider genus Baiyuerius Zhao, Li &amp; Li, 2023, from China (Agelenidae, Coelotinae), pp. 91-102 in ZooKeys 1184&lt;/i&gt; on page 91, DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.1184.10793

    Wang Shuo and the commercialisation of contemporary Chinese culture

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    This thesis examines the commercialisation of Chinese culture that has taken place over the past twenty years in mainland China. It explores the contribution of Wang Shuo, a cultural figure who straddles different fields of culture, moving from literature to the ultimate mass culture medium of television, this study plots Wang Shuo' s development from educational failure, to business failure, to fiction writer, film &amp; TV editor, film director and cultural critic and analyst. His stories, films, TV series and articles have caused shock-waves throughout national cultural circles as he has transformed the terms of the debate from academic discourse to a validation of the role of the market in the culture field. Although Wang Shuo has not been labelled as a dissident, his approach to the culture market has had a more subversive effect on official ideology that those overt dissidents who have had to live in exile or have been imprisoned. He has utilised the language of official ideology to satirise the authorities, turning the ideology and its supporters into figures of fun. Yet his own goals have been strictly personal and economic ones. The authorities recognize the value of Wang Shuo's work in the cultural market but at the same time distrust his works and place him under strict censorship. Examining the way Wang Shuo and people surround him have succeeded in different fields of cultural achievement is a mirror to understanding the process of the transformation of contemporary Chinese culture from a socialist state-controlled culture to a market-oriented mass culture industry

    Dianous pengi Wang & Tang & Luo 2019, sp. n.

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    Dianous pengi Wang, Tang & Luo sp. n. (Figs. 7, 8, 27–32) Type material. Holotype. China: Guangxi: &male;, glued on a card with labels as follows: “ China: Guangxi Prov., Jinxiu County, 16 km, alt. 900m, 29.VII.2011, Peng Zhong leg.” “ Holotype / Dianous pengi / Wang, Tang & Luo” [red handwritten label] (SHNU). Paratypes. 3&male;&male; 1&female;, same data as for the holotype; 2&male;&male; 2&female;&female;, same data as for the holotype except 31.VII.2011, Zhu Jian-Qing leg. (SHNU); 2&male;&male; 1&female;&female;, Guangxi Prov., Jinxiu County, 16 km, alt. 850–950 m, 24.VII.2011, Peng Zhong leg. (SHNU, cPut). Description. Head, pronotum, abdomen and appendages black with strong blue metallic tint, elytra dark blue, each with a large violet to coppery mark on posterior half reaching the lateral margin of the elytron, portions along anterior and inner margins of the marks distinctly lighter than remain portions. Pubescence silvery to brownish, nearly invisible on pronotum. BL: 5.5–6.2 mm, FL: 3.0– 3.2 mm. HW: 1.11–1.17 mm, PL: 0.79–0.83 mm, PW: 0.83–0.88 mm, EL: 1.46–1.62 mm, EW: 1.35–1.49 mm, SL: 1.27–1.35 mm. Head 0.76–0.84 times as wide as elytra; interocular area with deep longitudinal furrows, median portion slightly narrower than the side portions and convex posteriorly, extending a little beyond the level of inner eye margins; punctures round and well delimited except those at the furrows between median and side portions more or less longitudinal confluent; diameter of punctures as wide as medial ommatidia of eyes; interstices reticulated, distinctly narrower than half the diameter of punctures. Antennae relative long, when reflexed, reaching the humeral portion of elytra. Pronotum 0.93–0.97 times as long as wide; disk uneven with two large basal impressions and two transverse lateromedian impressions, each basal impression with a large outer tubercle; punctures slightly larger than those of head, mostly confluent; interstices reticulated, narrower than half the diameter of punctures, more or less rotated around the median portion. Elytra 1.05–1.09 times as long as wide; disk slightly uneven with shallow humeral impressions and shallow sutural impressions; punctures similar to those of head though slightly larger in average; interstices indistinctly microsculptured, narrower than half the diameter of punctures. Metasternum with median area impressed, sparsely punctate and densely reticulated, diameters of punctures similar to or smaller than those of head. Legs slender, metatarsomere 1 slightly longer than the following three segments combined, metatarsomere 4 simple. Abdomen semi-cylindrical with broad, horizontal and densely punctate paratergites, width of paratergites of segment IV slightly wider than median cross section of metatibia; posterior margin of tergite VII with palisade fringe; abdominal tergites III–VII with punctation oval, interstices microsculptured and mostly smaller than half the diameter of punctures; tergite VIII with punctation distinctly larger than those of former tergites, interstices shallowly reticulated, smaller than diameter of punctures. Male. Sternite VII slightly emarginated; sternite VIII (Fig. 27) broadly emarginated in the middle of posterior margin; sternite IX (Fig. 28) with apicolateral projections indistinct, posterior margin emarginated. Aedeagus (Fig. 29, 30) robust, median lobe gradually tapering apicad and broadly blunted at apex, anterior margin of apical sclerotized portion with few short setae, parameres slender, longer than median lobe, each with 8–11 setae on inner side of apical portion. Female. Sternite VIII (Fig. 31) with two acute projection in the middle; valvifer (Fig. 32) rounded apically. Etymology. This species is named in honor of Dr. Peng Zhong, the collector of the species. Distribution. China (Guangxi). Remarks. The new species belongs to Dianous calceatus complex. It can be easily distinguished from other species by the smaller size, each elytron with only one metallic mark on posterior half, and pronotum with dense punctation.Published as part of Wang, Wei, Tang, Liang & Luo, Yong-Ting, 2019, Notes on the genus Dianous LEACH, 1819 with description of a new species from China (Coleoptera, Staphylinidae), pp. 282-288 in Zootaxa 4686 (2) on pages 284-287, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4686.2.8, http://zenodo.org/record/349016

    Epitrimerus armeniacae Kuang, Luo & Wang 2005

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    &lt;i&gt;Epitrimerus armeniacae&lt;/i&gt; Kuang, Luo &amp; Wang 2005 &lt;p&gt; &lt;i&gt;Epitrimerus armeniacae&lt;/i&gt; Kuang, Luo &amp; Wang, 2005: 55.&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt; &lt;i&gt;Epitrimerus armeniacae&lt;/i&gt;; Song &lt;i&gt;et al&lt;/i&gt;., 2008: 25.&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt; &lt;b&gt;Host.&lt;/b&gt; &lt;i&gt;Prunus armeniaca&lt;/i&gt; L. (Rosaceae).&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt; &lt;b&gt;Relation to host.&lt;/b&gt; Vagrant.&lt;/p&gt; &lt;p&gt; &lt;b&gt;Distribution.&lt;/b&gt; China (Gansu, Jilin).&lt;/p&gt;Published as part of &lt;i&gt;XUE, XIAO-FENG, GUO, JING-FENG &amp; HONG, XIAO-YUE, 2013, &lt;/i&gt;&lt;p class=" HeadingRunIn "&gt;&lt;i&gt; &lt;strong&gt; Eriophyoid mites from Northeast China (Acari: Eriophyoidea) , pp. 1-123 in Zootaxa 3689 (1)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/i&gt;&lt;strong&gt; on page 50, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3689.1.1, &lt;a href="http://zenodo.org/record/6031216"&gt;http://zenodo.org/record/6031216&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/p&gt
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