109,195 research outputs found

    Wong, M P

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    Wong, P M

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    P. Huard et M. Wong, La médecine chinoise au cours des siècles

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    Théodoridès Jean. P. Huard et M. Wong, La médecine chinoise au cours des siècles. In: Revue d'histoire des sciences et de leurs applications, tome 13, n°2, 1960. pp. 167-169

    P. Huard et M. Wong, La médecine chinoise au cours des siècles

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    Théodoridès Jean. P. Huard et M. Wong, La médecine chinoise au cours des siècles. In: Revue d'histoire des sciences et de leurs applications, tome 13, n°2, 1960. pp. 167-169

    Tawaia sabahensis S. Y. Wong & P. C. Boyce

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    Tawaia sabahensis (S.Y.Wong, S.L.Low & P.C.Boyce) S.Y.Wong & P.C.Boyce Material examined. MALAYSIA – Sandakan • Tongod, Gunung Tingkar; 05°18′00″N, 117°07′45″E; 167.64 m elev.; 24 August 1992; K. M. Wong & Joseph Radin WKM 2215 (SAN). Identification. Tawaia sabahensis is the only species in Tawaia and is unique by the combination of globose thecae and spathulate interpistillar staminodes. In overall aspect, by the nodding spathe on a long, slender peduncle, and by the spathe limb hardly opening at pistillate anthesis and deliquescing acroscopically, spathe recurved and abscises, remained with a 5 mm rim beyond the junction of upper spathe and the persistent lower spathe, upper spathe then marcescent and was partially attached on the persistent lower spathe, thence browning and marcescent during staminate anthesis (Low et al. 2018). Distribution and ecology. Endemic to Sabah. Occurs as an obligate rheophyte on ultramafic (ultrabasic) river boulders and waterfalls under moist lowland forest, elevation between 135 and 300 m.Published as part of Wong, Sin Yeng & Joling, Jyloerica, 2021, Checklist of aroids (Alismatales, Araceae) from Sabah (Malaysian Borneo), pp. 931-974 in Check List 17 (3) on page 971, DOI: 10.15560/17.3.93

    Rhynchopyle loi S. Y. Wong & P. C. Boyce

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    Rhynchopyle loi (P.C.Boyce & S.Y.Wong) S.Y.Wong & P.C.Boyce Figure 6A Material examined. MALAYSIA – Tawau • Tawau Hills Park, trail to Bukit Gelas; 04°23′59″N, 117°53′21″E; 25 November 1998; J. T. Pereira 551 (SAN) • Tawau, Tawau Hills Park, Bukit Gelas Waterfall; 04°23′00″N, 117°53′00″E; 30 June 2006; Julia S. SAN 147860 (SAN) • Tawau River Forest Reserve; [04°24′40″N, 117°53′28″E]; 33 m (100 ft.) elev.; 6 July 1959; W. Meijer SAN 19468 (L). Identification. Flowering Rhynchopyle loi most closely resembles R. pileata (S.Y.Wong & P.C.Boyce) S.Y.Wong & P.C.Boyce by the deep magenta-purple strongly rostrate spathe limb. However, R. loi is readily differentiated by the spathe basally with a prominent ventral mentum, by the larger, centrally impressed interstice staminodes held in a zone wider than the remainder of the spadix, the stamens irregularly arranged (not carried in two rows), and the proportion- ately longer staminate flower zone. The leaves of R. loi are only ca. half as long as those of R. pileata, and much narrower; the entire plant is seldom exceeding 15 cm (Boyce and Wong 2013b). Distribution and ecology. Endemic to Sabah. Growing on bare or moss-covered basalt waterfall rocks under perhumid lowland forest; between 200 and 300 m elevation. Typically inhabits the steep banks of muddy, meandering lowland streams and, less frequently, the floor of lowlying forest where it may be inundated in wet periods.Published as part of Wong, Sin Yeng & Joling, Jyloerica, 2021, Checklist of aroids (Alismatales, Araceae) from Sabah (Malaysian Borneo), pp. 931-974 in Check List 17 (3) on page 961, DOI: 10.15560/17.3.93

    Studies on Schismatoglottideae(Araceae) of Borneo VII : Schottarum and Bakoa, two new genera from Sarawak, Malaysian Borneo

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    Schottarum P. C. Boyce & S. Y. Wong and Bakoa P. C. Boyce & S. Y. Wong are described as new genera from Sarawak, each with one species : Schottarum sarikeense (Bogner & M. Hotta) P. C. Boyce & S. Y. Wong based upon Schismatoglottis sarikeensis (Bogner & M. Hotta) Bogner & A. Hay and Bakoa lucens (Bogner)..

    Schismatoglottis saafiei Kartini, P. C. Boyce. & S. Y. Wong 2017

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    Schismatoglottis saafiei Kartini, P.C.Boyce. & S.Y.Wong Material examined. MALAYSIA – Pedalaman • Keningau, Ulu Senagang; 05°21′51′′N, 116°01′26′′E; 558 m elev.; Suzana S. SAN 151904 (SAN). Identification. A species of the Trifasciata complex as characterised by elongated slender subcylindric spadix with the staminate flower zone held partly within the lower spathe chamber and densely arranged staminodes of appendix with rounded to pointed tips, but immediately distinguished from all other described species of this complex by the unique thinly rubbery brilliant green leaf blades (Kartini et al. 2017). Distribution and ecology. Endemic to Sabah. Known only from the type locality in Tawau Hills Park on the banks of Tiku River along the trail to Galas Hill. Grows in open areas and along track sides in lowland evergreen perhumid forest on basalts at elevation about 100 m and is so far known only from the type locality where it is locally abundant.Published as part of Wong, Sin Yeng & Joling, Jyloerica, 2021, Checklist of aroids (Alismatales, Araceae) from Sabah (Malaysian Borneo), pp. 931-974 in Check List 17 (3) on pages 965-966, DOI: 10.15560/17.3.93

    Megaselia paulizona Brown & Hartop & Wong 2022, New Species

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    Megaselia paulizona New Species Fig. 24. urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act: D8499749-E8B5-4524-860E- E48D19C20176 Holotype. Male. COLOMBIA: Bogota: Venado de Oro, 4.5983°N,- 74.0614°W, 2600 m, 7.ix.2016, M. Gonzalez, forest, Malaise trap [LACM ENT 366293] (BIOUG40364 -D09) (IAVH). Holotype Barcode TTTATATTTTATTTTTGGAGCATGAGCTGG AATAGTGGGAACTTCTTTAAGAATTTTAATTCGAGCTGAAT TAGGCCACCCAGGAGCTTTAATCGGAGATGACCAAATTTAT AACGTAATTGTAACTGCCCATGCATTTATTATAATTTTTTTTA TAGTAATACCTATTATAATAGGAGGATTTGGAAATTGATTAG TACCTCTAATATTAGGGGCTCCTGATATAGCTTTTCCCCGT ATAAATAATATAAGATTTTGAATGCTTCCTCCTTCATTAACTT TATTACTAGCAAGTAGTATAGTTGAAAATGGAGCTGGGACA GGATGAACTGTATACCCTCCTTTATCCTCTAGAATTGCTCAT AGAGGCTCTTCTGTAGATCTTGCAATTTTTTCCCTTCATTTA GCAGGAATTTCTTCAATTTTAGGAGCAGTAAATTTTATTACT ACAATTATTAACATACGCTCATCCGGAATTACTTTTGACCGA ATGCCTTTATTTGTATGATCAGTAGGAATTACAGCTTTACTC TTACTTCTTTCTTTACCTGTATTAGCAGGAGCAATTACTATAC TTTTAACTGACCGAAATTTTAATACGTCATTTTTTGACCCTG CTGGAGGAGGAGACCCAATTTTATACCAACATTTATT BOLD Specimens Examined. 4 further specimens (BIOUG 40594-C12, BIOUG 40668-C04, BIOUG 41075-H03, BIOUG 41217-F04)from the same locality as the holotype (IAVH). Diagnosis. This species differs from the sympatric M. colombizona by about 10% mean divergence in the barcode (Fig. 1), as well as the wing shape (Fig. 24). The most similar barcode is that of M. winnizona, from which it differs by 6.8% minimum p-distance (Fig. 1, Table 1). This species is in the BOLD as BOLD:ADV9367. Distribution. Colombia. Etymology. Named for Paul Hebert, who has kindly helped the senior author with barcoding issues.Published as part of Brown, Brian V., Hartop, Emily A. & Wong, Maria A., 2022, Sixteen in One: White-Belted Megaselia Rondani (Diptera: Phoridae) From the New World Challenge Species Concepts, pp. 1-17 in Insect Systematics and Diversity 6 (3) on page 11, DOI: 10.1093/isd/ixac00

    Diisopropyl methylphosphonate

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    Prepared by: Sciences International, Inc. under subcontract to Research Triangle Institute ; prepared for U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service, Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry under contract no. 205-93-0606.Chemical manager(s)/author(s): Malcolm Williams, Diana Wong, Patricia M. Bittner, Steve Rhodes.Includes bibliographical references: p. 121-130.205-93-060
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