1,726,444 research outputs found
Onthophagus fuscus parafuscus Zunino y Halffter, nuevo nombre para O. f. orientalis Zunino & Halffter, 1988
En 1988, en el marco de la revisión de los Onthophagus del grupo chevrolati, Zunino y Halffter (Monogr. Mus. Reg. Sci. Nat. Torino, IX págs. 36, 41: claves; págs. 82-83: descripción in extenso) describieron como subespecie orientalis una población de Onthophagus fuscus Boucomont, distribuida en la Sierra Madre Oriental, entre los estados mexicanos de Hidalgo y Puebla. Subsecuentemente Fernando Z. Vaz de Mello (comunicación personal) nos señaló que posiblemente se tratara de un caso de homonimia. De hecho, en 1868 Harold (Col. Hefte, IV pág. 83) describió Onthophagus orientalis, de la Región Oriental. Según las disposiciones del Código Internacional de Nomenclatura Zoológica, se trata efectivamente de un nomen praeoccupatum. Por lo tanto, proponemos para la subespecie oriental de Onthophagus fuscus el nuevo nombre O. f. parafuscus.En 1988, en el marco de la revisión de los Onthophagus del grupo chevrolati, Zunino y Halffter (Monogr. Mus. Reg. Sci. Nat. Torino, IX págs. 36, 41: claves; págs. 82-83: descripción in extenso) describieron como subespecie orientalis una población de Onthophagus fuscus Boucomont, distribuida en la Sierra Madre Oriental, entre los estados mexicanos de Hidalgo y Puebla. Subsecuentemente Fernando Z. Vaz de Mello (comunicación personal) nos señaló que posiblemente se tratara de un caso de homonimia. De hecho, en 1868 Harold (Col. Hefte, IV pág. 83) describió Onthophagus orientalis, de la Región Oriental. Según las disposiciones del Código Internacional de Nomenclatura Zoológica, se trata efectivamente de un nomen praeoccupatum. Por lo tanto, proponemos para la subespecie oriental de Onthophagus fuscus el nuevo nombre O. f. parafuscus
Curator Bowie Zunino on Nature Loves Courage
Join Bowie Zunino, co-executive director of the Wassaic Project in Wassaic, New York, for a lecture on the traveling exhibition Nature Loves Courage.https://scholarship.depauw.edu/peeler_event/1087/thumbnail.jp
Essai préliminaire sur l'évolution des armures génitales des Scarabaeinae, par rapport à la taxonomie du groupe et à l'évolution du comportement de nidification.
Zunino Mario. Essai préliminaire sur l'évolution des armures génitales des Scarabaeinae, par rapport à la taxonomie du groupe et à l'évolution du comportement de nidification [Col. Scarabaeidae]. In: Bulletin de la Société entomologique de France, volume 88 (7-8), Septembre-octobre 1983. Livre du Cent Cinquantenaire. Premier congrès international des entomologistes d'expression française. Paris, 6-9 juillet 1982. Comptes rendus des travaux. IV. pp. 531-542
Zunino (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Scarabaeinae), with Ecological and Distributional Notes
Sánchez-Huerta, J. L., Tonelli, M., Zunino, M., Halffter, G. (2015): Redescription of Onthophagus halffteri Zunino (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Scarabaeinae), with Ecological and Distributional Notes. The Coleopterists Bulletin 69 (2): 225-230, DOI: 10.1649/0010-065x-69.2.225, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1649/0010-065x-69.2.22
Fig. 8 in Redescription of Onthophagus halffteri Zunino (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Scarabaeinae), with Ecological and Distributional Notes
Fig. 8. Female genital structures of a) Onthophagus halffteri and b) Onthophagus hippopotamus.Published as part of <i>Sánchez-Huerta, J. L., Tonelli, M., Zunino, M. & Halffter, G., 2015, Redescription of Onthophagus halffteri Zunino (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Scarabaeinae), with Ecological and Distributional Notes, pp. 225-230 in The Coleopterists Bulletin 69 (2)</i> on page 228, DOI: 10.1649/0010-065x-69.2.225, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/10104788">http://zenodo.org/record/10104788</a>
Fig. 7 in Redescription of Onthophagus halffteri Zunino (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Scarabaeinae), with Ecological and Distributional Notes
Fig. 7. Onthophagus species. Male genitalia aedeagus, lateral view: a) O. halffteri, b) O. hippopotamus. Aedeagus, frontal view: c) O. halffteri, d) O. hippopotamus. Copulatory lamellae: e) O. halffteri, f) O. hippopotamus. Accessory lamellae: g) O. halffteri, h) O. hippopotamus.Published as part of <i>Sánchez-Huerta, J. L., Tonelli, M., Zunino, M. & Halffter, G., 2015, Redescription of Onthophagus halffteri Zunino (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Scarabaeinae), with Ecological and Distributional Notes, pp. 225-230 in The Coleopterists Bulletin 69 (2)</i> on page 227, DOI: 10.1649/0010-065x-69.2.225, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/10104788">http://zenodo.org/record/10104788</a>
Fig. 9. a in Redescription of Onthophagus halffteri Zunino (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Scarabaeinae), with Ecological and Distributional Notes
Fig. 9. a) Location of species associated with nests included in the Onthophagus hippopotamus line, taking the new records of Onthophagus halffteri into consideration. Map modified from Zunino and Halffter (1988a). b) Geographic location of O. halffteri and O. hippopotamus on the eastern slope of the Cofre de Perote Mountain. Contour lines are 100 m intervals of elevation.Published as part of <i>Sánchez-Huerta, J. L., Tonelli, M., Zunino, M. & Halffter, G., 2015, Redescription of Onthophagus halffteri Zunino (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Scarabaeinae), with Ecological and Distributional Notes, pp. 225-230 in The Coleopterists Bulletin 69 (2)</i> on page 229, DOI: 10.1649/0010-065x-69.2.225, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/10104788">http://zenodo.org/record/10104788</a>
Onthophagus (Furconthophagus) Zunino 1979
Subg. Onthophagus (Furconthophagus) Zunino, 1979 Onthophagus (Furconthophagus) Zunino, 1979, Boll. Mus. Zool. Univ. Tor., 1: 10 (Type species: Scarabaeus furcatus Fabricius, 1781).Published as part of Cheung, Kahong, Bai, Ming, Leung, Manhin, Lee, Yingming, Chan, Kinfung & Yang, Xingke, 2018, Scarabaeinae (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae) from Hong Kong, pp. 233-267 in Zoological Systematics 43 (3) on page 249, DOI: 10.11865/zs.201830, http://zenodo.org/record/461770
Figs. 1–6 in Redescription of Onthophagus halffteri Zunino (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Scarabaeinae), with Ecological and Distributional Notes
Figs. 1–6. Onthophagus halffteri. Males: 1) Hypertelic; 2) Eutelic; 3) Hypotelic. Females: 4) Hypertelic; 5) Eutelic;Published as part of <i>Sánchez-Huerta, J. L., Tonelli, M., Zunino, M. & Halffter, G., 2015, Redescription of Onthophagus halffteri Zunino (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae: Scarabaeinae), with Ecological and Distributional Notes, pp. 225-230 in The Coleopterists Bulletin 69 (2)</i> on page 226, DOI: 10.1649/0010-065x-69.2.225, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/10104788">http://zenodo.org/record/10104788</a>
Parametri biogeografici della Biodiversità. Struttura e rapporti del popolamento siculo a Scarabeidi degradatori (Coleoptera, Scarabaeoidea).
In this paper, we studied the relationships between ecobiogeography and historical biogeography, based on Sicily’s
population of Scarab dung beetles (Geotrupidae and Scarabaeidae).We based the island’s ecogeographic partition
on its floristic districts and subdistricts (Brullo et al., 1995).We applied some techniques of biodiversity analysis
to the study of I and II order chorotypes (Bellucci et al., 2007; Zunino, 2005, 2007). Species and groups found
correspond to 14 chorotypes of I order and to 22 of II order, differently represented and distributed in the sample.
The !, and " diversities were studied with both hierarchical levels of chorology. The obtained results, using different
indexes, confirm Sicily’s landscape heterogeneity. # diversity does not refute the proposed phytogeographic
island’s partition in districts. The analysis of the districts’ similitude, on the other hand, seems to refute the hierarchically
superior partition in subsectors. In fact, all the calculated indexes agree on grouping districts that in the
phytogeographic classification belong to different subsectors. Therefore, with the comparative analysis of the I order
chorotypes, the synchronic relations of the studied Sicilian faunistic component are discussed. Finally, through
the analysis of the II order chorotypes, considered as spaces that are occupied by panbiogeographic tracks, the relationships
of the Sicilian Scarab beetles are examined with a historical biogeography standpoint, suggesting hypotheses
of primary biogeographic homologies. From the same analysis, it becomes satisfactorily clear that Sicily is
included in more than one panbiogeographic node, and that this is evidence of its involvement in allotopic and allochronic
biogeographic histories
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