NEW CULICIDÆ FROM NORTH AMERICA
نویسندگان
چکیده
منابع مشابه
Six new species of Acomoptera from North America (Diptera, Mycetophilidae)
Six new species are described, raising the number of North American Acomoptera species to seven and the genus total to ten, and nearly doubling the number of species within the putative clade containing Acomoptera, Drepanocercus, and Paratinia. These novel species forms have implications for the concept of Acomoptera that in turn, may impact our understanding of its generic relationships and th...
متن کاملNew Hydrobiid Snails (mollusca: Gastropoda: Prosobranchia: Truncatelloidea) from North America
— The following new species of Cochliopinae (Prosobranchia: Hydrobiidae) are described: Aroapyrgus polius from Mexico; Cochliopa perforata from Costa Rica; Heleobops clytus from the Dominican Republic; H. torquatus from Jamaica; Lithococcus aletes from Costa Rica; and Littoridina microcona from Costa Rica. In addition, the following new genera and species are described: Mesobia pristina from Ho...
متن کاملSix new Eimeria species from vespertilionid bats of North America.
Twenty species of bats (Molossidae, Vespertilionidae) were collected from California, New Mexico, Oregon, South Carolina, Utah, and Baja California Norte (Mexico), and 29 of 404 (7%) animals, including Antrozous pallidus, Eptesicus fuscus, Myotis auriculus, Myotis californicus, Myotis ciliolabrum, Myotis evotis, Myotis lucifugus, Myotis thysanodes, Myotis vivesi, Myotis volans, Myotis yumanensi...
متن کاملTwo new desert Eschscholzia (Papaveraceae) from southwestern North America
Two new species of Eschscholzia are described. Both are found in the deserts of California and one extends outside the state boundary into Arizona. Eschscholzia androuxii Still, sp. nov. is found mainly in and around Joshua Tree National Park in Riverside and San Bernardino counties. Eschscholzia papastillii Still, sp. nov. is found from the northern Mojave south through Joshua Tree National Pa...
متن کاملA new genus of horse from Pleistocene North America
The extinct 'New World stilt-legged', or NWSL, equids constitute a perplexing group of Pleistocene horses endemic to North America. Their slender distal limb bones resemble those of Asiatic asses, such as the Persian onager. Previous palaeogenetic studies, however, have suggested a closer relationship to caballine horses than to Asiatic asses. Here, we report complete mitochondrial and partial ...
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ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: The Canadian Entomologist
سال: 1896
ISSN: 0008-347X,1918-3240
DOI: 10.4039/ent2843-2