Updated 14.07.2021 REFERENCES
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Green-Tree Retention and Controlled Burning in Restoration and Conservation of Beetle Diversity in Boreal Forests
Dissertationes Forestales 21 Green-tree retention and controlled burning in restoration and conservation of beetle diversity in boreal forests Esko Hyvärinen Faculty of Forestry University of Joensuu Academic dissertation To be presented, with the permission of the Faculty of Forestry of the University of Joensuu, for public criticism in auditorium C2 of the University of Joensuu, Yliopistonkatu 4, Joensuu, on 9th June 2006, at 12 o’clock noon. 2 Title: Green-tree retention and controlled burning in restoration and conservation of beetle diversity in boreal forests Author: Esko Hyvärinen Dissertationes Forestales 21 Supervisors: Prof. Jari Kouki, Faculty of Forestry, University of Joensuu, Finland Docent Petri Martikainen, Faculty of Forestry, University of Joensuu, Finland Pre-examiners: Docent Jyrki Muona, Finnish Museum of Natural History, Zoological Museum, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland Docent Tomas Roslin, Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences, Division of Population Biology, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland Opponent: Prof. Bengt Gunnar Jonsson, Department of Natural Sciences, Mid Sweden University, Sundsvall, Sweden ISSN 1795-7389 ISBN-13: 978-951-651-130-9 (PDF) ISBN-10: 951-651-130-9 (PDF) Paper copy printed: Joensuun yliopistopaino, 2006 Publishers: The Finnish Society of Forest Science Finnish Forest Research Institute Faculty of Agriculture and Forestry of the University of Helsinki Faculty of Forestry of the University of Joensuu Editorial Office: The Finnish Society of Forest Science Unioninkatu 40A, 00170 Helsinki, Finland http://www.metla.fi/dissertationes 3 Hyvärinen, Esko 2006. Green-tree retention and controlled burning in restoration and conservation of beetle diversity in boreal forests. University of Joensuu, Faculty of Forestry. ABSTRACT The main aim of this thesis was to demonstrate the effects of green-tree retention and controlled burning on beetles (Coleoptera) in order to provide information applicable to the restoration and conservation of beetle species diversity in boreal forests. -
Pharmaceutical Sciences
IAJPS 2019, 06 (10), 12713-12727 Muhammad Yousaf Ghilzai et al ISSN 2349-7750 CODEN [USA]: IAJPBB ISSN: 2349-7750 INDO AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHARMACEUTICAL SCIENCES Available online at: http://www.iajps.com Research Article FOOD PREFERENCE OF QUETTA BORER, AEOLESTHES SARTA COLEOPTERA; (CERAMBYCIDAE) UNDER CONTROL CONDITION 1Muhammad Yousaf Ghilzai,1Arshad Ghani Khan,2Imran Ali Sani, 2Nisar Ahmed 1Mohammad Amin 1Zafarullah,1Azhar Sheikh,1Essa Khan, 1Zia ul Haq,2Umair Ahmed, 3Sajid Nabi 1Balochistan Agriculture College Quetta, Pakistan 2Balochistan University of Information Technology Engineering and Management sciences, BUITEMS, Quetta, Pakistan 3University of Balochistan, Quetta Pakistan Article Received: March 2019 Accepted: April 2019 Published: October 2019 Abstract: Balochistan is the largest province of Pakistan, which is blessed with four agro-ecological zones and it has unique environment condition for the production of a great variety of quality fruits, that’s why the province is known as the fruit-basket of the country. Among these fruits’ apple, apricot and almond are considered as important fruits of the world and Pakistan. Fruits provide nutrients and vitamins to the human. These fruits are generally grown in temperate regions of Pakistan especially in Balochistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KPK). These fruits are attacked by number of insect pests viz, codling moth, shot hole borer, aphids and san Jose scale but borers (roundhead borer and flat-headed borer) are most serious/ destructive pest and potential threat to deciduous fruit of Balochistan. Adult stages feed on the buds, cortex and causing heavy leaf defoliation. While, immature stage (larvae) bore into the tree and destroyed their xylem and phloem bundle which badly affects the yield of the tree. -
History Happenings
History Happenings A newsletter published by the Department of History The University of Memphis Vol. 13, no. 1 February 2017 "Peace in Colombia," The Economist, Dec. 10, 2016 Editor: Guiomar Duenas-Vargas Layout Assistant: A.L. Savage All the Single Ladies By Dr. Cookie Woolner I’m a new Assistant Professor in the History Department who specializes in gender, sexuality, and race in modern American culture. I’m giving an upcoming pizza talk during Women’s History Month entitled, “All the Single Ladies”: Spinsters, Bachelor Maids, and Unmarried Women in American History,” which will examine how unmarried women’s position in U.S. society has changed over time. Here I’ll give a preview of some of my talk’s subject matter, focusing on late 19th and early 20th century America, my favorite era to research and teach. My research interests focus on unconventional women’s lives, such as queer women in the era before gay and women’s liberation, as well as female performers, such as singers and actresses. Unmarried and single women also transgress social norms and traditional roles for women in society, but another reason I’m interested in this topic is personal, as I’ve spent most of my adult life as a single woman (“of a certain age,” even). It’s hard not to notice the many spoken and unspoken privileges that couples – especially heterosexual and married ones, but queer and unmarried ones too – are given, economically and socially. There’s also a lot of overlap between the social stigma of being unmarried and/or being queer: both groups are often perceived as immature, not full adults. -
Bark Beetle Pheromones and Pine Volatiles: Attractant Kairomone Lure Blend for Longhorn Beetles (Cerambycidae) in Pine Stands of the Southeastern United States
FOREST ENTOMOLOGY Bark Beetle Pheromones and Pine Volatiles: Attractant Kairomone Lure Blend for Longhorn Beetles (Cerambycidae) in Pine Stands of the Southeastern United States 1,2 3 1 4 DANIEL R. MILLER, CHRIS ASARO, CHRISTOPHER M. CROWE, AND DONALD A. DUERR J. Econ. Entomol. 104(4): 1245Ð1257 (2011); DOI: 10.1603/EC11051 ABSTRACT In 2006, we examined the ßight responses of 43 species of longhorn beetles (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae) to multiple-funnel traps baited with binary lure blends of 1) ipsenol ϩ ipsdienol, 2) ethanol ϩ ␣-pinene, and a quaternary lure blend of 3) ipsenol ϩ ipsdienol ϩ ethanol ϩ ␣-pinene in the southeastern United States. In addition, we monitored responses of Buprestidae, Elateridae, and Curculionidae commonly associated with pine longhorn beetles. Field trials were conducted in mature pine (Pinus pp.) stands in Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, and Virginia. The following species preferred traps baited with the quaternary blend over those baited with ethanol ϩ ␣-pinene: Acanthocinus nodosus (F.), Acanthocinus obsoletus (Olivier), Astylopsis arcuata (LeConte), Astylopsis sexguttata (Say), Monochamus scutellatus (Say), Monochamus titillator (F.) complex, Rhagium inquisitor (L.) (Cerambycidae), Buprestis consularis Gory, Buprestis lineata F. (Buprestidae), Ips avulsus (Eichhoff), Ips calligraphus (Germar), Ips grandicollis (Eichhoff), Orthotomicus caelatus (Eichhoff), and Gna- thotrichus materiarus (Fitch) (Curculionidae). The addition of ipsenol and ipsdienol had no effect on catches of 17 other species of bark and wood boring beetles in traps baited with ethanol and ␣-pinene. Ethanol ϩ ␣-pinene interrupted the attraction of Ips avulsus, I. grandicollis, and Pityophthorus Eichhoff spp. (but not I. calligraphus) (Curculionidae) to traps baited with ipsenol ϩ ipsdienol. Our results support the use of traps baited with a quaternary blend of ipsenol ϩ ipsdienol ϩ ethanol ϩ ␣-pinene for common saproxylic beetles in pine forests of the southeastern United States. -
Exploring Flat Faced Longhorn Beetles (Cerambycidae: Lamiinae) from the Reserve Forests of Dooars, West Bengal, India
Hindawi Publishing Corporation ISRN Entomology Volume 2013, Article ID 737193, 8 pages http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2013/737193 Research Article Exploring Flat Faced Longhorn Beetles (Cerambycidae: Lamiinae) from the Reserve Forests of Dooars, West Bengal, India Sumana Saha,1 Hüseyin Özdikmen,2 Manish Kanti Biswas,3 and Dinendra Raychaudhuri4 1 Department of Zoology, Darjeeling Government College, Government of West Bengal, Darjeeling, West Bengal 734101, India 2 Gazi Universitesi,¨ Fen-Edebiyat Fakultesi,¨ Biyoloji Bol¨ um¨ u,¨ 06500 Ankara, Turkey 3 Department of Zoology, Sreegopal Banerjee College, Mogra, Hooghly, West Bengal 712148, India 4 Entomology Laboratory, Department of Zoology, University of Calcutta, 35 Ballygunge Circular Road, Kolkata, West Bengal 700019, India Correspondence should be addressed to Dinendra Raychaudhuri; [email protected] Received 25 June 2013; Accepted 7 August 2013 Academic Editors: Y. Fan and P. Simoes˜ Copyright © 2013 Sumana Saha et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. The present study deals with 29 lamiid species under 21 genera of Dooars, West Bengal, India. These include 4 newly recorded species, namely, Macrochenus isabellinus Aurivillius, Aesopida malasiaca Thomson, Pterolophia (Hylobrotus) lateralis Gahan and Nupserha quadrioculata (Thunberg) from India while 16 others (marked by ∙)fromthestate. 1. Introduction We (saving the second author) for nearly two decades are involved in the exploration of the long horn beetles of Subfamily Lamiinae (Cerambycidae) include members of flat the area. Present communication is one such outcome on the faced longhorn beetles that are both xylophagous and phy- lamiids dealing with 29 species under 21 genera. -
Additions and Corrections to the New Catalogue of Palaearctic Cerambycidae (Coleoptera) Edited by I
Russian Entomol. J. 19(3): 215–239 © RUSSIAN ENTOMOLOGICAL JOURNAL, 2010 Additions and corrections to the new Catalogue of Palaearctic Cerambycidae (Coleoptera) edited by I. Löbl and A. Smetana, 2010 Äîïîëíåíèÿ è èñïðàâëåíèÿ ê íîâîìó êàòàëîãó ïàëåàðêòè÷åñêèõ Cerambycidae (Coleoptera) èçäàííîì I. Löbl and A. Smetana, 2010 M.L. Danilevsky Ì.Ë. Äàíèëåâñêèé A. N. Severtzov Institute of Ecology and Evolution, Russian Academy of Sciences, Leninsky prospect 33, Moscow 119071, Russia. E-mail: [email protected], [email protected] Институт Проблем Экологии и Эволюции им. А.Н. Северцова РАН, Ленинский пр. 33, Москва 119071, Россия. KEY WORDS: Cerambycidae, taxonomy, new combinations, new synonyms, new names, Palearctic. КЛЮЧЕВЫЕ СЛОВА: Cerambycidae, таксономия, новые сочетания, новые названия, Палеарктика. ABSTRACT. For Volume 6 of Catalogue of Palaearctic & Rey, 1863. Название Cortodera tibialis (Marseul, beetles [2010] more than 150 misprints, wrong combina- 1876) предложено в качестве валидного для tiobns, wrong geographical records, wrong references, wrong C.pallipipes Pic, 1898 (= C. ruthena Plavilstshikov, status of certain names, wrong synonyms, wrong authotships 1936). Pseudodinoptera Pic, 1900s признан родом (ра- and dates of certain names, wrong original combinations, нее подрод в роде Dinoptera Mulsant, 1863). Cortodera wrong spelling of several names and so on are fixed. Some- times unavailable names were publisjed as available. Missing alpina xanthoptera Pic, 1898 восстановлена в качестве names, geographical data and references are added. Natural турецкого подвида вслед за Плавильщиковым [1936]. system is proposed for several genera: Stenocorus, Acmae- Alosterna tabacicolor tokatensis Pic, 1901 принята как ops, Dinoptera, Carilia, Leptura, Cerambyx, Molorchus, светло окрашенный турецкий подвид из Токата и Callimus, Phymatodes, Plagionotus, Xylotrechus, Saperda, Ерзинжана. -
Correspondence
Correspondence hppt/ urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub: FBB0B88C-C5ED-4F32-B637-C5C6D97B1AE7 A.V. Kuprin. THE LONGICORN BEETLES (INSECTA, COLEOPTERA: CERAMBYCOIDAE) OF THE USSURI NATURE RESERVE AND ADJACENT TERRITORIES. – Far Eastern Entomologist. 2016. N 309: 21-28. Ussuri Nature Reserve, Far East Branch, Russian Academy of Sciences, Ussuriysk 692519, Russia. E-mail: [email protected] Summary. A checklist of 177 species in superfamily of Cerambycoidae recorded from Ussuri Nature Reserve is given. The data on distribution of rare species, Callipogon relictus and Rosalia coelestis, in the Ussuri Nature Reserve is presented. Key words: Coleoptera, Cerambycidae, Disteniidae, longicorn beetles, fauna, Ussuri Nature Reserve, Russia. А. В. Куприн. Жуки-усачи (Insecta, Coleoptera: Cerambycoidae) Уссу- рийского заповедника и сопредельных территорий // Дальневосточный энтомолог. 2016. N 309. С. 21-28. Резюме. Приведен аннотированный список 177 видов надсемейства Cerambycoidae, отмеченных в Уссурийском заповеднике и сопредельных территориях. Представлены сведения о распространении редких видов (Callipogon relictus и Rosalia coelestis) на территории заповедника. Beetles of the superfamily Cerambyсoidae are among the best-studied insect groups. The superfamily currently consists of 4 families: Disteniidae Thomson, 1860, Cerambycidae Latreille, 1802, Oxypeltidae Lacordaire, 1869, and Vesperidae Mulsant, 1839. The increased interest in these insects is mostly due to their unique appearance and size. The fauna of longicorn beetles of the Russian Far East started to be actively studied in the 1920s, after the researchers of the Zoological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences had visited the southern part of this region and obtained a large sample collection. The first paper by T.P. Samoilov (1936) was based on the results of this and the previously made collection and focused on the faunistic-ecological characterization of the fauna of longicorn beetles of the southern Primorskii krai. -
EPPO Reporting Service
ORGANISATION EUROPEENNE ET MEDITERRANEENNE POUR LA PROTECTION DES PLANTES EUROPEAN AND MEDITERRANEAN PLANT PROTECTION ORGANIZATION EPPO Reporting Service NO. 10 PARIS, 2020-10 General 2020/209 New additions to the EPPO A1 and A2 Lists 2020/210 New data on quarantine pests and pests of the EPPO Alert List 2020/211 New and revised dynamic EPPO datasheets are available in the EPPO Global Database 2020/212 Recommendations from Euphresco projects Pests 2020/213 First report of Spodoptera frugiperda in Jordan 2020/214 Trogoderma granarium does not occur in Spain 2020/215 First report of Scirtothrips dorsalis in Mexico 2020/216 First report of Scirtothrips dorsalis in Brazil 2020/217 Scirtothrips dorsalis occurs in Colombia 2020/218 Update on the situation of Megaplatypus mutatus in Italy 2020/219 Update on the situation of Anoplophora chinensis in Croatia 2020/220 Update on the situation of Anoplophora chinensis in Italy 2020/221 Update on the situation of Anoplophora glabripennis in Italy Diseases 2020/222 Eradication of thousand canker disease in disease in Toscana (Italy) 2020/223 First report of tomato brown rugose fruit virus in the Czech Republic 2020/224 Update on the situation of tomato brown rugose fruit virus in Greece 2020/225 Update on the situation of tomato brown rugose fruit virus in the Netherlands 2020/226 New finding of ‘Candidatus Liberibacter solanacearum’ in Estonia 2020/227 Haplotypes and vectors of ‘Candidatus Liberibacter solanacearum’ in Scotland (United Kingdom) 2020/228 First report of wheat blast in Zambia and in -
Parklane Elementary Global Forest Tree Walk
Parklane Elementary Global Forest Tree Walk LEARNING LANDSCAPES Parklane Elementary Global Forest Tree Walk 2015 Learning Landscapes Site data collected in Summer 2014. Written by: Kat Davidson, Karl Dawson, Angie DiSalvo, Jim Gersbach and Jeremy Grotbo Portland Parks & Recreation Urban Forestry 503-823-TREE [email protected] http://portlandoregon.gov/parks/learninglandscapes Cover photos (from top left to bottom right): 1) Cones and foliage of a monkey puzzle tree. 2) The fall color of a Nothofagus alpina. 3) Cupressus dupreziana in its native range. 4) Students plant and water a young tree. 5) The infl orescence of a Muskogee crape myrtle. 6) Closeup of budding fl owers on a sycoparrotia twig. 7) The brightly-colored fruit of the igiri tree. 8) The fl ower of a Xanthoceras sorbifolium. ver. 1/30/2015 Portland Parks & Recreation 1120 SW Fifth Avenue, Suite 1302 Portland, Oregon 97204 (503) 823-PLAY Commissioner Amanda Fritz www.PortlandParks.org Director Mike Abbaté The Learning Landscapes Program Parklane Elementary School The fi rst planting at the Parklane Elementary Global Forest Learning Landscape was in 1999, and since then, the collection has grown to nearly 80 trees. This tree walk identifi es trees planted as part of the Learning Landscape as well as other interesting specimens at the school. What is a Learning Landscape? A Learning Landscape is a collection of trees planted and cared for at a school by students, volunteers, and Portland Parks & Recreation (PP&R) Urban Forestry staff. Learning Landscapes offer an outdoor educational experience for students, as well as environmental and aesthetic benefi ts to the school and surrounding neighborhood. -
Zootaxa, Catalogue of Family-Group Names in Cerambycidae
Zootaxa 2321: 1–80 (2009) ISSN 1175-5326 (print edition) www.mapress.com/zootaxa/ Monograph ZOOTAXA Copyright © 2009 · Magnolia Press ISSN 1175-5334 (online edition) ZOOTAXA 2321 Catalogue of family-group names in Cerambycidae (Coleoptera) YVES BOUSQUET1, DANIEL J. HEFFERN2, PATRICE BOUCHARD1 & EUGENIO H. NEARNS3 1Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Central Experimental Farm, Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0C6. E-mail: [email protected]; [email protected] 2 10531 Goldfield Lane, Houston, TX 77064, USA. E-mail: [email protected] 3 Department of Biology, Museum of Southwestern Biology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131-0001, USA. E-mail: [email protected] Corresponding author: [email protected] Magnolia Press Auckland, New Zealand Accepted by Q. Wang: 2 Dec. 2009; published: 22 Dec. 2009 Yves Bousquet, Daniel J. Heffern, Patrice Bouchard & Eugenio H. Nearns CATALOGUE OF FAMILY-GROUP NAMES IN CERAMBYCIDAE (COLEOPTERA) (Zootaxa 2321) 80 pp.; 30 cm. 22 Dec. 2009 ISBN 978-1-86977-449-3 (paperback) ISBN 978-1-86977-450-9 (Online edition) FIRST PUBLISHED IN 2009 BY Magnolia Press P.O. Box 41-383 Auckland 1346 New Zealand e-mail: [email protected] http://www.mapress.com/zootaxa/ © 2009 Magnolia Press All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored, transmitted or disseminated, in any form, or by any means, without prior written permission from the publisher, to whom all requests to reproduce copyright material should be directed in writing. This authorization does not extend to any other kind of copying, by any means, in any form, and for any purpose other than private research use. -
Coleoptera: Cerambycidae) of Assam, India
Rec. zool. Surv. India: Vol. 117(1)/ 78-90, 2017 ISSN (Online) : (Applied for) DOI: 10.26515/rzsi/v117/i1/2017/117286 ISSN (Print) : 0375-1511 An updated list of cerambycid beetles (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae) of Assam, India Bulganin Mitra1*, Udipta Chakraborti1, Kaushik Mallick1, Subhrajit Bhaumik2 and Priyanka Das1 1Zoological Survey of India, Prani Vigyan Bhavan, M-Block, New Alipore, Kolkata – 700 053, West Bengal, India; [email protected] 2Post Graduate, Department of Zoology, Vidyasagar College, Kolkata – 700006, West Bengal, India Abstract consolidated updated list of cerambycid fauna of Assam and reports 95 species, 64 genera, 32 tribes and 3 subfamilies. AmongAssam isthe a threestate subfamiliesin North-East from India Assam, which subfamily is considered Lamiinae as shares a biological 49 species, hotspot. followed Present by the communication subfamily Cerambycinae is the first with 38 species and Prioninae with only 8 species. Keywords: Longhorn beetle, Assam, North-East India Introduction world, therefore this beetle family is considered as one of important coleopteran family (Agarwala & Bhattacharjee, The study on long horned beetles from the northeast 2012). This communication is the first updated Indian state Assam is very poor with many species consolidated list of cerambycid beetles from the state of awaiting discovery, study and description. Among the Assam (after complete separation from other states of NE seven sister states, cerambycid fauna of Arunachal India in 1987) which includes 95 species under 64 genera Pradesh, Tripura, Meghalaya, Manipur, Mizoram, of 32 tribes belonging to 3 subfamilies along with their Nagaland are mostly worked out by the Zoological Survey distribution. of India and some other universities and institutions. -
List of Publications by M.A. Lazarev (2008-2021)
Updated 05.02.2021 List of publications by M.A. Lazarev (2008-2021) Russian Science Citation Index: SPIN-код: 3792-0052, AuthorID: 620166 (https://www.elibrary.ru/author_profile.asp?authorid=620166) IstinaResearcherID (IRID): 34361510 (https://istina.msu.ru/) GoogleSholarID: -nDHPnoAAAAJ (https://scholar.google.ru/citations?user=- nDHPnoAAAAJ&hl=ru) ResearcherID: M-8329-2014 (https://publons.com/researcher/2475662/maxim-a-lazarev/) Scopus Author ID: 47361265000 (https://www.scopus.com/authid/detail.uri?authorId=47361265000) ORCID: 0000-0002-4040-0987 (https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4040-0987) 2021 49. Lazarev M.A. A new species of the genus Pogonocherus Dejean, 1821 (Coleoptera: Cerambycidae) from China with a redescription of poorly known P. pilosipes (Pic, 1907) as a bases of a new subgenus P. (Neopogonocherus subgen. n.) // Humanity space. International almanac. Volume 10. No 1: 56-69. – ISSN 2226-0773 [DOI: 10.24412/2226-0773-2021-10-1-56-69] 48. Lin M.-Y., Lazarev M.A. Four new combinations in the genus Anaches Pascoe, 1865 (Coleoptera, Cerambycidae, Lamiinae, Pteropliini) // Humanity space. International almanac. Volume 10. No 1: 70-76. – ISSN 2226-0773 [DOI: 10.24412/2226-0773-2021-10-1-70-76] 2020 47. Lazarev M.A. 2020. New Nomenclatural, Taxonomic and Geographical Acts, and Comments, pp. 15-16. - In: Danilevsky M.L. (ed.). Catalogue of Palaearctic Coleoptera, vol. 6 (1), Chrysomeloidea I (Vesperidae, Disteniidae, Cerambycidae). Revised and updated edition. Leiden / Boston: Brill, i-xxii, 1-712. – ISBN: 978-90-04-42916-1 [DOI: 10.1163/9789004440333] Publication Date: 16 Dec 2020; E-Book (PDF), ISBN: 978-90-04-44033-3 (Publication Date: 04 Nov 2020) 46.