Recommended publications
  • Da Guiné-Bissau. Ii. Papilionidae E Pieridae
    Boletín Sociedad Entomológica Aragonesa, n1 41 (2007) : 223–236. NOVOS DADOS SOBRE OS LEPIDÓPTEROS DIURNOS (LEPIDOPTERA: HESPERIOIDEA E PAPILIONOIDEA) DA GUINÉ-BISSAU. II. PAPILIONIDAE E PIERIDAE A. Bivar-de-Sousa1, L.F. Mendes2 & S. Consciência3 1 Sociedade Portuguesa de Entomologia, Apartado 8221, 1803-001 Lisboa, Portugal. – [email protected] 2 Instituto de Investigação Científica Tropical (IICT-IP), JBT, Zoologia, R. da Junqueira, 14, 1300-343 Lisboa, Portugal. – [email protected] 3 Instituto de Investigação Científica Tropical (IICT-IP), JBT, Zoologia, R. da Junqueira, 14, 1300-343 Lisboa, Portugal. – [email protected] Resumo: Estudam-se amostras de borboletas diurnas das famílias Papilionidae e Pieridae colhidas ao longo da Guiné-Bissau, no que corresponde à nossa segunda contribuição para o conhecimento das borboletas diurnas deste país. Na sua maioria o material encontra-se depositadas na colecção aracno-entomológica do IICT e na colecção particular do primeiro co-autor, tendo-se reexaminado as amostras determinadas por Bacelar (1949). Em simultâneo, actualizam-se os conhecimentos sobre a fauna de lepidópteros ropalóceros do Parque Natural das Lagoas de Cufada (PNLC). A distribuição geográfica conhecida de cada uma das espécies no país é representada em mapas UTM com quadrícula de 10 Km de lado. Referem-se três espécies de Papilionidae e um género e quatro espécies de Pieridae como novidades faunísticas para a Guiné-Bissau e três espécies de Papilionidae e dois géneros e sete espécies de Pieridae são novas para o PNLC, no total das trinta e uma espécies até ao momento encontradas nestas famílias (nove, e vinte e duas, respectivamente) no país. Palavras chave: Lepidoptera, Papilionidae, Pieridae, distribuição geográfica, Guiné-Bissau.
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    MADAGASCAR: The Wonders of the “8th Continent” A Tropical Birding Custom Trip October 20—November 6, 2016 Guide: Ken Behrens All photos taken during this trip by Ken Behrens Annotated bird list by Jerry Connolly TOUR SUMMARY Madagascar has long been a core destination for Tropical Birding, and with the opening of a satellite office in the country several years ago, we further solidified our expertise in the “Eighth Continent.” This custom trip followed an itinerary similar to that of our main set-departure tour. Although this trip had a definite bird bias, it was really a general natural history tour. We took our time in observing and photographing whatever we could find, from lemurs to chameleons to bizarre invertebrates. Madagascar is rich in wonderful birds, and we enjoyed these to the fullest. But its mammals, reptiles, amphibians, and insects are just as wondrous and accessible, and a trip that ignored them would be sorely missing out. We also took time to enjoy the cultural riches of Madagascar, the small villages full of smiling children, the zebu carts which seem straight out of the Middle Ages, and the ingeniously engineered rice paddies. If you want to come to Madagascar and see it all… come with Tropical Birding! Madagascar is well known to pose some logistical challenges, especially in the form of the national airline Air Madagascar, but we enjoyed perfectly smooth sailing on this tour. We stayed in the most comfortable hotels available at each stop on the itinerary, including some that have just recently opened, and savored some remarkably good food, which many people rank as the best Madagascar Custom Tour October 20-November 6, 2016 they have ever had on any birding tour.
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  • Biolphilately Vol-64 No-3
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  • The Butterflies of Kenya and Uganda, Part 5
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  • The Sphingidae (Lepidoptera) of the Philippines
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  • Check-List of the Butterflies of the Kakamega Forest Nature Reserve in Western Kenya (Lepidoptera: Hesperioidea, Papilionoidea)
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  • Notes on Hawk Moths ( Lepidoptera — Sphingidae )
    Colemania, Number 33, pp. 1-16 1 Published : 30 January 2013 ISSN 0970-3292 © Kumar Ghorpadé Notes on Hawk Moths (Lepidoptera—Sphingidae) in the Karwar-Dharwar transect, peninsular India: a tribute to T.R.D. Bell (1863-1948)1 KUMAR GHORPADÉ Post-Graduate Teacher and Research Associate in Systematic Entomology, University of Agricultural Sciences, P.O. Box 221, K.C. Park P.O., Dharwar 580 008, India. E-mail: [email protected] R.R. PATIL Professor and Head, Department of Agricultural Entomology, University of Agricultural Sciences, Krishi Nagar, Dharwar 580 005, India. E-mail: [email protected] MALLAPPA K. CHANDARAGI Doctoral student, Department of Agricultural Entomology, University of Agricultural Sciences, Krishi Nagar, Dharwar 580 005, India. E-mail: [email protected] Abstract. This is an update of the Hawk-Moths flying in the transect between the cities of Karwar and Dharwar in northern Karnataka state, peninsular India, based on and following up on the previous fairly detailed study made by T.R.D. Bell around Karwar and summarized in the 1937 FAUNA OF BRITISH INDIA volume on Sphingidae. A total of 69 species of 27 genera are listed. The Western Ghats ‘Hot Spot’ separates these towns, one that lies on the coast of the Arabian Sea and the other further east, leeward of the ghats, on the Deccan Plateau. The intervening tract exhibits a wide range of habitats and altitudes, lying in the North Kanara and Dharwar districts of Karnataka. This paper is also an update and summary of Sphingidae flying in peninsular India. Limited field sampling was done; collections submitted by students of the Agricultural University at Dharwar were also examined and are cited here .
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  • The Mcguire Center for Lepidoptera and Biodiversity
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  • Catalogue of the Type Specimens of Lepidoptera Rhopalocera in the Hill Museum
    Original from and digitized by National University of Singapore Libraries Original from and digitized by National University of Singapore Libraries Original from and digitized by National University of Singapore Libraries Original from and digitized by National University of Singapore Libraries CATALOGUE OF THE Type Specimens of Lepidoptera Rhopalocera IN THE HILL MUSEUM BY A. G. GABRIEL, F.E.S. Issued June, 1932 LONDON JOHN BALE, SONS & DANIELSSON, LTD. 83-91, GBEAT TITCHFIELD STEEET, OXEOED STEEET, W. 1 1932 Price 20/- Original from and digitized by National University of Singapore Libraries Unfortunately Mr. Joicey did not live to see the publication of this Catalogue. It will however remain, together with the four completed volumes of the " Bulletin of the Hill Museum," as a lasting memorial to to the magnificent collection of Lepidoptera amassed by Mr. Joicey, and to the work carried out at the Hill Museum under his auspices. G. Talbot. Original from and digitized by National University of Singapore Libraries CATALOGUE OF THE TYPE SPECIMENS OF LEPIDOPTERA RHOPALOCERA IN THE HILL MUSEUM. By A. G. GABRIEL, F.E.S. INTRODUCTION BY G. TALBOT. It is important to know exactly where type specimens are to be found. The British Museum set an example by publishing catalogues of some of their Rhopalocera types, and we hope this will be continued. Mr. Gabriel, who was responsible for that work, has been asked by Mr. Joicey to prepare a catalogue for the Hill Museum. The original description of almost every name in this catalogue has been examined for the correct reference, and where the sex or habitat was wrongly quoted, the necessary correction has been made.
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  • AGIDE Final Report
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  • PICT: a Low Cost, Modular, Open-Source Camera Trap System to Study Plant-Insect Interactions
    PICT: A low cost, modular, open-source camera trap system to study plant-insect interactions Vincent Droissart, Laura Azandi, Eric Rostand Onguene, Marie Savignac, Thomas Smith, Vincent Deblauwe To cite this version: Vincent Droissart, Laura Azandi, Eric Rostand Onguene, Marie Savignac, Thomas Smith, et al.. PICT: A low cost, modular, open-source camera trap system to study plant-insect interactions. Meth- ods in Ecology and Evolution, Wiley, 2021, 12 (8), pp.1389-1396. 10.1111/2041-210X.13618. hal- 03217745 HAL Id: hal-03217745 https://hal.inrae.fr/hal-03217745 Submitted on 17 May 2021 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access L’archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est archive for the deposit and dissemination of sci- destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents entific research documents, whether they are pub- scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, lished or not. The documents may come from émanant des établissements d’enseignement et de teaching and research institutions in France or recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires abroad, or from public or private research centers. publics ou privés. Received: 28 January 2021 | Accepted: 7 April 2021 DOI: 10.1111/2041-210X.13618 PRACTICAL TOOLS PICT: A low- cost, modular, open- source camera trap system to study plant– insect interactions Vincent Droissart1,2,3 | Laura Azandi2,3 | Eric Rostand Onguene4,5 | Marie Savignac1,3 | Thomas B. Smith6 | Vincent Deblauwe2,4,6 1AMAP Lab, Université Montpellier, IRD, CNRS, INRAE, CIRAD, Montpellier, France; 2Herbarium et Bibliothèque de Botanique Africaine, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Brussels, Belgium; 3Plant Systematics and Ecology Laboratory, Higher Teachers’ Training College, University of Yaoundé I, Yaoundé, Cameroon; 4International Institute of Tropical Agriculture, Yaoundé, Cameroon; 5National Forestry School Mbalmayo, Mbalmayo, Cameroon and 6Center for Tropical Research, Institute of the Environment and Sustainability, University of California, Los Angeles, CA, USA Correspondence Vincent Deblauwe Abstract Email: [email protected] 1.
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