The Jungle Book, by Rudyard Kipling
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2017 AAS Abstracts
2017 AAS Abstracts The American Arachnological Society 41st Annual Meeting July 24-28, 2017 Quéretaro, Juriquilla Fernando Álvarez Padilla Meeting Abstracts ( * denotes participation in student competition) Abstracts of keynote speakers are listed first in order of presentation, followed by other abstracts in alphabetical order by first author. Underlined indicates presenting author, *indicates presentation in student competition. Only students with an * are in the competition. MAPPING THE VARIATION IN SPIDER BODY COLOURATION FROM AN INSECT PERSPECTIVE Ajuria-Ibarra, H. 1 Tapia-McClung, H. 2 & D. Rao 1 1. INBIOTECA, Universidad Veracruzana, Xalapa, Veracruz, México. 2. Laboratorio Nacional de Informática Avanzada, A.C., Xalapa, Veracruz, México. Colour variation is frequently observed in orb web spiders. Such variation can impact fitness by affecting the way spiders are perceived by relevant observers such as prey (i.e. by resembling flower signals as visual lures) and predators (i.e. by disrupting search image formation). Verrucosa arenata is an orb-weaving spider that presents colour variation in a conspicuous triangular pattern on the dorsal part of the abdomen. This pattern has predominantly white or yellow colouration, but also reflects light in the UV part of the spectrum. We quantified colour variation in V. arenata from images obtained using a full spectrum digital camera. We obtained cone catch quanta and calculated chromatic and achromatic contrasts for the visual systems of Drosophila melanogaster and Apis mellifera. Cluster analyses of the colours of the triangular patch resulted in the formation of six and three statistically different groups in the colour space of D. melanogaster and A. mellifera, respectively. Thus, no continuous colour variation was found. -
Araneae: Salticidae)
Belgian Journal of Entomology 67: 1–27 (2018) ISSN: 2295-0214 www.srbe-kbve.be urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:6D151CCF-7DCB-4C97-A220-AC464CD484AB Belgian Journal of Entomology New Species, Combinations, and Records of Jumping Spiders in the Galápagos Islands (Araneae: Salticidae) 1 2 G.B. EDWARDS & L. BAERT 1 Curator Emeritus: Arachnida & Myriapoda, Florida State Collection of Arthropods, FDACS, Division of Plant Industry, P. O. Box 147100, Gainesville, FL 32614-7100 USA (e-mail: [email protected] – corresponding author) 2 O.D. Taxonomy and Phylogeny, Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences, Vautierstraat 29, B-1000 Brussels, Belgium (e-mail: [email protected]) Published: Brussels, March 14, 2018 Citation: EDWARDS G.B. & BAERT L., 2018. - New Species, Combinations, and Records of Jumping Spiders in the Galápagos Islands (Araneae: Salticidae). Belgian Journal of Entomology, 67: 1–27. ISSN: 1374-5514 (Print Edition) ISSN: 2295-0214 (Online Edition) The Belgian Journal of Entomology is published by the Royal Belgian Society of Entomology, a non-profit association established on April 9, 1855. Head office: Vautier street 29, B-1000 Brussels. The publications of the Society are partly sponsored by the University Foundation of Belgium. In compliance with Article 8.6 of the ICZN, printed versions of all papers are deposited in the following libraries: - Royal Library of Belgium, Boulevard de l’Empereur 4, B-1000 Brussels. - Library of the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences, Vautier street 29, B-1000 Brussels. - American Museum of Natural History Library, Central Park West at 79th street, New York, NY 10024-5192, USA. - Central library of the Museum national d’Histoire naturelle, rue Geoffroy Saint- Hilaire 38, F-75005 Paris, France. -
REVISION of the JUMPING SPIDERS of the GENUS PHIDIPPUS (ARANEAE: SALTICIDAE) by G
Occasional Papers of the Florida State Collection of Arthropods Volume 11 2004 REVISION OF THE JUMPING SPIDERS OF THE GENUS PHIDIPPUS (ARANEAE: SALTICIDAE) by G. B. Edwards Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services Charles H. Bronson, Commissioner 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Occasional Papers of the Florida State Collection of Arthropods Volume 11 REVISION OF THE JUMPING SPIDERS OF THE GENUS PHIDIPPUS (ARANEAE: SALTICIDAE) by G. B. EDWARDS Curator: Arachnida & Myriapoda Florida State Collection of Arthropods FDACS, Division of Plant Industry Bureau of Entomology, Nematology, and Plant Pathology P. O. Box 147100, 1911 SW 34th Street Gainesville, Florida 32614-7100 USA 2004 FLORIDA DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND CONSUMER SERVICES DIVISION OF PLANT INDUSTRY and THE CENTER FOR SYSTEMATIC ENTOMOLOGY Gainesville, Florida FLORIDA DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE AND CONSUMER SERVICES Charles H. Bronson, Commissioner . Tallahassee Terry L. Rhodes, Assistant Commissioner . Tallahassee Craig Meyer, Deputy Commissioner . Tallahassee Richard D. Gaskalla, Director, Division of Plant Industry (DPI) . Gainesville Connie C. Riherd, Assistant Director, Division of Plant Industry . Gainesville Wayne N. Dixon, Ph.D., Bureau Chief, Entomology, Nematology and Plant Pathology . Gainesville Don L. Harris, Bureau Chief, Methods Development and Biological Control . Gainesville Richard A. Clark, Bureau Chief, Plant and Apiary Inspection . Gainesville Gregory Carlton, Bureau Chief, Pest Eradication and Control . Winter Haven Michael C. Kesinger, Bureau Chief, Budwood Registration . Winter Haven CENTER FOR SYSTEMATIC ENTOMOLOGY BOARD OF DIRECTORS G. B. Edwards, Ph.D., President . DPI, Gainesville Paul E. Skelley, Ph.D., Vice-President . DPI, Gainesville Gary J. Steck, Ph.D., Secretary . -
Surveying for Terrestrial Arthropods (Insects and Relatives) Occurring Within the Kahului Airport Environs, Maui, Hawai‘I: Synthesis Report
Surveying for Terrestrial Arthropods (Insects and Relatives) Occurring within the Kahului Airport Environs, Maui, Hawai‘i: Synthesis Report Prepared by Francis G. Howarth, David J. Preston, and Richard Pyle Honolulu, Hawaii January 2012 Surveying for Terrestrial Arthropods (Insects and Relatives) Occurring within the Kahului Airport Environs, Maui, Hawai‘i: Synthesis Report Francis G. Howarth, David J. Preston, and Richard Pyle Hawaii Biological Survey Bishop Museum Honolulu, Hawai‘i 96817 USA Prepared for EKNA Services Inc. 615 Pi‘ikoi Street, Suite 300 Honolulu, Hawai‘i 96814 and State of Hawaii, Department of Transportation, Airports Division Bishop Museum Technical Report 58 Honolulu, Hawaii January 2012 Bishop Museum Press 1525 Bernice Street Honolulu, Hawai‘i Copyright 2012 Bishop Museum All Rights Reserved Printed in the United States of America ISSN 1085-455X Contribution No. 2012 001 to the Hawaii Biological Survey COVER Adult male Hawaiian long-horned wood-borer, Plagithmysus kahului, on its host plant Chenopodium oahuense. This species is endemic to lowland Maui and was discovered during the arthropod surveys. Photograph by Forest and Kim Starr, Makawao, Maui. Used with permission. Hawaii Biological Report on Monitoring Arthropods within Kahului Airport Environs, Synthesis TABLE OF CONTENTS Table of Contents …………….......................................................……………...........……………..…..….i. Executive Summary …….....................................................…………………...........……………..…..….1 Introduction ..................................................................………………………...........……………..…..….4 -
International Journal of Computer Theory and Engineering (IJCTE)
Journal of Advanced Management Science Vol. 1, No. 2, June 2013 The Jungle Book: Another Facet of Childhood Viorica Banciu, Angela Jireghie, and Ionut Erdeli University Of Oradea Email: [email protected], [email protected], [email protected] Abstract—Kipling indicates that The Jungle Books is a book For Kipling the English intervention in the Indian life for children in order to easily move it over grown-ups reason is welcomed by the setting up of a surface designed prohibitions. The delightful story tackles subjects at the level civilization meant to trigger the locals from the native of children understanding, including a dose of exoticism beliefs and superstitions of their millennial world. Besides demystified on the whole by a popular and literary humor of the Barrack-Room Ballads, for example, as other pages of an old English origin. The Jungle Books reveals a world full range, without monotony and uniformity. Jungle life gets his work, even in well-known children's stories Just so epic contours. The adventure takes place at the forest level, Stories, exalt the idea of imperialism. And Kipling's ruled by laws given by its creatures. In this context Mowgli, travels around the globe, China, Japan, America had not the young man raised by beasts and loved by them, was changed optics. So that at the moment of the war of the necessary to Kipling's idea of restoring order in nature. British against the Burrs in South Africa, the British writer support the British cause and publishes a newspaper Index Terms—animals, childhood, humor, nature to spread the same ideas, entitled The Friend in Bloemfontein. -
The Jungle Book
Curriculum Units by Fellows of the Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute 1995 Volume II: Film and Literature Using Film and Literature in the Elementary Classroom: The Jungle Book Curriculum Unit 95.02.05 by Gretchen L. Gallagher The playful rays of sun peek between the large, flat green leaves of the towering trees. The young boy rubs his eyes and sits straight up. The first thing he sees is the slumbering black, muscled panther curled up peacefully next to him. His friend, an enormous brown bear, has just returned with some bananas for the boy’s breakfast. As he eats, the boy imagines what adventures he and his friends will have that day. Perhaps they will meet their good friend the python. Maybe he will return to the cave where he grew up and visit his brother wolves. He hopes they will not meet the fierce tiger that longs to kill him. The young boy finishes his breakfast and smiles to himself. He loves his life in the jungle. Introduction The faces of the third-grade boys light up and come to life when told they will learn about a boy their age who lives in the rain forest, or jungle, and whose best friends are a loyal brown bear and a wise black panther. Their attention span suddenly increases, and they begin to ask many questions as their imaginations sputter to life, trying to visualize the exciting, frightening world of the jungle. The students for whom this unit is designed are a group of bright, funny, energetic third grade boys. -
1 the RESTRUCTURING of ARTHROPOD TROPHIC RELATIONSHIPS in RESPONSE to PLANT INVASION by Adam B. Mitchell a Dissertation Submitt
THE RESTRUCTURING OF ARTHROPOD TROPHIC RELATIONSHIPS IN RESPONSE TO PLANT INVASION by Adam B. Mitchell 1 A dissertation submitted to the Faculty of the University of Delaware in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and Wildlife Ecology Winter 2019 © Adam B. Mitchell All Rights Reserved THE RESTRUCTURING OF ARTHROPOD TROPHIC RELATIONSHIPS IN RESPONSE TO PLANT INVASION by Adam B. Mitchell Approved: ______________________________________________________ Jacob L. Bowman, Ph.D. Chair of the Department of Entomology and Wildlife Ecology Approved: ______________________________________________________ Mark W. Rieger, Ph.D. Dean of the College of Agriculture and Natural Resources Approved: ______________________________________________________ Douglas J. Doren, Ph.D. Interim Vice Provost for Graduate and Professional Education I certify that I have read this dissertation and that in my opinion it meets the academic and professional standard required by the University as a dissertation for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Signed: ______________________________________________________ Douglas W. Tallamy, Ph.D. Professor in charge of dissertation I certify that I have read this dissertation and that in my opinion it meets the academic and professional standard required by the University as a dissertation for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Signed: ______________________________________________________ Charles R. Bartlett, Ph.D. Member of dissertation committee I certify that I have read this dissertation and that in my opinion it meets the academic and professional standard required by the University as a dissertation for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Signed: ______________________________________________________ Jeffery J. Buler, Ph.D. Member of dissertation committee I certify that I have read this dissertation and that in my opinion it meets the academic and professional standard required by the University as a dissertation for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. -
Identifying Spiders Through DNA Barcodes
481 Identifying spiders through DNA barcodes Rowan D.H. Barrett and Paul D.N. Hebert Abstract: With almost 40 000 species, the spiders provide important model systems for studies of sociality, mating systems, and sexual dimorphism. However, work on this group is regularly constrained by difficulties in species identi- fication. DNA-based identification systems represent a promising approach to resolve this taxonomic impediment, but their efficacy has only been tested in a few groups. In this study, we demonstrate that sequence diversity in a standard segment of the mitochondrial gene coding for cytochrome c oxidase I (COI) is highly effective in discriminating spider species. A COI profile containing 168 spider species and 35 other arachnid species correctly assigned 100% of subse- quently analyzed specimens to the appropriate species. In addition, we found no overlap between mean nucleotide di- vergences at the intra- and inter-specific levels. Our results establish the potential of COI as a rapid and accurate identification tool for biodiversity surveys of spiders. Résumé : Avec presque 40 000 espèces, les araignées constituent un modèle important pour l’étude de la vie sociale, des systèmes d’accouplement et du dimorphisme sexuel. Cependant, la recherche sur ce groupe est souvent restreinte par les problèmes d’identification des espèces. Les systèmes d’identification basés dur l’ADN présentent une solution prometteuse à cette difficulté d’ordre taxonomique, mais leur efficacité n’a été vérifiée que chez quelques groupes. Nous démontrons ici que la diversité des séquences dans un segment type du gène mitochondrial de la cytochrome c oxydase I (COI) peut servir de façon très efficace à la reconnaissance des espèces d’araignées. -
Everywhere, Animals Appear: Species, Race, and the State in Literature from the Raj to Global India
Western University Scholarship@Western Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository 1-8-2019 10:00 AM Everywhere, Animals Appear: Species, Race, and the State in Literature from the Raj to Global India Jason Sandhar The University of Western Ontario Supervisor Nandi Bhatia The University of Western Ontario Joint Supervisor Joshua Schuster The University of Western Ontario Graduate Program in English A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the equirr ements for the degree in Doctor of Philosophy © Jason Sandhar 2019 Follow this and additional works at: https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/etd Part of the Other English Language and Literature Commons Recommended Citation Sandhar, Jason, "Everywhere, Animals Appear: Species, Race, and the State in Literature from the Raj to Global India" (2019). Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository. 6006. https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/etd/6006 This Dissertation/Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by Scholarship@Western. It has been accepted for inclusion in Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository by an authorized administrator of Scholarship@Western. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Abstract In recent decades, postcolonial writers and critics have started attending to representations of animals in literature from the global south (e.g. Armstrong 2002; Huggan and Tiffin 2010). While the turn toward literary animals has been acknowledged for its potential to complicate how colonial violence dehumanized colonized groups, scholars such as Lucille Desblache have pointed out that animals can also go “unseen” or “unheard” in the service of human narratives about emancipation from colonial dominance if they are treated as allegories for the emancipatory process (Desblache 2016). -
Spring 2019 Bioblitz of Russ Pitman Park
RUSS PITMAN PARK SPRING BIOBLITZ - 5/6/19 – 5/7/19 Mammals: (5) Great-tailed Grackle - Quiscalus mexicanus Gray Squirrel – Sciurus carolinensis Chestnut-sided Warbler - Setophaga pensylvanica Fox Squirrel - Sciurus niger Eastern Screech Owl – Megascops asio Evening Bat - Nycticeius humeralis Purple Martin - Progne subis Eastern Red Bat - Lasiurus borealis Chuck-Will’s-Widow - Antrostomus carolinensis Big Brown Bat - Eptesicus fuscus Cedar Waxwing - Bombycilla cedrorum Carolina Wren - Thryothorus ludovicianus Birds: (23) Yellow-crowned Night Heron - Nyctanassa violacea Reptiles: (7) Downy Woodpecker - Picoides pubescens Three-toed Box Turtle – Terrapene carolina Cooper’s Hawk – Accipiter cooperii Red-eared Slider – Trachemys scripta Eastern Wood Pewee - Contopus virens Green Anole – Anolis carolinensis Wood Thrush - Hylocichla mustelina Cuban Brown Anole – Anolis sagrei Swainson’s Thrush – Catharus ustulatus Ground Skink – Scincella lateralis Chimney Swift - Chaetura pelagica Plain-bellied Water snake – Nerodia erythrogaster American Robin – Turdus migratorius Brahminy Blindsnake – indotyphlops braminus Ruby-throated Hummingbird- Archilochus colubris Northern Cardinal – Cardinalis cardinalis Amphibians: (3) Blue Jay - Cyanocitta cristata Gulf Coast Toad – Incilius nebulifer Northern Mockingbird - Mimus polyglottos Rio Grande Chirping Frog – Eleutherodactylus cystignathoides White-winged Dove - Zenaida asiatica Squirrel Treefrog – Hyla squirrela Black-bellied Whistling Duck - Dendrocygna autumnalis Rock Pigeon – Columba livia Bony Fish: -
Formerly Placed in the Genus Metaphidippus (Araneae: Salticidae)
PELEGRINA FRANGANILLO AND OTHER JUMPING SPIDERS FORMERLY PLACED IN THE GENUS METAPHIDIPPUS (ARANEAE: SALTICIDAE) WAYNE P. MADDISON' CONTENTS Abstract 216 2. Pelegrina proxima (G. & E. Peckham, Introduction 217 1901) 265 Acknowledgments 218 3. Pelegrina dithalea new species 268 Materials and Methods 219 4. Pelegrina edrilana new species 269 Explanation of Morphological and Behavioral 5. Pelegrina proterva (Walckenaer, 1837) __ 270 Terms 222 6. Pelegrina peckhamorum (Kaston, The Subfamily Dendryphantinae 226 1973) 272 Relationships within the Dendryphantinae 231 7. Pelegrina neoleonis new species 273 The Bagheera Group of Genera 232 8. Pelegrina tristis new species 274 Two Genera That Have Exchanged Species 9. Pelegrina sabinema new species 275 with Metaphidippus: Dendryphantes 10. Pelegrina pervaga (G. & E. Packham, and Beata 235 1909) 276 The Proper Placements of Metaphidippus 11. Pelegrina kastoni new species 277 Species 237 12. Pelegrina flavipedes (G. & E. Peckham, Phanias F. P.-Cambridge, 1901 238 1888) 278 Terralonus new genus 239 13. Pelegrina flaviceps (Kaston, 1973) 279 Ghelna new genus 239 14. Pelegrina exigua (Banks, 1892) 281 The Genus Pelegrina Franganillo, 1930 240 15. Pelegrina montana (Emerton, 1891) 283 Phylogeny within Pelegrina 245 16. Pelegrina insignis (Banks, 1892) 284 Identifying Species of Pelegrina and the 17. Pelegrina chaimona new species 286 Metaphidippus mannii Group 247 18. Pelegrina clemata (Levi & Levi, 1951) .. 287 Key to the Males of All Species of Pelegrina 19. Pelegrina aeneola (Curtis, 1892) 288 and Those Metaphidippus mannii 20. Pelegrina halia new species 290 Group Species Occurring in the United 21. Pelegrina chalceola new species 291 States 248 22. Pelegrina furcata (F. P.-Cambridge, Key to the Female Pelegrina of the Eastern 1901) 292 United States and Canada (East of the 23. -
The Pack Scouter's Handbook
The Pack Scouters Handbook THE PACK SCOUTER’S HANDBOOK Published by The Canadian General Council of The Boy Scouts Association, Ottawa 1965 Page 1 The Pack Scouters Handbook Downloaded from: “The Dump” at Scoutscan.com http://www.thedump.scoutscan.com/ Editor’s Note: The reader is reminded that these texts have been written a long time ago. Consequently, they may use some terms or express sentiments which were current at the time, regardless of what we may think of them at the beginning of the 21st century. For reasons of historical accuracy they have been preserved in their original form. If you find them offensive, we ask you to please delete this file from your system. This and other traditional Scouting texts may be downloaded from The Dump. Introduction The original and still basic book for Pack Scouters (Wolf Cub Leaders) is “The Wolf Cub’s Handbook” by the Founder of the Boy Scout Movement, the late Lord Baden-Powell of Gilwell. Each year, every Pack Scouter should read that book from cover to cover. This Handbook is offered not as a substitute but as a companion volume to “The Wolf Cub’s Handbook”. We feel that it will be of great use to all Canadian Pack Scouters, whether new or experienced in Wolf Cub leadership. In many respects this “Pack Scouter’s Handbook” is based on the well-known “Cubmaster’s First Year” which contributed so much towards the development of Cubbing in Canada during the last decade. To that base has been added additional information from many sources to form the “Pack Scouter’s Handbook”.