The Hymenoptera Collections of Williamedwardshuckard and the Dispersal of His Type Material
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On the Organic Law of Change : a Facsimile Edition and Annotated
On the Organic Law of Change On the Organic Law of Change A Facsimile Edition and Annotated Transcription of Alfred Russel Wallace’s Species Notebook of 1855–1859 Annotated by James T. Costa Cambridge, Massachusetts London, England 2013 Copyright © 2013 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America Book design by Dean Bornstein Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Wallace, Alfred Russel, 1823–1913. On the organic law of change : a facsimile edition and annotated transcrip- tion of Alfred Russel Wallace’s Species notebook of 1855–1859 / Alfred Russel Wallace ; annotated by James T. Costa. pages cm Includes bibliographical references and index. Summary: Notes from Wallace’s Malay expedition. ISBN 978-0-674-72488-4 (alk. paper) 1. Wallace, Alfred Russel, 1823–1913—Travel—Malay Archipelago. 2. Natural history—Malay Archipelago 3. Natural selection. 4. Evolution (Biology) I. Costa, James T., 1963– II. Title. III. Title: Species notebook of 1855–1859. QH375.W35 2013 508.598—dc23 2013010172 For Leslie, tiger swallowtail mom, with love Contents Preface ix Note on the Text xi Introduction 1 Species Notebook (Recto) 15 Species Notebook (Verso) 393 Appendix 1 535 Species Notebook Entries Bearing on Transmutation and Related Topics Appendix 2 537 On Wallace’s Critique of Charles Lyell and Principles of Geology References 545 Acknowledgments 557 Note on A. R. Wallace Literary Works 559 Index 561 Preface lecting triumphs and failures, and still others with lovely drawings and diagrams—I suddenly wondered, why has this notebook not been published? Biologists, students Alfred Russel Wallace (1823–1913) would have appreciated of evolutionary biology and its history, evolution mavens, the improbable and happenstance manner in which this Wallace and Darwin enthusiasts—all, I knew, would be project got its start: aboard the Oxford tube en route to keenly interested in its contents. -
Karl Jordan: a Life in Systematics
AN ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION OF Kristin Renee Johnson for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History of SciencePresented on July 21, 2003. Title: Karl Jordan: A Life in Systematics Abstract approved: Paul Lawrence Farber Karl Jordan (1861-1959) was an extraordinarily productive entomologist who influenced the development of systematics, entomology, and naturalists' theoretical framework as well as their practice. He has been a figure in existing accounts of the naturalist tradition between 1890 and 1940 that have defended the relative contribution of naturalists to the modem evolutionary synthesis. These accounts, while useful, have primarily examined the natural history of the period in view of how it led to developments in the 193 Os and 40s, removing pre-Synthesis naturalists like Jordan from their research programs, institutional contexts, and disciplinary homes, for the sake of synthesis narratives. This dissertation redresses this picture by examining a naturalist, who, although often cited as important in the synthesis, is more accurately viewed as a man working on the problems of an earlier period. This study examines the specific problems that concerned Jordan, as well as the dynamic institutional, international, theoretical and methodological context of entomology and natural history during his lifetime. It focuses upon how the context in which natural history has been done changed greatly during Jordan's life time, and discusses the role of these changes in both placing naturalists on the defensive among an array of new disciplines and attitudes in science, and providing them with new tools and justifications for doing natural history. One of the primary intents of this study is to demonstrate the many different motives and conditions through which naturalists came to and worked in natural history. -
Wildlife Review Cover Image: Hedgehog by Keith Kirk
Dumfries & Galloway Wildlife Review Cover Image: Hedgehog by Keith Kirk. Keith is a former Dumfries & Galloway Council ranger and now helps to run Nocturnal Wildlife Tours based in Castle Douglas. The tours use a specially prepared night tours vehicle, complete with external mounted thermal camera and internal viewing screens. Each participant also has their own state- of-the-art thermal imaging device to use for the duration of the tour. This allows participants to detect animals as small as rabbits at up to 300 metres away or get close enough to see Badgers and Roe Deer going about their nightly routine without them knowing you’re there. For further information visit www.wildlifetours.co.uk email [email protected] or telephone 07483 131791 Contributing photographers p2 Small White butterfly © Ian Findlay, p4 Colvend coast ©Mark Pollitt, p5 Bittersweet © northeastwildlife.co.uk, Wildflower grassland ©Mark Pollitt, p6 Oblong Woodsia planting © National Trust for Scotland, Oblong Woodsia © Chris Miles, p8 Birdwatching © castigatio/Shutterstock, p9 Hedgehog in grass © northeastwildlife.co.uk, Hedgehog in leaves © Mark Bridger/Shutterstock, Hedgehog dropping © northeastwildlife.co.uk, p10 Cetacean watch at Mull of Galloway © DGERC, p11 Common Carder Bee © Bob Fitzsimmons, p12 Black Grouse confrontation © Sergey Uryadnikov/Shutterstock, p13 Black Grouse male ©Sergey Uryadnikov/Shutterstock, Female Black Grouse in flight © northeastwildlife.co.uk, Common Pipistrelle bat © Steven Farhall/ Shutterstock, p14 White Ermine © Mark Pollitt, -
Hymenoptera: Aculeata) Jizerských Hor a Frýdlantska
Sborník Severočeského Muzea, Přírodní Vědy, Liberec, 27: 239 – 276, 2009 ISBN 978-80-87266-01-4 Žahadloví blanokřídlí (Hymenoptera: Aculeata) Jizerských hor a Frýdlantska Aculeata (Hymenoptera) of the Jizerské hory Mts and Frýdlant region (northern Bohemia, Czech Republic) Jakub STRAKA1), Libor Dvořák2) & Petr BOGUSCH3) 1) Katedra zoologie, Přírodovědecká fakulta, Univerzita Karlova, Viničná 7, CZ – 128 44 Praha 2; e-mail: [email protected] 2) Správa NP a CHKO Šumava, Sušická 399, CZ – 341 92 Kašperské Hory; e-mail: [email protected] 3) Katedra biologie, Pedagogická fakulta, Univerzita Hradec Králové, Rokitanského 62, CZ – 503 00 Hradec Králové; e-mail: [email protected] Abstract. The list of 279 species of aculeate Hymenoptera from the Jizerské hory Mts and Frýdlant region is presented. Altogether 13 critically endangered species, 22 endangered species, and 27 vulnerable species of the Czech Republic were found. The findings of Andrena tarsata Nylander, 1848, Anoplius tenuicornis (Tournier, 1889), Anthocopa villosa (Schenck, 1853), Crabro lapponicus Zetterstedt, 1838, Crossocerus walkeri (Shuckard, 1837), Dryudella femoralis (Moscary, 1877), Evagetes alamannicus (Blüthgen, 1944), Hylaeus annulatus (Lin- naeus, 1758), H. gracilicornis (Morawitz, 1867), Passaloecus monilicornis Dahlbom, 1842, Sphecodes spinulosus Hagens, 1875, Lasioglossum subfulvicorne austriacum Ebmer, 1973, and Mimumesa beaumonti (Van Lith, 1949) are of high faunistic importance. Key words: Hymenoptera, Aculeata, Jizerské hory Mts, Frýdlant region, faunistics, biology ÚVOD Žahadloví blanokřídlí (Hymenoptera: Aculeata) patří mezi velmi početné a ekonomicky významné skupiny hmyzu. Patří k nim význační opylovači (včely – Apoidea) i predátoři (sršni a vosy – Vespidae). V poslední době se ukazuje i velký význam této skupiny pro indikaci kva- lity lokalit. Řada druhů je na území České republiky buď kriticky ohrožena vyhubením, nebo jsou již považovány za regionálně vymizelé (Straka 2005a, b, c). -
Nr. 10 ISSN 2190-3700 Nov 2018 AMPULEX 10|2018
ZEITSCHRIFT FÜR ACULEATE HYMENOPTEREN AMPULEXJOURNAL FOR HYMENOPTERA ACULEATA RESEARCH Nr. 10 ISSN 2190-3700 Nov 2018 AMPULEX 10|2018 Impressum | Imprint Herausgeber | Publisher Dr. Christian Schmid-Egger | Fischerstraße 1 | 10317 Berlin | Germany | 030-89 638 925 | [email protected] Rolf Witt | Friedrichsfehner Straße 39 | 26188 Edewecht-Friedrichsfehn | Germany | 04486-9385570 | [email protected] Redaktion | Editorial board Dr. Christian Schmid-Egger | Fischerstraße 1 | 10317 Berlin | Germany | 030-89 638 925 | [email protected] Rolf Witt | Friedrichsfehner Straße 39 | 26188 Edewecht-Friedrichsfehn | Germany | 04486-9385570 | [email protected] Grafik|Layout & Satz | Graphics & Typo Umwelt- & MedienBüro Witt, Edewecht | Rolf Witt | www.umbw.de | www.vademecumverlag.de Internet www.ampulex.de Titelfoto | Cover Colletes perezi ♀ auf Zygophyllum fonanesii [Foto: B. Jacobi] Colletes perezi ♀ on Zygophyllum fonanesii [photo: B. Jacobi] Ampulex Heft 10 | issue 10 Berlin und Edewecht, November 2018 ISSN 2190-3700 (digitale Version) ISSN 2366-7168 (print version) V.i.S.d.P. ist der Autor des jeweiligen Artikels. Die Artikel geben nicht unbedingt die Meinung der Redaktion wieder. Die Zeitung und alle in ihr enthaltenen Texte, Abbildungen und Fotos sind urheberrechtlich geschützt. Das Copyright für die Abbildungen und Artikel liegt bei den jeweiligen Autoren. Trotz sorgfältiger inhaltlicher Kontrolle übernehmen wir keine Haftung für die Inhalte externer Links. Für den Inhalt der verlinkten Seiten sind ausschließlich deren Betreiber verantwortlich. All rights reserved. Copyright of text, illustrations and photos is reserved by the respective authors. The statements and opinions in the material contained in this journal are those of the individual contributors or advertisers, as indicated. The publishers have used reasonab- le care and skill in compiling the content of this journal. -
The Hymenoptera Collections of Williamedwardshuckard and the Dispersal of His Type Material
Beitr. Ent. Berlin ISSN 0005-805X 48 (1998) 1 S. 157-174 31.03.1998 The Hymenoptera collections of William Edward Shuckard and the dispersal of his type material With 1 figure D o n a ld B. B a k er Summary An inquiry is made into the dispersal of the Hymenoptera collections formed by WILLIAM EDWARD Shuckard and the survival of his type material. Zusammenfassung Untersucht wird der Verbleib der Hymenopteren-Sammlungen von WILLIAM EDWARD SHUCKARD und seines Typenmaterials. Additional key words T. Desvignes - W.H.L. Walcott - W.W. Saunders - E. Saunders - Hope Entomological Collections, Oxford - Natural History Museum, London - dispersal of some 19th Century entomological collections List of headings Introduction: W illiam Edward Shuckard (1803-1868)........................................................................... 158 Shuckard’s publications on the Hymenoptera:.......................................................................................... 158 Taxonomy: Hymenoptera other than bees................................................................................................. 158 The British Bees, 1866.................................................................................................................................. 159 The dispersal of Shuckard’s Hymenoptera collections.............................................................................. 159 The University Museum of Natural History, Oxford.......................................................................................162 Thomas Desvignes -
The Bees and Wasps of Marsland Nature Reserve
The Bees and Wasps of Marsland Nature Reserve Mason wasp Invertebrate survey and habitat evaluation Patrick Saunders [email protected] http://kernowecology.co.uk 1 Introduction This document consists of habitat evaluation and management recommendations for Bees and Wasps (Aculeate hymenoptera) for the Devon Wildlife Trust Nature Reserve Marsland mouth. The survey and report was commissioned by DWT Reserve warden. Marsland Nature reserve description (Pilkington & Threlkeld 2012) • The reserve comprises 212 hectares, of which 186 hectares occurs in the Marsland Valley and 26 hectares in the Welcombe Valley. The site was designated a SSSI in 1952. In addition the reserve includes an unknown acreage of foreshore north of Welcombe Mouth for 4 kilometres, extending beyond South Hole Farm (SS219201). The boundary of the reserve is approximately 18 miles long and is very complex, mainly through following the seven separate tributary streams. The reserve is freehold owned by Devon Wildlife Trust • The primary interest of the reserve is as an example of a north Devon/Cornwall coombe valley with a variety of slopes, soil types and aspects and coastal area that gives rise to a similar diversity of habitats. The most important of these are the extensive areas of relatively pure oak woodland and oak coppice, the maritime grassland and grass heath and the alder woodland and wet flushes in the valley bottoms. • There is approximately 36h of grassland, 130h of woodland, 43h of coastal habitat and 1h of open water. • The reserve also lies within an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty with the Marsland Valley being highly representative of an unspoilt coastal coombe habitat. -
Alfred Russel Wallace's Record of His Consignments to Samuel Stevens, 1854-1861
ZM 75 251-342 | 16 (baker) 12-01-2007 07:52 Page 251 Alfred Russel Wallace’s record of his consignments to Samuel Stevens, 1854-1861 D.B. Baker Baker, D.B. Alfred Russel Wallace’s record of his consignments to Samuel Stevens, 1854-1861. Zool. Med. Leiden 75 (16). 24.xii.2001: 251-341, figs 1-19.— ISSN 0024-0672. D.B. Baker, Oxford University Museum of Natural History, Oxford OX1 3PW, U.K. Keywords: A.R. Wallace; C. Allen; S. Stevens; Malaysia; Indonesia; biography; biogeography; bio- diversity. An annotated facsimile of those pages of Alfred Russel Wallace’s notebook recording his consign- ments from the Malay Archipelago to his London agent, Samuel Stevens, is provided. Records of indi- vidual consignments are linked with the stages of Wallace’s and Charles Allen’s itineraries to which they relate and are amplified from data provided by Wallace elsewhere; wherever possible, dates and places of the despatch of consignments and of the dates of their receipt in London are noted; and the dates of material becoming available for study are established, chiefly from British Museum acces- sions registers. It is intended that this should provide readier access to scattered collection data and should in particular assist in determining what specimens may properly be regarded as types or syn- types of the many taxa described by numerous contemporary authors from Wallace’s material. Contents Introduction ................................................................................................................................................. 254 The notebook ....................................................................................................................................... 254 The emphasis of Wallace’s collecting ...................................................................................... 254 Profit and loss; the dispersal of Wallace’s material .......................................................... 255 The publication of Wallace’s collections ............................................................................... -
First Records of Chrysis Splendidula Rossi, 1790 (Hymenoptera: Chrysididae), and Other Corrections of the Cuckoo Wasp Check-List of Lithuanian Fauna
124 BULLETIN OF THE LITHUANIAN ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY. Volume 3 (31) FIRST RECORDS OF CHRYSIS SPLENDIDULA ROSSI, 1790 (HYMENOPTERA: CHRYSIDIDAE), AND OTHER CORRECTIONS OF THE CUCKOO WASP CHECK-LIST OF LITHUANIAN FAUNA SVETLANA ORLOVSKYTĖ, EDUARDAS BUDRYS Nature Research Centre, Akademijos 2, LT-08412 Vilnius, Lithuania. E-mail: [email protected] Introduction Chrysis splendidula Rossi, 1790 (Hymenoptera: Chrysididae) is a cleptoparasitic cuckoo wasp widespread in the Palearctic region ranging from Europe and North Africa to Southeast Asia (Linsenmaier, 1959, 1997; Курзенко, Лелей, 2007). It has been recorded in neighbouring countries, such as Latvia (Paukkunen et al., 2014), Belarus, Poland (Wiśniowski, 2015), while the presence of this species in Lithuania has not yet been confirmed. Moreover, some other corrections must be made in the Lithuanian check-list of chrysidids (Orlovskytė et al., 2010) due to a new species description, misidentifications, and a revised taxonomic status of some species. The aim of this publication is to present new records of this cuckoo wasp species and to adjust the Chrysididae species check-list of Lithuania. Material and Methods The material was collected during field research using entomological net and yellow pan traps by E. Budrys (abbreviated as E.B.) and S. Orlovskytė (S.O.). It was identified according to W. Linsenmaier (1997), J. Paukkunen et al. (2015) and deposited in the Nature Research Centre (Vilnius, Lithuania). Total genomic DNA of the specimen from Užuožerės Miškas f. was extracted following the "GeneJet Genome Purification Kit" (Thermo Fisher Scientific) protocol. The 675 bp long fragment of the CO1-5' gene, widely used as a "barcoding" sequence (Hebert et al., 2003), was amplified with modified primers T3HYMlep-f (5'- attaaccctcactaaagtcwachaaycayaaaratatygg-3') and T7HYMnancy-r (5'- aatacgactcactataggdaraattaraatrtaaacytcwg-3') (Budrys et al., 2019). -
The Craneflies of Leicestershire and Rutland (VC55)
LEICESTERSHIRE ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY The Craneflies of Leicestershire and Rutland (VC55) John Kramer* Tipula maxima – Graham Calow LESOPS 26 (2011) ISSN 0957 - 1019 *31 Ash Tree Road, Oadby, Leicester LE2 5TE 1 Introduction It is necessary to say at the outset that, since craneflies are not a scientific group, its meaning has changed over the years. It seems to be synonymous with daddy long-legs , meaning all long-legged two-winged flies. These, in the past, have included Winter Gnats (Trichoceridae) Fold-winged flies (Ptychopteridae) and Dixidae. The present meaning, used here, is restricted to the super-family Tipuloidea (Order Diptera) which, for the past 20 years (Starý 1992), has been composed of four families - Tipulidae, Pediciidae, Cylindrotomidae and Limoniidae. I have tried to provide a firm basis for further work on craneflies in VC55, and to suggest what that work might be. There are voucher specimens for most, though not all, of the records and wherever there is only a single record, more records are needed to firmly establish that species on the county list. Pioneering work in Europe Before any meaningful lists of craneflies could be produced it was necessary to have fixed and unambiguous names for them. The genus-species naming system for doing this was first provided for the then-known craneflies by the 1758 volume of Linnaeus’s Systemae Naturae , published in Sweden, so this date provides a starting-point. Linnaeus named 14 of the more conspicuous craneflies on the British Checklist. Johan Christian Fabricius was a student of Linnaeus and did more work than his mentor on insects. -
F. Christian Thompson Neal L. Evenhuis and Curtis W. Sabrosky Bibliography of the Family-Group Names of Diptera
F. Christian Thompson Neal L. Evenhuis and Curtis W. Sabrosky Bibliography of the Family-Group Names of Diptera Bibliography Thompson, F. C, Evenhuis, N. L. & Sabrosky, C. W. The following bibliography gives full references to 2,982 works cited in the catalog as well as additional ones cited within the bibliography. A concerted effort was made to examine as many of the cited references as possible in order to ensure accurate citation of authorship, date, title, and pagination. References are listed alphabetically by author and chronologically for multiple articles with the same authorship. In cases where more than one article was published by an author(s) in a particular year, a suffix letter follows the year (letters are listed alphabetically according to publication chronology). Authors' names: Names of authors are cited in the bibliography the same as they are in the text for proper association of literature citations with entries in the catalog. Because of the differing treatments of names, especially those containing articles such as "de," "del," "van," "Le," etc., these names are cross-indexed in the bibliography under the various ways in which they may be treated elsewhere. For Russian and other names in Cyrillic and other non-Latin character sets, we follow the spelling used by the authors themselves. Dates of publication: Dating of these works was obtained through various methods in order to obtain as accurate a date of publication as possible for purposes of priority in nomenclature. Dates found in the original works or by outside evidence are placed in brackets after the literature citation. -
Zootaxa, Strepsiptera, Stylopidae, Xenos Hamiltoni Sp. N
Zootaxa 1104: 35–45 (2006) ISSN 1175-5326 (print edition) www.mapress.com/zootaxa/ ZOOTAXA 1104 Copyright © 2006 Magnolia Press ISSN 1175-5334 (online edition) Description and biological notes of the first species of Xenos (Strep- siptera: Stylopidae) parasitic in Polistes carnifex F. (Hymenoptera: Vespidae) in Mexico JEYARANEY KATHIRITHAMBY1 & DAVID P. HUGHES2 1Department of Zoology, South Parks Road, Oxford, OX1 3PS, U.K. [email protected] 2 Present address: Centre for Social Evolution, Institute of Biology, University of Copenhagen, Univer- sitetsparken 15, 2100 Copenhagen, Denmark [email protected] C o r r e s p o n d e n c e : J e y a r a n e y K a t h i r i t h a m b y D e p a r t m e n t o f Z o o l o g y , S o u t h P a r k s R o a d , O x f o r d O X 1 3 P S , U K . e-mail: [email protected] Abstract A description and biological notes on the first species of Xenos (X. hamiltoni) (Strepsiptera: Stylopidae) parasitic in Polistes carnifex F. from Mexico is given. A list of Strepsiptera and their hosts from Mexico is provided. Key words: Strepsiptera, Xenos hamiltoni sp. n., Polistes carnifex, Mexico Introduction To date thirteen species of Strepsiptera have been described from Mexico. Kifune & Brailovsky (1988) listed eleven and Kathirithamby & Moya-Raygoza (2000) listed twelve, and since then one subspecies has been added (Kathirithamby & Johnston 2003).