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Cephaloon
The Biodiversity of Flying Coleoptera Associated With
Deadwood and Saproxylic Beetle Diversity in Naturally Disturbed and Managed Spruce Forests in Nova Scotia
Comparison of Coleoptera Emergent from Various Decay Classes of Downed Coarse Woody Debris in Great Smoky Mountains Na- Tional Park, USA
An Annotated List of Insects and Other Arthropods
Rapport Officiel Insectes Susceptibles Fév2012 Pagecouv
Predator to Prey to Poop: Bats As Microbial Hosts and Insectivorous Hunters
General Overview of Saproxylic Coleoptera
Of Atlantic Canada
The World Fauna of Synchroidae Lacordaire, 1859 (Coleoptera, Tenebrionoidea, Synchroidae)
New Coleoptera Records from New Brunswick, Canada: Stenotrachelidae, Oedemeridae, Meloidae, Myceteridae, Boridae, Pythidae, Pyrochroidae, Anthicidae, and Aderidae
Insects Associated with Southern Magnolia (Magnolia Grandiflora L.) in East Tennessee
The False Longhorn Beetles (Stenotrachelidae) of Virginia (Coleoptera)
Trophic Interactions Among Dead-Wood-Dependent Forest Arthropods in the Southern Appalachian Mountains, USA
Ecology and Systematics of Coleoptera in Woody Debris Of
BEETLES and SPIDERS AS INDICATORS of RECOVERY on PRINCE of WALES ISLAND, ALASKA RECOMMENDED: by Jill M. Stockbridge Dr. Diane Wa
Annotated Checklist of Insects Associated with Native Pines in British Columbia
Colonization of Fire-Damaged Ponderosa Pine by Bluestain Fungi and Insects After the Hash Rock Fire of August 22, 2000
A Study of the Insects Inhabiting the Forest Floor in Certain Forest Types on Mount Toby, Sunderland, Massachusetts
Top View
Saproxylic Beetles (Coleoptera) of Nova Scotia
Comparison of Three Collection Techniques for Capture of Coleoptera, with an Emphasis on Saproxylic Species, in Great Smoky Mountains National Park, USA
Towards a Phylogeny of the Tenebrionoidea (Coleoptera) ⇑ Nicole L
The Comparative Morphology of the Mouthparts in the Order Coleoptera Treated from the Standpoint of Phylogeny
The Head-Capsule of Coleoptera;
Proceedings of the United States National Museum
(COLEOPTERA: CUCUJIFORMIA) Ph.D. Thesis
Dead Wood Is Anything but Dead. It Is the Lifeblood of an Intricate Web of Life in Which Insects Figure Prominently.”