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- Dicondylia Hennig 1953 Dott
- Insect Evolution
- The Head of the Earwig Forficula Auricularia (Dermaptera) and Its Evolutionary Implications
- Zoologischer Anzeiger
- Tricholepidion Gertschi Indicates Monophyletic Zygentoma Blanke Et Al
- Ground Plan of the Insect Mushroom Body: Functional and Evolutionary Implications
- INSECTS Arthropoda
- The Female Genitalic Region and Gonoducts of Embioptera (Insecta
- Contents More Information
- Hymenoptera: Formicidae: Leptanillinae
- Ultrastructure of Attachment Specializations of Hexapods (Arthropoda): Evolutionary Patterns Inferred from a Revised Ordinal Phylogeny
- Insect Radiation the Orders of Insects
- Butterflies at Geochembio: Taxonomy, Interesting Facts, Life Cycle, Photo Gallery, Bibliography
- Insect-Like Organization of the Stomatopod Central Complex: Functional and Phylogenetic Implications
- Türkçe Böcek Adları Turkish Entomonyms, Турецкие Энтомонимы
- Aphid Acyrthosiphon Pisum, Pea Aphid
- The Female Cephalothorax of Stylops Ovinae Noskiewicz & Poluszyå„Ski, 1928 (Strepsiptera: Stylopidae) 65-81 74 (1): 65 – 81 14.6.2016
- Insecta: Dermaptera: Hemimeridae), with a Discussion of the Postgenital Abdomen of Insecta
- Evolution of the Insects
- Notes on Mating and Oviposition of a Primitive Representative Of
- Origin and Evolution of Insect Wings and Their Relation to Metamorphosis, As Documented by the Fossil Record
- Hemiptera, Cicadomorpha, Cicadidae)
- The Evolutionary Pathway to Insect Flight – a Tentative Reconstruction
- The Phylogeny and Classification of Embioptera (Insecta) Janice Edgerly-Rooks Santa Clara University, [email protected]
- A Molecular Phylogeny of Hexapoda
- The Sister Group of Aculeata (Hymenoptera) – Evidence from Internal Head Anatomy, with Emphasis on the Tentorium
- Shifts in Hexapod Diversification and What Haldane Could Have Said
- The Cephalic Anatomy of Workers of the Ant Species Wasmannia Affinis
- Can Comprehensive Background Knowledge Be Incorporated Into
- Comparative Mitogenomic Analysis of Aposthonia Borneensisand
- Evolution of the Insects
- Possible Homologies in the Proventriculi of Dicondylia (Hexapoda) and Malacostraca (Crustacea)