Filtern
Erscheinungsjahr
Dokumenttyp
Sprache
- Englisch (65) (entfernen)
Gehört zur Bibliographie
- nein (65)
Schlagworte
- Art (13)
- Systematik (10)
- Bestimmung (7)
- Wanzen (7)
- Fossil (6)
- Paläozoologie (6)
- Milben (5)
- Miozän (4)
- Blindwanzen (3)
- Hornmilben (3)
Three new Geotomine species of the genus Paraethus Lis, 1994, have been discovered in the collection of the Muséum national d’Histoire Naturelle (Paris). Description of these species, Paraethus riegeri n. sp. and P. raunoi n. sp. from Africa and P. lisi n. sp. from Australia are given with illustration of male and female genitalia. The African species Aethus seyidiensis Jeannel, 1913, is transferred to Paraethus. New localities are given for this species. Additional generic characters are given for
Paraethus as well as a key to species of the genus.
A new species of Tingis (Hemiptera: Heteroptera: Tingidae) is described from the Spanish provinces of Valencia, Alicante, Murcia and Almería (southeastern Iberian Peninsula). Tingis (Tropidocheila) christianriegeri n. sp. is very similar to T. alberensis Péricart, 1979, and also seems to depend on plants of the genus Sideritis. However, it is easily distinguished by its dorsal setae, besides differences in distribution and, presumably, plant host species.
Tokukobelba is proposed as a new genus in the oribatid
mite family Damaeidae Berlese, 1896. The species
Tokukobelba compta (Kulczyński, 1902) comb.
nov. is redescribed based on specimens collected in
Heidelberg in Germany. The distinguishing traits of
Tokukobelba, which include the presence of prodorsal
apophyses Aa and Ap, the occurrence of only 2 setae
on femur IV, and a solenidion coupled with the dorsal
seta d on the tibiae of legs I-IV are most unusual for a
damaeid mite. The taxonomy and evolutionary systematics
of the new genus are discussed. Evidence from
comparative morphology suggests a basal position of
Tokukobelba within its family.
Tooth mesowear analysis on Hippotherium primigenium from the Vallesian Dinotheriensande (Germany)
(2000)
Ein neuer Ansatz zur Rekonstruktion der Paläodiät von Huftieren, die Mesowearmethode, wurde kürzlich von Fortelius &
Solounias (im Druck) beschrieben. Ein großes diagnostisches Potential für die Ernährungsweise von Huftieren wurde in Merkmalen der Zahnabnutzung auf der Okklusalfläche erkannt. Die vorliegende Untersuchung ist in zweifacher Hinsicht der erste Test der Mesowearmethode. (1) Es wird die Diät des hipparionten Equiden Hippotherium primigenium aus
den vallesischen Dinotheriensanden (Rheinhessen, Deutschland) unter Anwendung der Mesowearmethode rekonstruiert.
(2) Um die Robustheit der Methode zu überprüfen, wird eine Blindteststudie durchgeführt, in der die 5 Autoren dieselbe
Sammlung oberer zweiter Molaren unabhängig voneinander untersuchen. Als Konsensusdiät für Hippotherium primigenium,
wird eine gemischte Nahrungszusammensetzung mit Grasanteil, ähnlich der des Impala (Aepyceros melampus) vorgeschlagen. Die Mesowearmethode hat sich als effektiv und robust erwiesen.
„Semper Apertus“
(2012)
On 5 August 1947, two years after the occupying American army had shut it down, the University of Heidelberg recognized Prälat Hermann Ludwig Maas (1877–1970) on his seventieth birthday with a doctorate honoris causa. The document which the Rektor, Prof. Hans Freiherr von Campenhausen, presented to Maas supported the honor with half a dozen reasons why he was worthy of the title Doktor, but the laudatio made no mention of the university’s debt to Hermann Maas that arose in the summer of 1945. Years later, when Maas was a walking, living legend in his own city, the popular press remembered that Maas and members of the Theological Faculty taught uninterruptedly during the Summer Semester of 1945 while other faculties
slumbered. Maas and his colleagues helped the university live up to its heralded motto: semper apertus.