Results 181 to 190 of about 9,676 (237)
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Arachnida

2004
Abstract Although the earliest arachnids were apparently marine, arachnid diversity has been dominated by terrestrial forms from at least the Devonian. Even though arachnid fossils are scarce (perhaps only 100 pre-Cenozoic taxa), representatives of all major arachnid clades are known or cladistically implied from the Devonian or earlier,
Coddington, Jonathan A.   +4 more
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Arachnida

2008
Published as part of Perez-Gelabert, Daniel E., 2008, Arthropods of Hispaniola (Dominican Republic and Haiti): A checklist and bibliography, pp.
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Arachnida

1907
(Uploaded by Plazi from the Biodiversity Heritage Library) No abstract provided.
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Arachnida

Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, 1879
The few examples of Arachnida found during the Transit of Venus Expedition to Kerguelen’s Land, were all apparently new to science. One, indeed, at present seems to me incapable of inclusion in any previously recognised order of Arachnids.
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Arachnida

1915
(Uploaded by Plazi from the Biodiversity Heritage Library) No abstract provided.
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Arachnida

1916
(Uploaded by Plazi from the Biodiversity Heritage Library) No abstract provided.
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Spiders (Arachnida: Araneae)

2020
The microanalytical entomologist can expect to encounter certain species of scorpions, sunspiders or windscorpions, tailless whipscorpions and harvestmen in food products or buildings where food is handled or stored. Spiders are carnivores that are attracted to the insects and mites that infest a building or food product rather than to the food ...
Alan R. Olsen   +2 more
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Arachnida

1947
Bulletin of the Raffles Museum, Singapore, Issue 18, pp.
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Arachnida Class: Mites

2020
Mites, along with ticks, make up the subclass Acari within the class Arachnida. These creatures differ from other arachnids in that their bodies are not segmented into cephalothorax and abdomen.
David B. Duff   +3 more
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Arachnida (Excluding Scorpiones)

2015
AbstractArachnids are terrestrial predatory chelicerates, including spiders and mites, with more than 110,000 described species within these two groups. The conquest of land led to an enormous adaptive radiation, and in the Carboniferous all extant groups were present.
Tobias Lehmann   +5 more
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