Results 291 to 300 of about 52,743 (314)
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Cryptocephales espagnols (Col. Chrysomelidae)

Bulletin mensuel de la Société linnéenne de Lyon, 1964
Demaux Jacques. Cryptocephales espagnols (Col. Chrysomelidae). In: Bulletin mensuel de la Société linnéenne de Lyon, 33ᵉ année, n°5, mai 1964. pp. 178-180.
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SOME NEW CANADIAN CHRYSOMELIDAE

The Canadian Entomologist, 1938
Length 3.7 mm.; width 1.7 mm. Body form as in palustris Blatch. Black; the elytra with a greenish lustre, not at all bluish: the basal half of the head, antennae, and legs pale red; the basal segment and four terminal segments of each antenna distinctly infuscate; femora and the apical half of each terminal tarsal segment heavily infuscate.
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The Chrysomelinae (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae) of the Mongolian Altai

The Coleopterists Bulletin, 2017
Abstract An annotated inventory of the 40 species and 12 genera of Chrysomelinae from the Mongolian Altai is presented. Four species of leaf beetles, Chrysolina quadrangulata Motschulsky, 1860, Chrysolina graminis (Linnaeus, 1758), Phratora polaris (Schneider, 1886), and Phratora vulgatissima (Linnaeus, 1758), and one subspecies, Chrysolina perforata ...
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Coleopteran Pests: Family Chrysomelidae

2020
This chapter assesses the dichondra flea beetle, family Chrysomelidae, subfamily Halticinae. The dichondra flea beetle is a member of a genus of minute flea beetles generally smaller than 2.5 mm, with most 1.5–2.0 mm in length. It is a very destructive beetle on lawns of dichondra in California, often destroying many of them.
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Efficacy of lemongrass essential oil and citral in controlling Callosobruchus maculatus (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae), a post-harvest cowpea insect pest

Crop Protection, 2019
Marcela de S. Alves   +5 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

‘Retournement’ of the aedeagus in Chrysomelidae (Coleoptera)

1994
‘Retournement’ refers to a rotation of the aedeagus through 180° approximately, about its longitudinal axis, in development. This change in orientation of the copulatory organ is irreversible.
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Cytogenetics, Cytotaxonomy and Genetics of Chrysomelidae

1988
Very likely the most important feature of the living things is their own pool of genes, that is the whole inherited factors shared by the individuals of any species. Many different kinds of traits, from the molecules to the external characteristics, are directly or at least indirectly governed by the genes.
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Biology of Chrysomelidae

Annals of the Entomological Society of America, 1990
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The Hymenoptera and Diptera parasitoids of Chrysomelidae

1994
The literature on the Hymenoptera and Diptera parasitoids of leaf beetles is extensive and although there are some host-parasite catalogues for both orders, much information is concealed in individual publications on the biology/ecology of single chrysomelid species.
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