Results 171 to 180 of about 1,122 (192)
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New and little-known Indian craneflies (Diptera : Tipulidae)—III

Oriental Insects, 1969
Abstract Three new species of Indian Tipulidae are described, these being Limonia (Melanolimonia) latemarginata, L. (Sivalimnobia) clavula and Pilaria tiro all from Kameng, Assam. In addition, figures of the venation and male hypopygium of several Indian species of the Hexatomine genus Paradelphomyia Alexander, not previously illustrated, are provided.
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First Record of Cephalobellus brevicaudatus (Leidy, 1851) Christie, 1933 (Nematoda: Oxyurida: Thelastomatoidea), from Cranefly Larvae (Diptera: Tipulidae) in Ohio, U.S.A.

Comparative parasitology, 2018
Specimens of the tipulid (cranefly) larvae Tipula (Pterelachisas) sp. Rondani (n = 118) were recovered from rotting logs in 2 forests of central Ohio from 2011 to 2016.
R. Carreno, Lauren E Kiebler, L. Tuhela
semanticscholar   +1 more source

First record for France of a little-known palaearctic cranefly: Tipula (Pterelachisus) jutlandica Nielsen, 1947 (Diptera, Tipulidae)

Bulletin de la Société entomologique de France
Tipula (Pterelachisus) jutlandica Nielsen, 1947, a little-known Palaearctic cranefly species, is recorded for the first time from France, in Haute-Saône, at a site managed by the Conservatoire d’espaces naturels de Franche-Comté.
P. Tillier   +2 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

The Ecological Distribution of Adult Craneflies in Carnarvonshire

The Journal of Ecology, 1925
THE county of Carnarvonshire, N. Wales, has a very great surface variety, unequalled by any other county in the British Isles. Its greatest length is 55 miles from east to west, but from north to south it is 25 miles in the extreme east, narrowing down to 20 miles in a line from Bangor to Portmadoc, and ending in the snout-like projection of Braich-y ...
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Global diversity of craneflies (Insecta, Diptera: Tipulidea or Tipulidae sensu lato) in freshwater

Hydrobiologia, 2007
The Tipulidae s.l.—craneflies—are one of the largest groups of the Diptera containing over 15,270 valid species and subspecies. The immatures of the majority of species live in aquatic or semiaquatic habitats. Some aquatic species live entirely submerged and lack functional spiracles, others come to the surface to take oxygen by using spiracles ...
de Jong, H.   +4 more
openaire   +3 more sources

New and little-known Indian craneflies (Tipulidae, Diptera) I

Oriental Insects, 1967
Abstract New Indian species of the tribe Limoniini, chiefly the genus Limonia are described. These are: Orimarga (O.) pachyrhyncha, Limonia (Afrolimonia) indra, L. (L.) submurcida, L. (Goniodineura) magnisiva, L. (Die-ranomyia) amblymorpha, L. (D.) pristomera, L. (Geranomyia) deccanica, and L. tigriventris.
openaire   +1 more source

The craneflies of the South-West Cape (Diptera, Tipuloidea)

1952
(Uploaded by Plazi from the Biodiversity Heritage Library) No abstract provided.
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Passive Dispersal of Viable Algae and Protozoa By Certain Craneflies and Midges

Ecology, 1967
Four species of aquatic Diptera, Tipula triplex Walker (Tipulidae), Bittacomorpha clavipes (F.) (Ptychopteridae), Chaoborus punctipennis (Say) (Culicidae), and Tendipes sp. (Tendipedidae), were collected aseptically and used to inoculate sterile soil—water extract.
Donald L. Revill   +2 more
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Behavioural and morphological mimicry in a cranefly and an ichneumonid

1974
(Uploaded by Plazi from the Biodiversity Heritage Library) No abstract provided.
openaire   +1 more source

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