22 results on '"Cybertaxonomy"'
Search Results
2. Three new species in the harvestmen genus Acuclavella (Opiliones, Dyspnoi, Ischyropsalidoidea), including description of male Acuclavella quattuor Shear, 1986.
- Author
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Richart, Casey H. and Hedin, Marshal
- Subjects
- *
OPILIONES , *CLADISTIC analysis , *NUCLEOTIDE sequence , *MORPHOMETRICS , *FIELD research - Abstract
In Shear's (1986) cladistic analysis of the Ischyropsalidoidea, he described the new genus Acuclavella including four new species from the Pacific Northwest states of Washington and Idaho. Several of these species descriptions were based on very limited sample sizes. Our recent field work has increased by more than an order of magnitude both the number of specimens and known localities for Acuclavella. We use this new material to interpret species limits in Acuclavella using morphometric analyses and DNA sequence data from four gene regions. We sequence for the first time the protein-coding homolog of the Wnt2 gene for phylogenetic reconstruction in Opiliones. Our multi-locus phylogeny corroborates a sister relationship between Acuclavella and Ceratolasma, as hypothesized using morphology by Shear (1986). Within Acuclavella, morphometric clusters and reciprocal allelic monophyly allows recognition of three additional species: Acuclavella leonardi sp. n., A. sheari sp. n., and A. makah sp. n. This work also describes the previously unknown male of Acuclavella quattuor, from specimens collected at the type locality. Our research identifies a number of novel morphologies for Acuclavella, including females with four pairs of spines, individuals with three pairs of spines on scute areas I-III, and a population with two pairs of spines disjunct from A. quattuor, which was diagnosed with this spination character. We were unable to assign these populations to existing species, and conservatively do not yet recognize them as new. Intrageneric morphometrics and phylogenetic inference in Acuclavella were often concordant. However, we demonstrate that species delimitation signal would not be detected if only a single line of evidence were utilized. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Micro-computed tomography: Introducing new dimensions to taxonomy.
- Author
-
Faulwetter, Sarah, Vasileiadou, Aikaterini, Kouratoras, Michail, Dailianis, Thanos, and Arvanitidis, Christos
- Subjects
- *
THREE-dimensional imaging , *BIOLOGICAL classification , *POLYCHAETA , *SPECIES distribution , *DISPERSAL (Ecology) , *ELECTRONIC data processing - Abstract
Continuous improvements in the resolution of three-dimensional imaging have led to an increased application of these techniques in conventional taxonomic research in recent years. Coupled with an ever increasing research effort in cybertaxonomy, three-dimensional imaging could give a boost to the development of virtual specimen collections, allowing rapid and simultaneous access to accurate virtual representations of type material. This paper explores the potential of micro-computed tomography (X-ray micro-tomography), a non-destructive three-dimensional imaging technique based on mapping X-ray attenuation in the scanned object, for supporting research in systematics and taxonomy. The subsequent use of these data as virtual type material, so-called "cybertypes", and the creation of virtual collections lie at the core of this potential. Sample preparation, image acquisition, data processing and presentation of results are demonstrated using polychaetes (bristle worms), a representative taxon of macro-invertebrates, as a study object. Effects of the technique on the morphological, anatomical and molecular identity of the specimens are investigated. The paper evaluates the results and discusses the potential and the limitations of the technique for creating cybertypes. It also discusses the challenges that the community might face to establish virtual collections. Potential future applications of three-dimensional information in taxonomic research are outlined, including an outlook to new ways of producing, disseminating and publishing taxonomic information. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. New Australian stiletto flies: revision of Manestella Metz and description of Medomega gen. n. (Diptera, Therevidae, Agapophytinae).
- Author
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Winterton, Shaun L. and Lambkin, Christine L.
- Subjects
- *
FLIES , *SPECIES distribution , *BIOLOGICAL classification , *DISPERSAL (Ecology) , *DIPTERA , *THEREVIDAE - Abstract
The previously monotypic genus Manestella Metz, 2003 is revised with a single species, M. tristriata (Mann, 1933), redescribed and an additional 14 new species described: Manestella caesia sp. n., M. campestris sp. n., M. canities sp. n., M. cooloola sp. n., M. fumosa sp. n., M. incompleta sp. n., M. nubis sp. n., M. obscura sp. n., M. ocellaris sp. n., M. persona sp. n., M. poecilothorax sp. n., M. umbrapennis sp. n., M. vasta sp. n. and M. vespera sp. n. The putative sister genus to Manestella, Medomega gen. n., is described containing six new species: Medomega averyi sp. n., M. bailmeup sp. n., M. chlamydos sp. n., M. danielsi sp. n., M. gigasathe sp. n., and M. nebrias sp. n. Complete taxonomic descriptions were generated from a character matrix developed in Lucid Builder from which natural language descriptions (NLD) were parsed. Images of all species of Manestella and Medomega gen. n. are included, along with dichotomous keys to species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. A charismatic new species of green lacewing discovered in Malaysia (Neuroptera, Chrysopidae): the confluence of citizen scientist, online image database and cybertaxonomy.
- Author
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Winterton, Shaun L., Guek, Hock Ping, and Brooks, Stephen J.
- Subjects
- *
SPECIES , *CHRYSOPIDAE , *NEUROPTERA , *TAXONOMISTS - Abstract
An unusual new species of green lacewing (Neuroptera: Chrysopidae: Semachrysa jade sp. n.) is described from Selangor (Malaysia) as a joint discovery by citizen scientist and professional taxonomists. The incidental nature of this discovery is underscored by the fact that the species was initially photographed and then released, with images subsequently posted to an online image database. It was not until the images in the database were randomly examined by the professional taxonomists that it was determined that the species was in fact new. A subsequent specimen was collected at the same locality and is described herein along with another specimen identified from nearby Sabah. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Review of Australasian spider flies (Diptera, Acroceridae) with a revision of Panops Lamarck.
- Author
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Winterton, Shaun L.
- Subjects
- *
SPIDER behavior , *ACROCERIDAE , *ANIMAL species - Abstract
The Australasian spider flies (Diptera: Acroceridae) are reviewed, with all eight currently recognized genera diagnosed and figured. The panopine genus Panops Lamarck, 1804 from Australia and Indonesia is revised with four new species described, increasing the total number of species in the genus to nine: P. aurum sp. n., P. danielsi sp. n., P. jade sp. n. and P. schlingeri sp. n. Five species of Panops are redescribed: Panops austrae Neboiss, 1971, P. baudini Lamarck, 1804, P. boharti (Schlinger, 1959), comb. n., P. conspicuus (Brunetti, 1926) and P. grossi (Neboiss, 1971), comb. n. The monotypic genera Neopanops Schlinger, 1959 and Panocalda Neboiss, 1971 are synonymized with Panops. Keys to genera of Australasian Acroceridae and species of Panops, Helle Osten Sacken, 1896 and Australasian Pterodontia Gray, 1832 are included. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Bush Blitz aids description of three new species and a new genus of Australian beeflies (Diptera, Bombyliidae, Exoprosopini).
- Author
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Lambkin, Christine L. and Bartlett, Justin S.
- Subjects
- *
PHYLOGENY , *TAXONOMY , *NATIONAL Reserve System (Australia) , *BOMBYLIIDAE - Abstract
Bush Blitz is a three-year multimillion dollar program to document the plants and animals in hundreds of properties across Australia's National Reserve System. The core focus is on nature discovery - identifying and describing new species of plants and animals. The Bush Blitz program has enabled the collection and description of beeflies (Diptera, Bombyliidae) from surveys in Western Australia and Queensland. Three new species of Australian beeflies belonging to the Exoprosopini are described; Palirika mackenziei Lambkin, sp. n., Palirika culgoafloodplainensis Lambkin, sp. n., and Larrpana bushblitz Lambkin, sp. n. Phylogenetic analysis of 40 Australian exoprosopine species belonging to the Balaana generic-group Lambkin & Yeates, 2003 supports the placement of the three new species into existing genera, and the erection and description of the new genus Ngalki Lambkin, gen. n. for Ngalki trigonium (Lambkin & Yeates, 2003), comb. n. Revised keys are provided for the genera of the Australian Balaana genus-group and the species of Palirika Lambkin & Yeates, 2003 and Larrpana Lambkin & Yeates, 2003. With the description of the three new species and the transferral of Munjua trigona Lambkin & Yeates, 2003 into the new genus Ngalki Lambkin, gen. n., three genera are rediagnosed; Munjua Lambkin & Yeates, 2003, Palirika and Larrpana. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Sphaerosyllis levantina sp. n. (Annelida) from the eastern Mediterranean, with notes on character variation in Sphaerosyllis hystrix Claparède, 1863.
- Author
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Faulwetter, Sarah, Chatzigeorgiou, Georgios, Galil, Bella S., Nicolaidou, Artemis, and Arvanitidis, Christos
- Subjects
- *
POLYCHAETA , *SYLLIDAE , *TAXONOMY - Abstract
Examination of polychaete specimens from Haifa Bay (Israel, eastern Mediterranean Sea) revealed several individuals exhibiting morphological characteristics similar to Sphaerosyllis hystrix Claparede, 1863. A detailed morphometrical analysis of the Israeli specimens in comparison to specimens of S. hystrix and S. boeroi Musco, Cinar & Giangrande, 2005 supported the description of the former as a new species, S. levantina sp. n. Individuals of S. hystrix formed a very heterogeneous group with strong character variations in the analysis and the presumed cosmopolitan distribution of the species is discussed based on literature records. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. New genera of philopotine spider flies (Diptera, Acroceridae) with a key to living and fossil genera.
- Author
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Gillung, Jéssica P. and Winterton, Shaun L.
- Subjects
- *
ACROCERIDAE , *DIPTERA , *FLIES - Abstract
In this paper we describe two new genera of philopotine Acroceridae: Schlingeriella irwini gen. et sp. n. (New Caledonia) and Quasi fisheri gen. et sp. n. (Mexico). The Baltic amber species Eulonchiella eocenica Meunier, 1912 is rediagnosed and a neotype designated based on a newly discovered specimen. We also provide a dichotomous key to the world genera of Philopotinae, both living and fossil. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Revision of the stiletto fly genera Acupalpa Kröber and Pipinnipons Winterton (Diptera, Therevidae, Agapophytinae) using cybertaxonomic methods, with a key to Australasian genera.
- Author
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Winterton, Shaun L.
- Subjects
- *
THEREVIDAE , *CLASSIFICATION of insects , *DIPTERA , *NUMBERS of species - Abstract
Australian stiletto flies of the sister-genera Acupalpa Kröber, 1912 and Pipinnipons Winterton, 2001 (Diptera: Therevidae: Agapophytinae) are revised. Twelve new species of Acupalpa are described, while Acupalpa imitans (White, 1915), comb. n. is transferred from Pipinnipons and Acupalpa albimanis (Kröber, 1914), comb. n. is transferred from Ectinorhynchus Macquart as a senior synonym of Acupalpa pollinosa Mann. The total number of species of Acupalpa is therefore increased to 19: A. albimanis (Kröber), comb. n., A. albitarsa Mann, A. boharti sp. n., A. divisa (Walker), A. dolichorhyncha sp. n., A. glossa sp. n., A. imitans (White), comb. n., A. irwini Winterton, A. melanophaeos sp. n., A. miaboolya sp. n., A. minuta sp. n., A. minutoides sp. n., A. notomelas sp. n., A. novayamarna sp. n., A. rostrata Kröber, A. semirufa Mann, A. westralica sp. n., A. yalgoo sp. n. and A. yanchep sp. n. Three new species of Pipinnipons are described, increasing the total number of species to five: P. chauncyvallis sp. n., P. fascipennis (Kröber), P. kampmeierae sp. n., P. kroeberi Winterton, and P. sphecoda sp. n. Pipinnipons and Acupalpa are rediagnosed in light of the new species presented herein and revised keys to species are included. A dichotomous key to genera of Australasian Therevidae is included. As an empirical example of cybertaxonomy, taxonomic descriptions were composed using a character matrix developed in Lucid Builder (in Structured Descriptive Data (SDD) format) to generate natural language descriptions supplemented by online specimen and image databases. Web resources are provided throughout the document including: a) links to high resolution colour images of all species on Morphbank, b) registration of authors, publications, taxon names and other nomenclatural acts in Zoobank, with assignment of Life Science Identifiers (LSIDs) for each, c) links to Genbank accession records for DNA sequences, and d) assignment of LSIDs to specimen records with links to respective records in an online Therevidae specimen database. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. The centipede genus Eupolybothrus Verhoeff, 1907 (Chilopoda: Lithobiomorpha: Lithobiidae) in North Africa, a cybertaxonomic revision, with a key to all species in the genus and the first use of DNA barcoding for the group.
- Author
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Stoev, Pavel, Akkari, Nesrine, Zapparoli, Marzio, Porco, David, Enghoff, Henrik, Edgecombe, Gregory D., Georgiev, Teodor, and Penev, Lyubomir
- Subjects
- *
LITHOBIUS , *LITHOBIIDAE , *CENTIPEDES , *MYRIAPODA , *GENETIC genealogy , *TAXONOMY , *ANIMAL species , *ANIMAL classification - Abstract
Thee centipede genus Eupolybothrus Verhoeff, 1907 in North Africa is revised. A new cavernicolous species, E. kahfiStoev & Akkari, sp. n., is described from a cave in Jebel Zaghouan, northeast Tunisia. Morphologically, it is most closely related to E. nudicornis (Gervais, 1837) from North Africa and Southwest Europe but can be readily distinguished by the long antennae and leg-pair 15, a conical dorso-median protuberance emerging from the posterior part of prefemur 15, and the shape of the male first genital sternite. Molecular sequence data from the cytochrome c oxidase I gene (mtDNA-5' COI-barcoding fragment) exhibit 19.19% divergence between E. kahfiand E. nudicornis, an interspecific value comparable to those observed among four other species of Eupolybothrus which, combined with a low intraspecific divergence (0.3-1.14%), supports the morphological diagnosis of E. kahfias a separate species. Theis is the first troglomorphic myriapod to be found in Tunisia, and the second troglomorph lithobiomorph centipede known from North Africa. E. nudicornis is redescribed based on abundant material from Tunisia and its post-embryonic development, distribution and habitat preferences recorded. E. cloudsley-thompsoni Turk, 1955, a nominal species based on Tunisian type material, is placed in synonymy with E. nudicornis. To comply with the latest technological developments in publishing of biological information, the paper implements new approaches in cybertaxonomy, such as fine granularity XML tagging validated against the NLM DTD TaxPub for PubMedCentral and dissemination in XML to various aggregators (GBIF, EOL, Wikipedia), vizualisation of all taxa mentioned in the text via the dynamically created Pensoft Taxon Profile (PTP) page, data publishing, georeferencing of all lo calities via Google Earth, and ZooBank, GenBank and MorphBank registration of datasets. An interactive key to all valid species of Eupolybothrus is made with DELTA software. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. The flower fly genus Eosphaerophoria Frey (Diptera, Syrphidae).
- Author
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Mengual, Ximo and Ghorpadé, Kumar
- Subjects
- *
SYRPHIDAE , *DIPTERA , *INSECTS , *ANIMAL species , *ANIMAL classification - Abstract
The flower fly genus Eosphaerophoria is revised. Eight new species are described (adornata sp. n. Mengual, bifi da sp. n. Mengual, brunettii sp. n. Ghorpadé, hermosa sp. n. Mengual, luteofasciata sp. n. Mengual, nigrovittata sp. n. Mengual, symmetrica sp. n. Mengual, and vietnamensis sp. n. Mengual), and an identifi cation key is provided. Redescriptions, illustrations, synonymies, diagnoses and distributional data are given for all 11 known species of Eosphaerophoria. The new described species increase the genus' distribution, now recorded from Nepal and Sri Lanka east to New Guinea. All information data, images and drawings, as well as additional images and relevant information, are available online via the internet as an example of the utility of international standards for biodiversity informatics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Jewelled spider flies of North America: a revision and phylogeny of Eulonchus Gerstaecker (Diptera, Acroceridae)
- Author
-
Jessica P. Gillung, Shaun L. Winterton, and Christopher J. Borkent
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Biogeography ,010607 zoology ,tarantula ,Zoology ,phylogeny ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Intraspecific competition ,Genus ,lcsh:Zoology ,Animalia ,lcsh:QL1-991 ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Antrodiaetidae ,Euctenizidae ,spider parasitoid ,biodiversity ,Lucid ,Tarantula ,Spider ,small-headed fly ,Acroceridae ,biology ,Ecology ,Diptera ,biology.organism_classification ,Key (lock) ,Animal Science and Zoology ,cybertaxonomy ,Research Article - Abstract
The spider fly genus Eulonchus Gerstaecker is found throughout the Nearctic Region. Six species are recognized and intraspecific morphological variation is documented in several species. A phylogeny of Eulonchus based on DNA sequence data of three molecular markers (COI, CAD, and 16S) is presented and relationships of species are discussed in the light of biogeography and host usage. All six species of Eulonchus are redescribed using natural language descriptions exported from a character matrix, and a key to species is presented. Lectotypes are designated for Eulonchus sapphirinus Osten Sacken, Eulonchus smaragdinus Gerstaecker, and Eulonchus tristis Loew.
- Published
- 2016
14. Micro-computed tomography: Introducing new dimensions to taxonomy
- Author
-
Michail Kouratoras, Christos Arvanitidis, Thanos Dailianis, Sarah Faulwetter, and Aikaterini Vasileiadou
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Computer science ,ComputingMethodologies_IMAGEPROCESSINGANDCOMPUTERVISION ,Bioinformatics ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,taxonomy ,visualisation ,Type (biology) ,Taxonomy (general) ,lcsh:Zoology ,lcsh:QL1-991 ,systematics ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Data processing ,Micro-computed tomography ,Information retrieval ,Object (computer science) ,cybertypes ,Study Object ,Visualization ,interactive PDF ,Specimen collection ,polychaetes ,Identity (object-oriented programming) ,Animal Science and Zoology ,cybertaxonomy ,3D - Abstract
Continuous improvements in the resolution of three-dimensional imaging have led to an increased application of these techniques in conventional taxonomic research in recent years. Coupled with an ever increasing research effort in cybertaxonomy, three-dimensional imaging could give a boost to the development of virtual specimen collections, allowing rapid and simultaneous access to accurate virtual representations of type material. This paper explores the potential of micro-computed tomography (X-ray micro-tomography), a non-destructive three-dimensional imaging technique based on mapping X-ray attenuation in the scanned object, for supporting research in systematics and taxonomy. The subsequent use of these data as virtual type material, so-called “cybertypes”, and the creation of virtual collections lie at the core of this potential. Sample preparation, image acquisition, data processing and presentation of results are demonstrated using polychaetes (bristle worms), a representative taxon of macro-invertebrates, as a study object. Effects of the technique on the morphological, anatomical and molecular identity of the specimens are investigated. The paper evaluates the results and discusses the potential and the limitations of the technique for creating cybertypes. It also discusses the challenges that the community might face to establish virtual collections. Potential future applications of three-dimensional information in taxonomic research are outlined, including an outlook to new ways of producing, disseminating and publishing taxonomic information.
- Published
- 2013
15. Sphaerosyllis levantina sp. n. (Annelida) from the eastern Mediterranean, with notes on character variation in Sphaerosyllis hystrix Claparède, 1863
- Author
-
Christos Arvanitidis, Bella S. Galil, Sarah Faulwetter, Georgios Chatzigeorgiou, and Artemis Nicolaidou
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,food.ingredient ,Zoology ,Mediterranean ,Sphaerosyllis hystrix ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,Scratchpads ,Sphaerosyllis ,food ,Exogoninae ,Sphaerosyllis levantina ,lcsh:Zoology ,14. Life underwater ,lcsh:QL1-991 ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,new species ,Polychaete ,Heterogeneous group ,biology ,Ecology ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,biology.organism_classification ,Eastern mediterranean ,Cosmopolitan distribution ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Cybertaxonomy ,Syllidae ,Bay ,Polychaetes - Abstract
Examination of polychaete specimens from Haifa Bay (Israel, eastern Mediterranean Sea) revealed several individuals exhibiting morphological characteristics similar to Sphaerosyllis hystrix Claparède, 1863. A detailed morphometrical analysis of the Israeli specimens in comparison to specimens of Sphaerosyllis hystrix and Sphaerosyllis boeroi Musco, Çinar and Giangrande, 2005 supported the description of the former as a new species, Sphaerosyllis levantina sp. n. Individuals of Sphaerosyllis hystrix formed a very heterogeneous group with strong character variations in the analysis and the presumed cosmopolitan distribution of the species is discussed based on literature records.
- Published
- 2011
16. Bush Blitz aids description of three new species and a new genus of Australian beeflies (Diptera, Bombyliidae, Exoprosopini)
- Author
-
Justin S Bartlett and Christine L. Lambkin
- Subjects
Entomology ,Ngalki ,Morphbank ,Balaana genus-group ,phylogenetic analysis ,Zoology ,Larrpana ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Article ,Scratchpads ,Palirika ,Genus ,lcsh:Zoology ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Munjua ,Bombyliidae ,lcsh:QL1-991 ,cybertaxonomy ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Exoprosopini - Abstract
Bush Blitz is a three-year multimillion dollar program to document the plants and animals in hundreds of properties across Australia’s National Reserve System. The core focus is on nature discovery – identifying and describing new species of plants and animals. The Bush Blitz program has enabled the collection and description of beeflies (Diptera, Bombyliidae) from surveys in Western Australia and Queensland. Three new species of Australian beeflies belonging to the Exoprosopini are described; Palirika mackenziei Lambkin, sp. n., Palirika culgoafloodplainensis Lambkin, sp. n., and Larrpana bushblitz Lambkin, sp. n. Phylogenetic analysis of 40 Australian exoprosopine species belonging to the Balaana generic-group Lambkin & Yeates, 2003 supports the placement of the three new species into existing genera, and the erection and description of the new genus Ngalki Lambkin, gen. n. for Ngalki trigonium (Lambkin & Yeates, 2003), comb. n. Revised keys are provided for the genera of the Australian Balaana genus-group and the species of Palirika Lambkin & Yeates, 2003 and Larrpana Lambkin & Yeates, 2003. With the description of the three new species and the transferral of Munjua trigona Lambkin & Yeates, 2003 into the new genus Ngalki Lambkin, gen. n., three genera are rediagnosed; Munjua Lambkin & Yeates, 2003, Palirika and Larrpana.
- Published
- 2011
17. The centipede genus Eupolybothrus Verhoeff, 1907 (Chilopoda: Lithobiomorpha: Lithobiidae) in North Africa, a cybertaxonomic revision, with a key to all species in the genus and the first use of DNA barcoding for the group
- Author
-
Lyubomir Penev, Pavel Stoev, Gregory D. Edgecombe, Teodor Georgiev, Nesrine Akkari, Marzio Zapparoli, David Porco, and Henrik Enghoff
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Troglomorphism ,010607 zoology ,Zoology ,habitat preferences ,semantic tagging ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,DNA barcoding ,Article ,cytochrome c oxidase I gene ,Type (biology) ,Eupolybothrus kahfi sp. n ,Genus ,lcsh:Zoology ,lcsh:QL1-991 ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,biology ,E. nudicornis ,Eupolybothrus nudicornis ,troglomorphism ,biology.organism_classification ,North Africa ,semantic enhancements ,barcoding ,Taxon ,Lithobiidae ,Key (lock) ,Animal Science and Zoology ,cybertaxonomy ,interactive key ,Centipede - Abstract
The centipede genus Eupolybothrus Verhoeff, 1907 in North Africa is revised. A new cavernicolous species, Eupolybothrus kahfi Stoev & Akkari, sp. n., is described from a cave in Jebel Zaghouan, northeast Tunisia. Morphologically, it is most closely related to Eupolybothrus nudicornis (Gervais, 1837) from North Africa and Southwest Europe but can be readily distinguished by the long antennae and leg-pair 15, a conical dorso-median protuberance emerging from the posterior part of prefemur 15, and the shape of the male first genital sternite. Molecular sequence data from the cytochrome c oxidase I gene (mtDNA–5’ COI-barcoding fragment) exhibit 19.19% divergence between Eupolybothrus kahfi and Eupolybothrus nudicornis, an interspecific value comparable to those observed among four other species of Eupolybothrus which, combined with a low intraspecific divergence (0.3–1.14%), supports the morphological diagnosis of Eupolybothrus kahfi as a separate species. This is the first troglomorphic myriapod to be found in Tunisia, and the second troglomorph lithobiomorph centipede known from North Africa. Eupolybothrus nudicornis is redescribed based on abundant material from Tunisia and its post-embryonic development, distribution and habitat preferences recorded. Eupolybothrus cloudsley-thompsoni Turk, 1955, a nominal species based on Tunisian type material, is placed in synonymy with Eupolybothrus nudicornis. To comply with the latest technological developments in publishing of biological information, the paper implements new approaches in cybertaxonomy, such as fine granularity XML tagging validated against the NLM DTD TaxPub for PubMedCentral and dissemination in XML to various aggregators (GBIF, EOL, Wikipedia), vizualisation of all taxa mentioned in the text via the dynamically created Pensoft Taxon Profile (PTP) page, data publishing, georeferencing of all localities via Google Earth, and ZooBank, GenBank and MorphBank registration of datasets. An interactive key to all valid species of Eupolybothrus is made with DELTA software.
- Published
- 2010
18. A charismatic new species of green lacewing discovered in Malaysia (Neuroptera, Chrysopidae): the confluence of citizen scientist, online image database and cybertaxonomy
- Author
-
Stephen J. Brooks, Shaun L. Winterton, and Hock Ping Guek
- Subjects
biology ,Operations research ,Neuroptera ,citizen scientist ,JADE (programming language) ,biology.organism_classification ,Genealogy ,Article ,Semachrysa ,Ankylopterygini ,Image database ,lcsh:Zoology ,Citizen science ,Charisma ,Animal Science and Zoology ,lcsh:QL1-991 ,cybertaxonomy ,computer ,Chrysopidae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,computer.programming_language - Abstract
An unusual new species of green lacewing (Neuroptera: Chrysopidae: Semachrysa jade sp. n.) is described from Selangor (Malaysia) as a joint discovery by citizen scientist and professional taxonomists. The incidental nature of this discovery is underscored by the fact that the species was initially photographed and then released, with images subsequently posted to an online image database. It was not until the images in the database were randomly examined by the professional taxonomists that it was determined that the species was in fact new. A subsequent specimen was collected at the same locality and is described herein along with another specimen identified from nearby Sabah.
- Published
- 2012
19. Review of Australasian spider flies (Diptera, Acroceridae) with a revision of Panops Lamarck
- Author
-
Shaun L. Winterton
- Subjects
Spider ,Panops baudini ,Zoology ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Article ,Acroceridae ,Genus ,Botany ,lcsh:Zoology ,Pterodontia ,Animal Science and Zoology ,lcsh:QL1-991 ,cybertaxonomy ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,spider parasitoid - Abstract
The Australasian spider flies (Diptera: Acroceridae) are reviewed, with all eight currently recognized genera diagnosed and figured. The panopine genus Panops Lamarck, 1804 from Australia and Indonesia is revised with four new species described, increasing the total number of species in the genus to nine: P. aurum sp. n., P. danielsi sp. n., P. jade sp. n. and P. schlingeri sp. n. Five species of Panops are redescribed: Panops austrae Neboiss, 1971, P. baudini Lamarck, 1804, P. boharti (Schlinger, 1959), comb. n., P. conspicuus (Brunetti, 1926) and P. grossi (Neboiss, 1971), comb. n. The monotypic genera Neopanops Schlinger, 1959 and Panocalda Neboiss, 1971 are synonymized with Panops. Keys to genera of Australasian Acroceridae and species of Panops, Helle Osten Sacken, 1896 and Australasian Pterodontia Gray, 1832 are included.
- Published
- 2011
20. Revision of the stiletto fly genera Acupalpa Kröber and Pipinnipons Winterton (Diptera, Therevidae, Agapophytinae) using cybertaxonomic methods, with a key to Australasian genera
- Author
-
Shaun L. Winterton
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Acupalpa semirufa ,biology ,Acupalpa albitarsa ,character matrix ,010607 zoology ,Acupalpa divisa ,Zoology ,Pipinnipons ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,Taxon ,Synonym (taxonomy) ,Botany ,lcsh:Zoology ,Key (lock) ,natural language description ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Therevidae ,lcsh:QL1-991 ,cybertaxonomy ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,LSID - Abstract
Australian stiletto flies of the sister-genera Acupalpa Kröber, 1912 and Pipinnipons Winterton, 2001 (Diptera: Therevidae: Agapophytinae) are revised. Twelve new species of Acupalpa are described, while Acupalpa imitans (White, 1915), comb. n. is transferred from Pipinnipons and Acupalpa albimanis (Kröber, 1914), comb. n. is transferred from Ectinorhynchus Macquart as a senior synonym of Acupalpa pollinosa Mann. The total number of species of Acupalpa is therefore increased to 19: A. albimanis (Kröber), comb. n., A. albitarsa Mann, A. boharti sp. n., A. divisa (Walker), A. dolichorhyncha sp. n., A. glossa sp. n., A. imitans (White), comb. n., A. irwini Winterton, A. melanophaeos sp. n., A. miaboolya sp. n., A. minuta sp. n., A. minutoides sp. n., A. notomelas sp. n., A. novayamarna sp. n., A. rostrata Kröber, A. semirufa Mann, A. westralica sp. n., A. yalgoo sp. n. and A. yanchep sp. n. Three new species of Pipinnipons are described, increasing the total number of species to five: P. chauncyvallis sp. n., P. fascipennis (Kröber), P. kampmeierae sp. n., P. kroeberi Winterton, and P. sphecoda sp. n. Pipinnipons and Acupalpa are rediagnosed in light of the new species presented herein and revised keys to species are included. A dichotomous key to genera of Australasian Therevidae is included. As an empirical example of cybertaxonomy, taxonomic descriptions were composed using a character matrix developed in Lucid Builder (in Structured Descriptive Data (SDD) format) to generate natural language descriptions supplemented by online specimen and image databases. Web resources are provided throughout the document including: a) links to high resolution colour images of all species on Morphbank, b) registration of authors, publications, taxon names and other nomenclatural acts in Zoobank, with assignment of Life Science Identifiers (LSIDs) for each, c) links to Genbank accession records for DNA sequences, and d) assignment of LSIDs to specimen records with links to respective records in an online Therevidae specimen database.
- Published
- 2011
21. Revision of the South American window fly genus Heteromphrale Kröber, 1937 (Diptera, Scenopinidae)
- Author
-
Shaun L. Winterton and Stephen D. Gaimari
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Heteromphrale ,010607 zoology ,Zoology ,Scenopinidae ,Therevoid clade ,Biology ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,Asiloidea ,Heteromphrale cyanops ,Genus ,lcsh:Zoology ,Botany ,lcsh:QL1-991 ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Heteromphrale blanca ,biology.organism_classification ,South american ,Key (lock) ,Animal Science and Zoology ,cybertaxonomy - Abstract
The Neotropical window fly genus Heteromphrale Krober, 1937 is revised. Two previously described species (H. chilensis (Krober, 1937) and H. cyanops (Edwards, 1932)) are redescribed while a new species (H. blanca sp. n.) is described from Argentina. The male of H. chilensis and female of H. cyanops are described and figured for the first time, and a key to species is presented.
- Published
- 2010
22. The flower fly genus Eosphaerophoria Frey (Diptera, Syrphidae)
- Author
-
Ximo Mengual and Kumar Ghorpadé
- Subjects
Insecta ,Arthropoda ,Identification key ,Zoology ,Biology ,taxonomy ,identification key ,Syrphinae ,lcsh:Zoology ,Animalia ,lcsh:QL1-991 ,Syrphidae ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,new species ,Diptera ,New guinea ,Biodiversity ,biology.organism_classification ,Information data ,Key (lock) ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Taxonomy (biology) ,Sri lanka ,cybertaxonomy ,Relevant information - Abstract
The flower fly genus Eosphaerophoria is revised. Eight new species are described (adornata sp. n. Mengual, bifida sp. n. Mengual, brunettii sp. n. Ghorpadé, hermosa sp. n. Mengual, luteofasciata sp. n. Mengual, nigrovittata sp. n. Mengual, symmetrica sp. n. Mengual, and vietnamensis sp. n. Mengual), and an identification key is provided. Redescriptions, illustrations, synonymies, diagnoses and distributional data are given for all 11 known species of Eosphaerophoria. The new described species increase the genus' distribution, now recorded from Nepal and Sri Lanka east to New Guinea. All information data, images and drawings, as well as additional images and relevant information, are available online via the internet as an example of the utility of international standards for biodiversity informatics.
- Published
- 2010
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