65 results on '"Carosi M. A."'
Search Results
52. The ACCI access protocol for a twin bus ATM metropolitan area network
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Baiocchi, A., primary, Carosi, M., additional, Listanti, M., additional, Pacifici, G., additional, Roveri, A., additional, and Winkler, R., additional
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53. The ACCI access protocol for a twin bus ATM metropolitan area network.
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Baiocchi, A., Carosi, M., Listanti, M., Pacifici, G., Roveri, A., and Winkler, R.
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- 1990
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54. A suitable architecture for personal communications systems based on small satellites.
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Carosi, M., Pavesi, B., and Rondinelli, G.
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- 1993
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55. INFONET project: a flexible MAN architecture for very high throughput ATM communications.
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Baiocchi, A., Carosi, M., Listanti, M., Pacifici, G., Roveri, A., and Winkler, R.
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- 1989
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56. Update available: comprehensive tools for comparative anatomy ver.2.0
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F. Spani, M. Carosi, M. Scalici, M. P. Morigi, M. Bettuzzi, M. Colasanti, Spani, F., Carosi, M., Scalici, M., Morigi, M. P., Bettuzzi, M., Colasanti, M., Gruppo Embriologico Italiano, and F. Spani, M. Carosi, M. Scalici, M.P. Morigi, M. Bettuzzi, M. Colasanti
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Micro-CT ,comparative anatomy ,primate ,genital bone - Abstract
"UPDATE AVAILABLE: COMPREHENSIVE TOOLS FORCOMPARATIVE ANATOMY VER.2.0" F. Spani1, M. Carosi1, M. Scalici1, M.P. Morigi2,3,4, M. Bettuzzi2,3,4, M. Colasanti11 Department of Sciences, Roma Tre University, Rome;2Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Bologna,Bologna; 3Museo Storico della Fisica e Centro Studi e Ricerche“Enrico Fermi”, Rome; 4Istituto Nazionale di Fisica NucleareRome, ItalyE-mail: federica.spani@uniroma3.it Treatises on comparative anatomy1,2are the evidence of howinvestigating anatomical structures have been crucial to betterknow living organisms and their interplay with the surroundingenvironment which could induce significant morphological varia-tion. Traditional anatomical dissections for exploring internalmorphology were not suitable to maintain integrity of samples.In the last few years, bio-imaging techniques paired with geomet-ric morphometrics (GM), and applied to comparative anatomystudies, overcame these limits becoming at the same time widelynon-invasive and highly descriptive. In fact, they preserved sam-ples in their whole integrity, unfolding new descriptors of formvariation previously unknown. The application field of these tech-niques ranged from 2- to 3-dimensional GM studies, coveringboth invertebrates and vertebrates. Radiological instrumentsbelonging to the family of Computed Tomography (CT) scannersdefinitively allowed to advance in the knowledge of either knownor neglected biological structures. Our implementations coveredseveral animal orders (e.g. Decapoda, Ephemeroptera Mytiloida,Macroscelidea, Primates). Here we focused on the feasibility ofthe cone-beam CT for 3D surface scanning of the mussel Mytilusgalloprovincialis(Lamarck, 1819) valves,3,4and the potential ofmicro-CT scanner in detecting and 3D characterizing virtual vol-umes of genital bones in primates (i.e., baculumin males andbaubellumin females).5These innovative practices help toengage and deepen the meaning of shape in animal biology, fromboth structural and evolutionary views. They allow to describethe relation between phylogeny and morphogenesis, identifyingall possible links between structure, function and fitness, andmechanical and ontogenetic modifications due to environmentalpressures, including anthropogenic alterations.1. Grandidier A. Histoire Physique, Naturelle et Politique de Madagascar1875, 6: 272-278.2. Hill PWC. Primates-Comparative Anatomy and Taxonomy 1953-1974,vols. 1-7.3. Scalici M et al. Ecotoxicology 2017, 26: 396-404.4. Scalici M et al. Aquat Living Resour 2016, 29: 207.5. Spani F et al. Folia Primatol 2017, 88: 200.
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- 2018
57. Coypu (Myocastor coypus Molina, 1782) feeding on algae: first evidence for Europe
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Silvia De Michelis, S. Ceschin, M. Carosi, C. Battisti, De Michelis, Silvia, Ceschin, S., Carosi, M., and Battisti, C.
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Diet, macroalgae, Spirogyra, microalgae, Central Italy ,DIET, MACROALGAE, SPIROGYRA, MICROALGAE, CENTRAL ITALY - Abstract
– In this note we report the first direct evidence for Europe of coypus (Myocastor coypus) feeding on freshwater algae. Coypus fed on green algae of the genus Spirogyra (Zygnematophyceae) in a mediterranean coastal wetland of central Italy (Torre Flavia) where Spirogyra represents the most spread filamentous macroalgal stands. By analyzing Spirogyra stands, we also detected the presence of microalgae which, in turn, have been indirectly ingested by coypus: Ulnaria capitata, Navicula sp., Nitzschia sp. (Bacillariophyceae), Netrium digitus (Zygnematophyceae), and Phacus sp. (Euglenophyceae). Other taxa of green macroalgae, such as Cladophora glomerata and Ulva intestinalis (Ulvophyceae), were commonly recorded in the same area, however there is no evidence that they were consumed by coypus.
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- 2022
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58. Over and beyond the Primate baubellum Surface: A 'Jewel Bone' Shielded in Museums
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Federica Spani, Maria Pia Morigi, Matteo Bettuzzi, Massimiliano Scalici, Monica Carosi, Spani, Federica, Pia Morigi, Maria, Bettuzzi, Matteo, Scalici, Massimiliano, Carosi, Monica, Spani, F., Morigi, M.P., Bettuzzi, M., Scalici, M., and Carosi, M
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Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes ,Micro-CT ,clitoral bone ,Alpha-shape ,Clitoral bone ,Process Chemistry and Technology ,General Engineering ,General Materials Science ,alpha-shape ,micro-CT ,Instrumentation ,3D rendering ,Computer Science Applications - Abstract
Computed Tomography (CT), mostly used in the medical field, has also recently been involved in Cultural Heritage studies, thanks to its efficiency and total non-invasiveness. Due to the large variety of sizes and compositions typical of Cultural Heritage objects, different X-ray sources, detectors, and setups are necessary to meet the different needs of various case studies. Here, we focus on the use of micro-CT to explore the morphology and shape of a small, neglected bone found inside the clitoris of non-human primates (the baubellum), which we obtained by accessing two prestigious primatological collections of the American Museum of Natural History (New York, NY, USA) and the National Museum of Natural History (Washington, DC, USA). Overcoming methodological limits imposed by the absence of homologous landmarks, we combined the use of the non-invasive 3D micro-CT and a recently released landmark-free shape analysis (the alpha-shape technique) to objectively describe and quantify the shape complexity of scanned primate baubella. Micro-CT provided high-resolution results, overcoming constraints linked to museum policy about non-disruptive sampling and preserving samples for future research. Finally, it proved appropriate as post-mortem sampling had no impact on protected wild primate populations.
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- 2022
59. The ultimate database to (re)set the evolutionary history of primate genital bones
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Massimiliano Scalici, Federica Spani, Gabriele Gentile, Matteo Bettuzzi, Maria Pia Morigi, Monica Carosi, Spani, Federica, Morigi, Maria Pia, Bettuzzi, Matteo, Scalici, Massimiliano, Gentile, Gabriele, Carosi, Monica, Spani F., Morigi M.P., Bettuzzi M., Scalici M., Gentile G., and Carosi M.
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MAMMALIAN BACULUM ,Primates ,0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Settore BIO/05 ,Databases, Factual ,Science ,computer.software_genre ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,SEXUAL SELECTION ,Article ,Set (abstract data type) ,Databases ,03 medical and health sciences ,Species level ,Taxonomy (general) ,biology.animal ,Animals ,Sex organ ,Primate ,Genitalia ,Homology (anthropology) ,ALLOMETRY ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Database ,OS-PENIS ,Evolutionary theory ,COPULATORY-BEHAVIOR ,Data acquisition ,EXTERNAL GENITALIA ,X-Ray Microtomography ,Biological Evolution ,ANATOMY ,Phylogenetics ,030104 developmental biology ,Geography ,Baculum ,MORPHOLOGY ,Medicine ,Data integration ,Raw data ,computer - Abstract
Scientific literature concerning genital bones in primates consists of both ancient works (dating back to the nineteenth century) and more recent revisions/meta-analyses, which, however, are not always so detailed or exhaustive. Based on a thorough analysis, several conflicting data, inaccurate references, and questionable claims have emerged. We generated a binary matrix of genital bone occurrence data, considering only data at the species level, based on (1) a rigorous literature search protocol, (2) raw data (collected exclusively from primary literature), (3) an updated taxonomy (often tracing back to the species taxonomic history) and (4) new occurrence data from scanned genitals of fresh and museum specimens (using micro-computed tomography-micro-CT). Thanks to this methodological approach, we almost doubled available occurrence data so far, avoiding any arbitrary extension of generic data to conspecific species. This practice, in fact, has been recently responsible for an overestimation of the occurrence data, definitively flattening the interspecific variability. We performed the ancestral state reconstruction analysis of genital bone occurrence and results were mapped onto the most updated phylogeny of primates. As for baculum, we definitively demonstrated its simplesiomorphy for the entire order. As for baubellum, we interpreted all scattered absences as losses, actually proposing (for the first time) a simplesiomorphic state for the clitoral bone as well. The occurrence data obtained, while indirectly confirming the baculum/baubellum homology (i.e., for each baubellum a baculum was invariably present), could also directly demonstrate an intra-specific variability affecting ossa genitalia occurrence. With our results, we established a radically improved and updated database about the occurrence of genital bones in primates, available for further comparative analyses.
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- 2021
60. Clitoral length in immature and mature captive tufted capuchin (Sapajus spp.) females: A cross-sectional study
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Monica Carosi, Federica Spani, Massimiliano Scalici, Amy E. Ulland, Stephen J. Suomi, Carosi, M., Spani, F., Ulland, A. E., Scalici, M., and Suomi, S. J.
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0106 biological sciences ,Population ,Zoology ,Clitoris ,Crocuta crocuta ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,Intraspecific competition ,biology.animal ,medicine ,Animals ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Primate ,Sex organ ,050102 behavioral science & comparative psychology ,education ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,education.field_of_study ,biology ,Body Weight ,05 social sciences ,biology.organism_classification ,negative allometry, immature sexual mimicry, external clitoris [Keywords] ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Sapajus ,Trait ,Female ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Allometry - Abstract
Quantitative data on female external genital morphology are sporadic in the primate literature, and the intraspecific and interfemale variation is especially under investigated (e.g., external clitoris length). Since in most anthropoid primate species female external genitals are relatively small and often hidden, for those species whose external clitoris is described as hypertrophic, external genital resemblance may represent a source of confusion in distinguishing the sexes at a distance. This is the case of both captive and wild tufted capuchin (Sapajus spp.) infants. We provided data on external clitoral length and investigated differences in this trait at different ages in a captive female tufted capuchin population. Since likely allometric growth describes changes in relative dimensions of parts of the body that are correlated with changes in overall size, clitoris length has been analyzed by using body weight as a covariate. We measured clitoral length by adapting a technique developed for spotted hyenas (Crocuta crocuta). Our results suggest that the small body size may be only in part responsible of the perception of long clitoris in female infants, since the clitoris is actually longer in immature females compared to adult ones and its size is inversely related to body weight. While the cross-sectional nature of these data does not allow for conclusive interpretation of the results, we tentatively suggest this phenomenon as a transient male-mimicry by immature females. Our study contributed to the description of normative data in a clitoral trait, thus providing foundation for future studies about causal mechanisms and possible adaptive function(s).
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- 2020
61. Endometrial Cancer Immune Escape Mechanisms: Let Us Learn From the Fetal–Maternal Interface
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Valentina Bruno, Giacomo Corrado, Denisa Baci, Benito Chiofalo, Maria Antonia Carosi, Livia Ronchetti, Emilio Piccione, Adriana Albini, Douglas M. Noonan, Giulia Piaggio, Enrico Vizza, Bruno, V, Corrado, G, Baci, D, Chiofalo, B, Carosi, M, Ronchetti, L, Piccione, E, Albini, A, Noonan, D, Piaggio, G, and Vizza, E
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0301 basic medicine ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_treatment ,immunotherapy potential targets ,Review ,Bioinformatics ,lcsh:RC254-282 ,immunotherapy potential target ,Immune tolerance ,03 medical and health sciences ,Therapeutic approach ,0302 clinical medicine ,Immune system ,Medicine ,business.industry ,cancer immune escape ,fetal–maternal immune tolerance ,immunological parallelism in cancer and pregnancy ,personalized medicine ,Endometrial cancer ,Cancer ,Immunotherapy ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,medicine.disease ,lcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,030104 developmental biology ,Oncology ,Tumor progression ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,bacteria ,Personalized medicine ,business - Abstract
The immune escape mechanisms at the base of tumor progression in endometrial cancer mimic immune tolerance mechanisms occurring at the maternal–fetal interface. The biological and immunological processes behind the maternal–fetal interface are finely tuned in time and space during embryo implantation and subsequent pregnancy stages; conversely, those behind cancer progression are often aberrant. The environment composition at the maternal–fetal interface parallels the pro-tumor microenvironment identified in many cancers, pointing to the possibility for the use of the maternal–fetal interface as a model to depict immune therapeutic targets in cancer. The framework of cancer environment signatures involved in immune adaptations, precisely timed in cancer progression, could reveal a specific “immune clock” in endometrial cancer, which might guide clinicians in patient risk class assessment, diagnostic workup, management, surgical and therapeutic approach, and surveillance strategies. Here, we review studies approaching this hypothesis, focusing on what is known so far about oncofetal similarities in immunity with the idea to individualize personalized immunotherapy targets, through the downregulation of the immune escape stage or the reactivation of the pro-inflammatory processes suppressed by the tumor.
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- 2020
62. Activity budget, home range, and habitat use of moor macaques (Macaca maura) in the karst forest of South Sulawesi, Indonesia
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Erin P. Riley, Maurizio Cutini, Monica Carosi, Lavinia Germani, Alessandro Albani, Putu Oka Ngakan, Albani, A., Cutini, M., Germani, L., Riley, E. P., Ngakan, P. O., and Carosi, M.
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0106 biological sciences ,Male ,Home range ,Feeding ecology ,Sulawesi macaques ,Conservation ,Forest structure and composition ,Forests ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Homing Behavior ,Forest ecology ,Animals ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,050102 behavioral science & comparative psychology ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,biology ,Ecology ,Moor macaque ,National park ,05 social sciences ,Feeding Behavior ,biology.organism_classification ,Karst ,Disturbance (ecology) ,Habitat ,Animal ecology ,Indonesia ,Anthropogenic disturbance ,Macaca ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Female - Abstract
Primate behavior can be responsive to the different ecological pressures associated with different habitats, as well as to the effects of direct and indirect anthropogenic disturbance. The karst forest ecosystem of South Sulawesi (Indonesia) represents one of the few intact forests available for residual populations of the moor macaque, but our understanding of its habitat use is limited. In the present study, this gap in knowledge was addressed by observing the activity and habitat use of two groups of moor macaques and by assessing the suitability of different habitats in the karst forest. Through a fine-scale vegetation analysis of 1ha of forest in Bantimurung Bulusaraung National Park, we identified the presence of two distinct habitats that differ in terms of forest structure and composition. The karst plain forest (KPF) provided a greater abundance and diversity of food resources than the karst tower forest (KTF). In addition, anthropogenic disturbance was high in the KPF but low in the KTF. Behavioral data collected via group scans indicate that the macaques devoted more time to feeding activities when in the KPF, suggesting an ability to adjust their feeding behavior to meet their nutritional needs. However, the larger of the two groups used the food-rich KPF more than expected, implying that the KTF may represent a valuable refuge for the smaller group, as it is a less risky portion of its home range. The results of this study therefore provide novel information on the ecology of moor macaques and their habitats that can inform conservation planning for remnant populations.
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- 2019
63. A new Eastern Asian Hycleus and key to the Chinese species of the phaleratus group (Coleoptera, Meloidae, Mylabrini)
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Marco Alberto Bologna, Monica Carosi, Zhao Pan, Pan, Z, Carosi, M, and Bologna, M
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new species ,China ,Insecta ,Arthropoda ,Ecology ,key to species ,Biology ,Bioinformatics ,Hycleus phaleratus ,Coleoptera ,taxonomy ,new specie ,Blister beetles ,lcsh:Zoology ,Animalia ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Taxonomy (biology) ,Meloidae ,lcsh:QL1-991 ,ColeopteraAnimalia ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Tenebrionoidea ,Research Article - Abstract
A new species of Hycleus belonging to the phaleratus group, and close to Hycleus phaleratus, is described. The new species, Hycleus marcipoli, is distributed in China (Gansu and Taiwan), Laos, and northern Thailand. A key to the Chinese species of this group is presented.
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- 2014
64. Socially tolerant relationships among wild male moor macaques (Macaca maura)
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Cristina Sagnotti, Erin P. Riley, Monica Carosi, Ngakan Putu Oka, Riley, Ep, Sagnotti, Cristina, Carosi, M, and Ngakan, P. O.
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biology ,Moor macaque ,Aggression ,Context (language use) ,biology.organism_classification ,Macaque ,Developmental psychology ,Style (sociolinguistics) ,affiliation, aggression, social style variation, greeting,s genital manipulation, social upheaval, male takeover, Sulawesi macaque ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Dominance (ethology) ,Variation (linguistics) ,biology.animal ,medicine ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Primate ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology - Abstract
Researchers are increasingly documenting the existence of social tolerance and affiliative behavior among primate males, including in male-dispersing species. We investigated the nature of male social relationships in a relatively understudied macaque species, the moor macaque (Macaca maura), in order to expand our knowledge of male social relationships in male dispersing primates. The classification of social styles for primates rests largely on data about female social relationships. Therefore, by providing data on male–male relationships, we also contribute to our understanding of social style variation within the genus Macaca. Observations were conducted on a wild yet well-habituated group in Bantimurung-Bulusaraung National Park in South Sulawesi, Indonesia. We collected focal animal and ad libitum data on four adult males, recording social behavior during 209 contact hours over two field seasons in 2010 and 2011. The adult male moor macaques in this study did not interact frequently. Interactions that did occur more frequently involved affiliation rather than aggression, with greetings being the most common form of interaction. Greetings occurred in a predominately neutral context and were more common between specific males with uncertain or ambiguous dominance relationships and low-quality relationships, but the initiation of greetings was not linked to dominance rank. These results suggest that greetings enable males to communicate information about their willingness to invest in the relationship, representing one way for adult males to ease social tension and build social bonds. To expand our understanding of social style variation in Macaca, we compared our data to those published for other macaque taxa. In the present study, the observed pattern of aggression (i.e., low rate, low to moderate intensity and high symmetry) was consistent with the species’ social style classification as highly tolerant. The relatively low grooming rate and low percentage of counteraggression, however, were more consistent with the social style of less tolerant taxa. Further research is needed to determine what factors explain this pattern of social tolerance among male moor macaques.
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- 2014
65. Morphology of a new blister beetle (Coleoptera, Meloidae) larval type challenges the evolutionary trends of phoresy-related characters in the genus Meloe
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M. Carosi, A. Di Giulio, R. Khodaparast, Marco Alberto Bologna, DI GIULIO, Andrea, Carosi, M, Khodaparast, R, and Bologna, Marco Alberto
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Larva ,biology ,Blister beetle ,Zoology ,Seta ,biology.organism_classification ,Meloe ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,Genus ,Instar ,Subgenus ,Meloinae, Meloe, Lampromeloe, triungulin, phoresy, SEM, Iran ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 ,Anthophora - Abstract
The discovery of some specimens of a new first instar larval type in blister beetles, collected in Iran on Anthophora bees, confirms the existence of repetitive and parallel trends in morphological specialization to phoresy in distinct lineages of Meloidae and in particular in the subfamily Meloinae. The new Iranian larva, herein described and illustrated, shows several characters and a peculiar phoretic strategy that closely parallel that of the Meloe subgenus Lampromeloe, with similar modifications of the fronto-clypeal setae into strong lanceolate spines used to pierce the intersegmental membranes of the bees. Both parallel and shared derived evolution of these characters seem possible. The coexistence in this larva of characters in both primitive and derived state is of particular interest in order to analyse the different rates and trends of evolution of phoretic adaptations. A morphological comparison (SEM) of this new meloine larva (incertae sedis), tentatively assignable to Meloe, with the M. (Lampromeloe) larvae is carried out in order to discuss the evolutionary implications of its placement in Lampromeloe, and the relative characters that would support it, vs other possible alternative scenarios.
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- 2014
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