scholarly journals DESCRIPTION OF A NEW TOLYPE

1893 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 6-6
Author(s):  
B. Neumoegen

P. tolteca, nov. sp.♂. Antennae light brown. Eyes black. Head, prothorax and thorax snowy white. Tegulae snowy white, with black hairy centre band, connecting it with the black haired abdomen, just like in T. velleda, Stoll. Abdomen metallic black, clothed with long hair and long drawn out analtuft. The latter intermixed with white hair. Primaries dark slate, especially in the interspace formed by a marginal and double central transverse line as well as along costa and internal margin. Veins white. A lunulate white discal spot, and whitish tinges around it.

1873 ◽  
Vol 5 (12) ◽  
pp. 225-228
Author(s):  
Aug. R. Grote

♀. Larger thanBaltimoralis and differing at once by the parallel continuation of the transverse lines to the internal margin. The peculiar conformation of the dark median space, described by Guenée as resembling “une espéce de colé in Baltimoralis, is therefore wanting in scutellaris. Differing from crassalis, than which it is larger, by the inner transverse line being incepted on costa and joining internal margin without fusion with the outer transverse line. In coloration scutellaris is unusuallv bright and contrasted.


1876 ◽  
Vol 8 (7) ◽  
pp. 121-122
Author(s):  
J. A. Lintner

The species is closely allied to C. polygama Guen. Its distinctive features may be more clearly appreciated by a differential cotnparison with that species. The basal region is conspicuously and broadly shaded with black, deepening toward the anterior transverse line ; in polygama, shaded with ferruginous. The anterior transverse line is moderately oblique in its general direction, tending to the posterior third of the internal margin, geminate, distinctly separated by white below and slightly above the submedian : in polygama the line is quite oblique, tending to, or very near to, the internal angle; preceded below the submedian by gray and ferruginous scales.


1902 ◽  
Vol 34 (10) ◽  
pp. 267-267
Author(s):  
T. D. A. Cockerell

Bombomelecta Arizonica, n. sp.– ♀. Length about 11 mm., black; head, thorax and legs with dull white hair, having a faint yellowish tinge; black hair on cheeks, lower sides of face, labrum and mandibles; hair of pleura, except its upper part, black; a conspicuous band of black hair between the wings; hair of anterior legs long and black, but the tarsimore or less silvery, and the femora with a conspicuous tuft of white hair near the end behind; middle tibiæ and tarsi largely silvery-white on theouter side, but the white and black pubescence are mixed, so as to produce a speckled effect; hind tibiæ and tarsi similar, except that the tibiæ have the outer apical half black ; tegulæ large, black, punctured; wings pale brownish, nervures piceous; abdomen heart-shaped, with sparse black hair, and conspicuous clear-cut patches of white hair; first segment with a broad band of yellowish-white erect or suberect hairs, interrupted in the middle; first to fifth segements with lateral patches of appressed snow-white hair, that on the second segment broad and deeply notched behind.


1892 ◽  
Vol 24 (7) ◽  
pp. 179-180
Author(s):  
Harrison G. Dyar

Ichthyrua multnoma N. SP.Ground colour of primaries dark “ecur drab” (Ridg. iii., 21, * but much darker), heavily irrorate with “clove brown” (Ridg. iii., 2.) scales which almost entirely obscure the ground colour at the basal portion fo the wings as well as outside the third and fourth lines. First (basal) transverse line faintly yellowish, inwardly arcuate from internal margin to median vein, then rectangularly bent towards the base and following the median vein for about 1.5 mm, when it is again bent at right angles and proceeds straight to costa.


1902 ◽  
Vol 34 (9) ◽  
pp. 234-240
Author(s):  
J. C. Crawford

The specimens on which this paper is based are in the collection of the University of Nebraska, unless otherwide stated. Especial acknowledgments are due to Prof. Cockerell for specimens and suggestions, to Prof. Titus for specimens, and to Prof. Bruner for overseeing my work.Halictus Montanus, n. sp. –Female: Black, head closely coarsely and deeply puncutred on the vertex, coarser along the inner orbits, less closely on the face below the antennæ clypesu sparsely and more coarsely punctured, fringed with golden hair at the apex; mandibles black, reddish at tips; antennæ black flagellum dark brownish beneath towards tip; pubescence of head and thorax griseous, slightly tinged with ochraceous on the thorax, thin on the disc of mesothorax, dense on pleura and cheeks; thorax closely and rather coarsely punctured; base of metathorax enclosed and finely rugose, truncation finely roughened and with large punctures; tegulæ large, testaceous, and with punctures anteriorly; wings slightly yellowish, clouded apically; nervures and stigma bright testaceous; legs black, tarsi and hind tibiæ behind ferruginous; pubescence of legs slightly ochraceous, on inner side of tarsi and hind tibiæ golden; inner hind tibial spur with many short blunt teeth; abdomen black, very finely punctured, apical margins of segments with yellowish-white hair bands, bases of segments 2–4 also showing slight hair bands; pubescence at base of first segment griseous, on discs of other segments black, not showing plainly except from the sides. Length, 12–14 mm.


Author(s):  
Daniel Martin

The Bride with White Hair (Ronny Yu, 1993) tells the tale of a heroic swordsman’s ill-fated love affair with a woman transformed by hatred into a white-haired killer, elevated the figure of the frosty-follicled executioner into one of the most enduring icons of the Hong Kong horror film. The timelessness and mysticism of the story lends itself to a highly hybridized type of horror, offering wuxia (swordplay), magical fantasy, romance and erotic scintillation alongside bloody fights, savage violence, and a monstrous depiction of malevolent conjoined twins. This chapter examines this film as emblematic of a particular cultural moment in the development of the Hong Kong fantasy-horror, appealing to a global fanbase for its supposedly transgressive and erotic content, and analyses the film in terms of its generic hybridity, its depictions of disability and morality, as well as in the context of the international marketing and reception of cult Hong Kong horror of the 1990s.


2021 ◽  
pp. 106410
Author(s):  
Ahmed Abrahim Al-Haidary ◽  
Yusuf Al-Dosari ◽  
Abd-Elatif Abd-Elwahab ◽  
Emad Mohamed Samara ◽  
Mohammed Abdo Al-Badwi ◽  
...  

1970 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 227-235 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. G. Searle ◽  
Gillian M. Truslove

SUMMARYMice heterozygous for rump-white (Rw) have white hair in lumbo-sacral and caudal regions, although the tail-tip is sometimes pigmented. The homozygote is lethal in utero. No recombination has been found between Rw and the very closely linked spotting genes patch (Ph) and the viable allele of W (Wv). The compounds between these genes are all viable and fertile, although individual homozygotes are either lethal (Ph, Rw) or sterile and anaemic (Wv). It is concluded that they are non-allelic, but form a gene triplet. Close linkage between a cluster of dominant spotting genes and an angora gene in mouse and rabbit provide evidence for homology of part of linkage group II in the rabbit and part of linkage group XVII in the mouse.


2010 ◽  
Vol 14 (4) ◽  
pp. 193-194 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cheng Tan ◽  
Wen-Yuan Zhu

Background and Objective: Poliosis is an inherited or acquired loss of pigment from a group of closely positioned hair follicles characterized by a patch of white hair. It is commonly seen in vitiligo, piebaldism, Waardenburg syndrome, Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada syndrome, Griscelli syndrome, and Apert syndrome. We investigated a male manifesting poliosis on the chin after repetitive plucking. Conclusion: To our knowledge, poliosis induced by repeated plucking has never been documented.


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