The Genus Epipagis Hubner, nec Hampson, in North America (Lepidoptera: Pyralidae)

1955 ◽  
Vol 87 (6) ◽  
pp. 249-252
Author(s):  
Eugene Munroe

Hübner ([1824-25] p. 357) defined the genus Epipagis, citing three species. Hampson (1918: 277) chose fenestralis Hübner as type, and sank Sameodes Snellen to Epipagis. The arrangement of the British Museum Pyralidae shows that Hampson thought fenestralis Hübner was the same as phyllisalis Walker; but so far as I know this synonymy was never published. Actually, Hübner's figure of fenestralis represents a female of the genus usually known as Stenophyes Lederer, wrongly synonymized by Hampson (1899) with Crocidophora Lederer. The size and coloration suggest that the species Hübner figured is the common North American one universally called buronalis Guenée.

1990 ◽  
Vol 68 (11) ◽  
pp. 2306-2309 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard S. Stemberger

The rotifer Keratella armadura n.sp. is described from a shallow alkaline bog lake from Michigan's lower peninsula. The facet pattern of the dorsal plate is similar to that of the common North American phenotype of Keratella cochlearis and K. taurocephala. The rigid, thickened lorica, long recurving posterior spine, and constriction of the body near the base of the anterior spines is distinctive from known congenors. The species was abundant (> 300 individuals/L) within a well-defined habitat, and appears to have a narrow geographic range. Keratella armadura occurred in spring and summer months and was absent from fall and winter collections. This restricted distribution, if common among rotifers, suggests that many undescribed species still exist in Michigan and in North America.


1999 ◽  
Vol 47 (3) ◽  
pp. 399 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vernon W. Proctor

The Llano Estacado region of western Texas and adjacent New Mexico has one of the most species-rich charophyte floras known for North America, but upon closer inspection this flora is seen to consist of two, strictly non-overlapping segments, one of 12 taxa, the other of nine. The larger group of species is confined to a vast series of shallow, ephemerally inundated depressions known as playas. These normally fill with run-off rainwater in late May or early June, remain flooded through early to mid-September before eventually drying to the curling polygon stage near the end of September. Approximately 8 months later the cycle is repeated. The remaining nine charophytes are confined to permanently inundated sites, the most common of which are livestock-watering windmill complexes, known as papalotes. Rarely, if ever, are members of the playa-12 encountered in papalotes or members of the papalote-9 in playas. The underlying bases for this ‘two flora’ dichotomy stem from the contrasting amphipod populations engendered by the two habitat types. Most freshwater amphipods (scuds), including the common North American herbivore Hyalella azteca (Saussure), cannot withstand complete desiccation which, accordingly, prevents its colonisation of playas. By contrast, scuds often reach exceptionally high densities in the associated concrete or metal tanques of papalotes, since such specialised habitats are usually free of vertebrate predators, e.g. birds, fish, turtles, salamanders. Scud- resistant charophytes are larger and slower to develop gametangia, features inimical to success in short- lived playas. By contrast, precocious charophyte opportunists–typical of playa floras–cannot withstand the grazing pressures of papalote (or papalote-like) environments. While charophytivory is assumed to be of worldwide occurrence and significance, it has been clearly demonstrated only in the unique juxtaposition of ‘playas y papalotes’.


1991 ◽  
Vol 19 (4) ◽  
pp. 391-408 ◽  
Author(s):  
George R. Hunsberger

The contextual missiology of the North American churches is poorly formed, at best. At the heart of the recent work of Lesslie Newbigin, there lies a challenge to develop a domestic missiology marked by the theological depth he has habitually brought to bear on missiological issues. To do so will require that we acknowledge the fundamentally new social circumstances in which the churches of North America now live, and pursue the answer to three questions in light of those circumstances: How must we grasp our identity? How must we seek the “common good”? And how must we tell the gospel?


1947 ◽  
Vol 79 (6) ◽  
pp. 120-120 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eugene G. Munroe

Forbes (1938) recorded a single specimen of Acentropus niveus from Oswego, New York, and Sheppard (1945) recorded three specimens taken by him at Montreal, Quebec. These are the only published records from North America of this species, which is well known in Europe.


1951 ◽  
Vol 83 (7) ◽  
pp. 161-169 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eugene G. Munroe

Framinghamia Strand, 1920: 160. Monotype: [Pionea helvalis Walker=] Framinghamia botys Strand.The common species helvalis Walker has ordinarily been placed in Phlyctaenia Hübner; this arrangement is unnatural even on the old definition of the genus. The third joint of the labial palpus is exposed and the species runs to Archernis in Hampson's (1898) key. The species of that genus, however, are of much stouter build and have radically different genitalia; there is accordingly, I think, no direct relationship. Framinghamia helvalis (Walker), new combination, like the species of Archernis, belongs to the group of Pyraustinae that has lost the frenulum hook. Framinghamia may be differentiated from Udea by the different configuration of the palpi (Fig. 12), as well as by genitalic characters (Fig. 8). Among the more striking features of the male genitalia are the absence of the uncus, the conspicuous fringe of long, heavily pigmented scales along the costa of the valve, the broad transtilla, the minute, furcate juxta, and the twisted, ribbon-like coremata, with simple scent tufts.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chris Parker

Abstract Phragmites australis, the common reed, is an aggressive, vigorous species which, in suitable habitats, will out-compete virtually all other species and form a totally dominant stand. Its invasive character has been particularly apparent in North America where it has become dominant in a range of wetland habitats replacing native species and biotypes including the native North American P. australis subsp. americanus. Bird, fish and insect populations can also be affected.


1956 ◽  
Vol 88 (2) ◽  
pp. 74-78
Author(s):  
E. G. Munroe

The most recent list of the North American species of Orenaia was given by McDunnough (1939: 14), who referred two species to the genus. In the present paper two nominal species are transferred from Titanio to Orenaia, one as a synonym, and a new species of Orenaia is described.Titanio and Orenaia agree in the reduced eyes, stout build, hairy vestiture, and noctuid-like facies. However, as was first shown by Müller-Rutz (1929), the genitalia of Orenaia are indistinguishable from those of Evergestis, whereas those of Titanio are of a very different type. The similarity in habitus of the two genera is undoubtedly the result of convergence.


1934 ◽  
Vol 66 (6) ◽  
pp. 132-140 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. C. Huckett

The first extensive contribution to a knowledge of the anthomyid flies of North America was made by Francis Walker in 1849, when he published the records of fifty-five nominal species in his list of dipterous insects in the British Museum.


1987 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 85-88
Author(s):  
CHARLOTTE M PORTER

A curious error affects the names of three North American clupeids—the Alewife, American Shad, and Menhaden. The Alewife was first described by the British-born American architect, Benjamin Henry Latrobe in 1799, just two years after what is generally acknowledged as the earliest description of any ichthyological species published in the United States. Latrobe also described the ‘fish louse’, the common isopod parasite of the Alewife, with the new name, Oniscus praegustator. Expressing an enthusiasm for American independence typical of his generation, Latrobe humorously proposed the name Clupea tyrannus for the Alewife because the fish, like all tyrants, had parasites or hangers-on.


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