49 results on '"Platynota"'
Search Results
2. A New Species of Cenopis Zeller, 1876, from the Southeastern United States (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae: Sparganothini).
- Author
-
Brown, John W. and Sullivan, J. Bolling
- Abstract
Abstract. Cenopis croatanensis Brown and Sullivan, new species, is described and illustrated from North Carolina, Louisiana, and Texas, U.S.A. The new species is assigned convincingly to Cenopis on the basis of two features of the male: a highly modified hood of scales over the upper frons on the head and a fold in the anal region of the hindwing concealing a slender hairpencil. Males are easily distinguished from all congeners by features of the genitalia, in particular the short, broadly rounded sacculus with a free subapical process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. A New Platynotan Lizard (Parasaniwidae, Anguimorpha) from the Late Paleocene of Southern Mongolia.
- Author
-
Alifanov, V. R.
- Abstract
Abstract: A new lizard, Tsagansaurus nemegetensis gen. et sp. nov., from the Late Paleocene of southern Mongolia is described. It is assigned to the extinct family Parasaniwidae (Platynota, Anguimorpha). The new taxon is the latest representative of this group in the fossil record. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Observation records of the Bangon Monitor Lizard, Varanus bangonorum (Squamata, Varanidae), with emphasis on behaviour and local threats, from the Municipality of Abra de Ilog, Occidental Mindoro, Philippines
- Author
-
Przemysław Zdunek and Michaela S. Webb
- Subjects
Vertebrata ,Tetrapoda ,new locality records ,Sarcopterygii ,Varanidae ,Amniota ,Biota ,Varanus ,Platynota ,Gnathostomata ,Osteichthyes ,herpetofauna of the Philippines ,Squamata ,Varanus bangonorum ,Animalia ,Animal Science and Zoology ,monitor lizard ,Bayawak ,foraging behaviour ,Chordata ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Varanus bangonorum, the Bangon Monitor Lizard, is one of eleven Varanidae species endemic to the Philippines; its occurrence is restricted to dwindling habitats on the islands of Mindoro and Semirara. This lizard is still poorly known and is presently classified as “Least Concern” under the IUCN Red List in 2022. Observations recorded during eleven years (2011 to 2022) originate from the north-central Municipality of Abra de Ilog in Occidental Mindoro where this species was never before documented. We emphasise the primary factors that pose threats to the monitor lizard population, including insights gained from the knowledge of local community members. We present information about the lizards’ diet, for example, they can consume invasive toxic cane toads without harm. The result of our collective long-term observation records may serve as a baseline for further studies and contribute to evaluating the conservation status of this species.
- Published
- 2023
5. Effect of climate change on the potential distribution of Heloderma alvarezi (Squamata, Helodermatidae)
- Author
-
Christian Ruiz-Castillejos, Daniel Ariano-Sánchez, José Alberto Cruz, Aarón Gómez-Cruz, José A. De Fuentes-Vicente, Eduardo E. Espinoza-Medinilla, and Nancy G. Santos-Hernández
- Subjects
Helodermatidae ,Reptilia ,Range (biology) ,Climate change ,Distribution (economics) ,biology.animal ,Squamata ,Animalia ,Heloderma ,Chordata ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Extinction ,biology ,Ecology ,Lizard ,business.industry ,México ,Global warming ,conservation ,Biota ,Platynota ,Climatic change ,Geography ,Habitat ,QL1-991 ,beaded lizard ,Threatened species ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Heloderma alvarezi ,business ,Chiapas ,Zoology - Abstract
Climate change represents a real threat to biodiversity conservation worldwide. Although the effects on several species of conservation priority are known, comprehensive information about the impact of climate change on reptile populations is lacking. In the present study, we analyze outcomes on the potential distribution of the black beaded lizard (Heloderma alvarezi Bogert & Martin del Campo, 1956) under global warming scenarios. Its potential distribution, at present and in projections for the years 2050 and 2070, under both optimistic and pessimistic climate change forecasts, were computed using current data records and seven bioclimatic variables. General results predict a shift in the future potential distribution of H. alvarezi due to temperature increase. The optimistic scenario (4.5 W/m2) for 2070 suggests an enlargement in the species’ distribution as a response to the availability of new areas of suitable habitat. On the contrary, the worst-case scenario (7 W/m2) shows a distribution decrease by 65%. Moreover, the range distribution of H. alvarezi is directly related to the human footprint, which consequently could magnify negative outcomes for this species. Our research elucidates the importance of conservation strategies to prevent the extinction of the black beaded lizard, especially considering that this species is highly threatened by aversive hunting.
- Published
- 2021
6. A microconchiate Hypowaagenia Schweigert and Schlampp, 2020 (Aspidoceratidae, Hybonoticeratinae) from the Upper Jurassic of Southern Germany
- Author
-
Victor Schlampp and Günter Schweigert
- Subjects
Ammonite ,Paleontology ,Geography ,biology ,Aspidoceratidae ,Genus ,language ,biology.organism_classification ,language.human_language ,Platynota - Abstract
The previously unknown microconch which corresponds to the recently introduced Late Jurassic aspidoceratoid ammonite genus Hypowaagenia Schweigert and Schlampp, 2020, is reported from beds of the topmost Platynota Zone or basal Hypselocyclum Zone of Franconia. This record indicates that these exotic ammonite findings are not of long-drifting necroplanktonic shells, but stem from animals that have spread over this area after immigration from the Tethys.
- Published
- 2020
7. A New Platynotan Lizard (Parasaniwidae, Anguimorpha) from the Late Paleocene of Southern Mongolia
- Author
-
V. R. Alifanov
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,010506 paleontology ,Fossil Record ,biology ,Lizard ,Anguimorpha ,Paleontology ,Zoology ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Platynota ,Taxon ,Geography ,Group (stratigraphy) ,biology.animal ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
A new lizard, Tsagansaurus nemegetensis gen. et sp. nov., from the Late Paleocene of southern Mongolia is described. It is assigned to the extinct family Parasaniwidae (Platynota, Anguimorpha). The new taxon is the latest representative of this group in the fossil record.
- Published
- 2018
8. Predation on Translocated Burmese Star Tortoise (Geochelone platynota) by Asiatic Jackals (Canis aureus) and Wild Pigs (Sus scrofa) at a Wildlife Sanctuary in Myanmar
- Author
-
Me Me Soe, Andrew D. Walde, Thomas R. Rainwater, Steven G. Platt, Swann Htet Naing Aung, Kalyar Platt, and Tint Lwin
- Subjects
Tiger ,Wildlife ,Leopard ,Zoology ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Platynota ,Predation ,Geochelone platynota ,biology.animal ,Canis aureus ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Panthera ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Successful restoration of Geochelone platynota to Dry Zone ecosystems in Myanmar depends on the survival of translocated tortoises and, therefore, a knowledge of predators and predation is important. We here report the loss of 28 and approximately 200 translocated G. platynota to Eurasian golden jackals (Canis aureus) and wild pigs (Sus scrofa), respectively, at Shwe Settaw Wildlife Sanctuary in central Myanmar. Measures to reduce the risk of future predation include structural reinforcement of acclimation pens to deter wild pigs and the experimental use of large cat (e.g., tiger [Panthera tigris] and leopard [Panthera pardus]) odors to repel jackals and wild pigs from the translocation area.
- Published
- 2021
9. Circanota: a new genus of Sparganothini from the Neotropics, and its two new species (Lepidoptera, Tortricidae).
- Author
-
Brown, John W.
- Subjects
- *
SPARGANOTHIS , *ORGANISMS , *SYMPATRIC speciation , *LEPIDOPTEROLOGY , *GENETICS - Abstract
Circanota, new genus, and its two new species, C. undulata sp. n. (type species), from Costa Rica and Panama, and C. simplex sp. n., from Panama and Ecuador, are described and illustrated. Although superficially similar to some species of Platynota Clemens, 1860, Circanota appears to be more closely related to members of a putative clade within Sparganothini defined by a slender crescent-shaped signum in the corpus bursae of the female genitalia. The most conspicuous autapomorphy for Circanota is the strongly undulate costa of the male and female forewing. Barcode sequence data (i.e., cytochrome oxidase I) from Circanota undulata (n = 12) form a tight cluster with exceedingly limited genetic divergence (less than 0.1%); specimens of C. simplex have not been sequenced. In neighbor-joining trees based on COI, Circanota is portrayed nearest Sparganothoides, which is consistent with morphological evidence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Hypowaagenia nov. gen., a rare genus of giant aspidoceratid ammonite from the Upper Jurassic of Southern Germany
- Author
-
Victor Schlampp and Günter Schweigert
- Subjects
Ammonite ,biology ,Fauna ,Biostratigraphy ,biology.organism_classification ,language.human_language ,Platynota ,Aspidoceras ,Paleontology ,Type species ,Geography ,language ,Taxonomy (biology) ,Planula - Abstract
A new genus, Hypowaagenia (type species: H. endressi nov. sp.), is introduced for previously unknown large-sized macroconchiate aspidoceratid ammonites with an umbilical and a ventrolateral row of spines. In the medium and adult stages irregular ribs interconnect these spines. The oldest unequivocal record of this genus comes from the Early Kimmeridgian Planula Zone, whereas the type material of H. endressi nov. sp. comes from the upper Platynota Zone/? lowermost Hypselocyclum Zone. Corresponding microconchs have not yet been identified. Although all unequivocal records come from Southern Germany, a Tethyan origin is most likely for these aspidoceratids. Another, stratigraphically younger species tentatively included in Hypowaagenia is Aspidoceras acanthomphalum (Zittel, 1870), which is, however, only recorded yet by mesoconchiate specimens. The ammonite fauna of the type horizon of H. endressi nov. sp. is briefly characterized and termed as the geniculatum Biohorizon of the late Platynota Zone.
- Published
- 2020
11. A New Species ofCenopisZeller, 1876, from the Southeastern United States (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae: Sparganothini)
- Author
-
J. Bolling Sullivan and John W. Brown
- Subjects
Tortricidae ,Lepidoptera genitalia ,Geography ,biology ,Insect Science ,Zoology ,Sparganothini ,Anal Region ,biology.organism_classification ,Sparganothis ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Platynota - Abstract
Cenopis croatanensis Brown and Sullivan, new species, is described and illustrated from North Carolina, Louisiana, and Texas, U.S.A. The new species is assigned convincingly to Cenopis on the basis of two features of the male: a highly modified hood of scales over the upper frons on the head and a fold in the anal region of the hindwing concealing a slender hairpencil. Males are easily distinguished from all congeners by features of the genitalia, in particular the short, broadly rounded sacculus with a free subapical process.
- Published
- 2018
12. Highly Species-Specific Centromeric Repetitive DNA Sequences in Lizards: Molecular Cytogenetic Characterization of a Novel Family of Satellite DNA Sequences Isolated from the Water Monitor Lizard (Varanus salvator macromaculatus, Platynota).
- Author
-
Chaiprasertsri, Nampech, Uno, Yoshinobu, Peyachoknagul, Surin, Prakhongcheep, Ornjira, Baicharoen, Sudarath, Charernsuk, Saranon, Nishida, Chizuko, Matsuda, Yoichi, Koga, Akihiko, and Srikulnath, Kornsorn
- Subjects
- *
NUCLEOTIDE sequence , *MONITOR lizards , *CYTOGENETICS , *HETEROCHROMATIN , *VARANUS - Abstract
Two novel repetitive DNA sequences, VSAREP1 and VSAREP2, were isolated from the water monitor lizard (Varanus salvator macromaculatus, Platynota) and characterized using molecular cytogenetics. The respective lengths and guanine-cytosine (GC) contents of the sequences were 190bp and 57.5% for VSAREP1 and 185bp and 59.7% for VSAREP2, and both elements were tandemly arrayed as satellite DNA in the genome. VSAREP1 and VSAREP2 were each located at the C-positive heterochromatin in the pericentromeric region of chromosome 2q, the centromeric region of chromosome 5, and 3 pairs of microchromosomes. This suggests that genomic compartmentalization between macro- and microchromosomes might not have occurred in the centromeric repetitive sequences of V. salvator macromaculatus. These 2 sequences did only hybridize to genomic DNA of V. salvator macromaculatus, but no signal was observed even for other squamate reptiles, including Varanus exanthematicus, which is a closely related species of V. salvator macromaculatus. These results suggest that these sequences were differentiated rapidly or were specifically amplified in the V. salvator macromaculatus genome. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. A large predatory lizard (Platynota, Squamata) from the Late Cretaceous of South China.
- Author
-
Mo, Jin-you, Xu, Xing, and Evans, SusanE.
- Subjects
- *
FOSSIL squamata , *FOSSIL lizards , *FOSSIL predatory animals , *CRETACEOUS Period , *ANIMAL classification - Abstract
The Late Cretaceous deposits of the Nanxiong Formation, southern China, have yielded some dinosaur bones and many eggs, but there has been little record of the associated fauna. A new locality in Jiangxi Province has recently produced a fossil lizard assemblage including two genera of herbivores and the partial skull and lower jaws of a terrestrial predator. The latter combines large size, the possession of a small number of recurved, well-separated marginal teeth, a blunt rostrum, and rounded cranial osteoderms. It resembles Estesia from the Late Cretaceous of Mongolia, but is distinct in its jaw morphology and the possession of cranial osteoderms. It is therefore placed in a new genus and species, Chianghsia nankangensis. Phylogenetic analysis groups Chianghsia unequivocally with the Platynota, the group to which living monitor lizards and extinct mosasaurs belong. Within Platynota, there is support for the attribution of Chianghsia to Monstersauria, the group that includes the living venomous Gila monster, Heloderma suspectum, and its fossil relatives. This is the first record of a large terrestrial predatory platynotan lizard from the Mesozoic of southern China. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. The age of the Tojeira Formation (Late Jurassic, Early Kimmeridgian), of Montejunto, west-central Portugal
- Author
-
Andrew S. Gale, David K. Watkins, Felix M. Gradstein, and Holly E. Turner
- Subjects
010506 paleontology ,Lithology ,Jurassic ,Biostratigraphy ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,01 natural sciences ,Paleontology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Ammonite ,Portugal ,biology ,biology.organism_classification ,stable isotope stratigraphy ,language.human_language ,Platynota ,Kimmeridgian ,Ataxioceras ,Stratigraphy ,correlation ,Clastic rock ,Earth Sciences ,language ,biostratigraphy ,Idoceras ,Geology - Abstract
Precise biostratigraphic dating of the Tojeira Formation (Late Jurassic, Early Kimmeridgian) of the Montejunto section of west-central Portugal, which has yielded important planktonic foraminiferal assemblages, is hindered by poor preservation in the upper part of the section as the lithology shifts from shale to coarser clastics. Assignment was previously made to the Idoceras planula and Sutneria platynota zones based on ammonites. Coccolith and dinoflagellate assemblages described here concur with the Early Kimmeridgian, yet, a finer age constraint is proposed by cyclo- and chemostratigraphical correlation. Peaks in δ 13Corg and TOC, if equivalent to maxima in the envelope of clay/carbonate cycles in SE France, imply that the c. 50 m-thick section spans a 0.8-myr interval of the S. platynota through upper Ataxioceras hypselocyclum ammonite zones, with the approximate base of the A. hypselocyclum Zone at c. 15.4 m (level 13). Such stratigraphy provides new insights into the upper part of the formation by interbasinal correlation with other Tethyan records. An extended first occurrence of the dinoflagellate species Dichadogonyaulax? pannea in the S. platynota Zone is also proposed.
- Published
- 2017
15. Lizards of the family Hodzhakuliidae (Scincomorpha) from the lower Cretaceous of Mongolia
- Author
-
V. R. Alifanov
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,010506 paleontology ,biology ,Ecology ,Lizard ,Central asia ,Paleontology ,biology.organism_classification ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Cretaceous ,Platynota ,Predation ,biology.animal ,Scincomorpha ,Geology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
The lizard family Hodzhakuliidae (Scincomorpha) endemic to the Early Cretaceous of Central Asia is characterized in the light of finds from the Khoobur (Hoovor) locality in Mongolia. Available material includes Hodzhakulia magna Nessov, 1985 described from the Upper Albian of Uzbekistan and three new genera and species. It is proposed that Hodzhakuliidae occupied the adaptive zone of small carnivorous predators before the appearance of Platynota.
- Published
- 2016
16. Host Records for Tortricidae (Lepidoptera) Reared from Seeds and Fruits in Panama
- Author
-
Sofia Gripenberg, Catalina Fernandez, Yves Basset, Indira Simon, Marleny Rivera, Osvaldo Calderón, Marjorie Cedeno, and John W. Brown
- Subjects
Tortricidae ,Lepidoptera genitalia ,Panama ,Horticulture ,Ricula ,Grapholita ,biology ,Cydia ,Insect Science ,Talponia ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Platynota - Abstract
A survey of Lepidoptera reared from seeds and fruits primarily on Barro Colorado Island, Panama, yielded 444 specimens of Tortricidae representing 20 species. Nearly 90% of reared tortricids and 65% of the species are members of the tribe Grapholitini, a group that includes numerous economically important pests of fruit worldwide. We present host records for the following species: Histura panamana Brown, Platynota obliqua Walsingham complex, Platynota subargentea Walsingham, Spinipogon triangularis Brown, Cryptaspasma perseana Gilligan and Brown, Steblopotamia streblopa (Meyrick), Cydia pyraspis (Meyrick) complex, Eriosocia guttifera (Meyrick), Riculorampha ancyloides Rota and Brown, Grapholita mabea Razowski, Ricula croceus Brown, Ricula lacistema Brown, Ricula sp. 1, Ricula sp. 2, Talponia sp. 1, Talponia sp. 2, and four unidentified Grapholitini. In a comparison of studies focused on fruit- and seed-feeding insects in Thailand, Panama, and Kenya, Grapholitini represented 73% (in Thailand) to 90% (in Panama) of the total number of reared specimens of Tortricidae, and 45% (in Kenya) to 65% (in Panama) of the total number of tortricid species. However, a similar survey in Papua New Guinea produced considerably different results, with Grapholitini representing 46% of the tortricid specimens and only 20% of the species.
- Published
- 2020
17. Diverse and complex male polymorphisms in Odontolabis stag beetles (Coleoptera: Lucanidae)
- Author
-
Keita Matsumoto and Robert J. Knell
- Subjects
Male ,0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,lcsh:Medicine ,Mandible ,Body size ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,Genetic Heterogeneity ,03 medical and health sciences ,Trimorphism ,Animals ,Body Size ,lcsh:Science ,Sex Characteristics ,Polymorphism, Genetic ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,lcsh:R ,Thorax ,biology.organism_classification ,Platynota ,Coleoptera ,Sexual dimorphism ,030104 developmental biology ,Evolutionary biology ,lcsh:Q ,Odontolabis ,Head - Abstract
When male animals engage in intrasexual contests then any alternative tactics they use can be associated with dimorphisms in the expression of weapons. Some species have recently been found to exhibit trimorphism in their weaponry, suggesting that the processes leading to their evolution and maintenance of these polymorphisms can be more complex than previously thought. Here, we describe the extraordinary diversity of polymorphism within the genus Odontolabis: there are dimorphic species (O. siva and O. platynota), trimorphic species (O. cuvera, as previously described, and O. sommeri s.stricto) and, uniquely, tetramorphic species, with males of O. sommeri lowei and O. brookeana showing four clearly differentiated male morphs: small “Gammas”, “Alphas” which express large, long mandibles, “Betas” which have long mandibles with different morphology and “Boltcutters”, with short, wide mandibles. Such polymorphisms are usually thought of as being maintained as a status-dependent conditional strategy, but we found only one size threshold: in most cases males develop into Gamma males below a certain size but there is no relationship between morph and body size amongst the larger, ‘weaponised’ morphs. We suggest that the complex polymorphisms in these animals are probably maintained by a combination of a conditional strategy and a genetic polymorphism.
- Published
- 2017
18. New Combinations in Sparganothini (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae: Tortricinae)
- Author
-
John W. Brown
- Subjects
Lepidoptera genitalia ,Tortricidae ,Sparganothina ,biology ,Synonym ,Insect Science ,Botany ,Sparganothini ,Paramorbia ,biology.organism_classification ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Tortricinae ,Platynota - Abstract
Five new combinations and one new synonymy are proposed in Sparganothini: Paramorbia hermosa (Razowski and Wojtusiak, 2010), new combination; Spaganopseustis gnosta (Razowski and Wojtusiak, 2011), new combination; Platynota arrecta (Meyrick, 1917), new combination; Platynota richersi (Powell and Brown, 2012), new combination; and Sparganothina thiodyta (Meyrick, 1931), new combination, and senior synonym of Sparganothina beckeriLandry and Powell, 2001, new synonymy. Host plants are presented for P. hermosa, which appears to feed exclusively on ferns.
- Published
- 2019
19. New Host Records for Four Species of Tortricid Moths (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae) on Cultivated Blueberries,Vaccinium corymbosum(Ericaceae), in Argentina
- Author
-
Margarita Rocca and John W. Brown
- Subjects
Fruit pest ,Tortricidae ,Clarkeulia deceptiva ,Larva ,biology ,Host (biology) ,Clarkeulia bourquini ,Zoología, Ornitología, Entomología, Etología ,biology.organism_classification ,Argyrotaenia sphaleropa ,Argyrotaenia ,Platynota ,Ciencias Biológicas ,Lepidoptera genitalia ,Horticulture ,Buenos Aires Province ,Ericaceae ,Insect Science ,Botany ,Platynota meridionalis ,CIENCIAS NATURALES Y EXACTAS ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Vaccinium - Abstract
Four species of tortricids were reared from cultivated blueberries,Vaccinium corymbosum L. (Ericaceae), from four field sites in the province of Buenos Aires, Argentina: Clarkeulia bourquini (Clarke, 1949), Clarkeulia deceptiva (Clarke, 1949), Argyrotaenia sphaleropa (Meyrick, 1909), and Platynota meridionalis Brown, 2013. These are the first records of these polyphagous tortricids on Vaccinium. Larvae were discovered primarily on the flowers, buds, and fruit of the host plant, where they fed externally. Fil: Brown, John W.. Systematic Entomology Laboratory; Estados Unidos Fil: Rocca, Margarita. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico la Plata. Centro de Estudios Parasitológicos y de Vectores (i); Argentina
- Published
- 2013
20. A large predatory lizard (Platynota, Squamata) from the Late Cretaceous of South China
- Author
-
Jinyou Mo, Susan E. Evans, and Xing Xu
- Subjects
Squamata ,biology ,Lizard ,Ecology ,Rostrum ,Paleontology ,Zoology ,biology.organism_classification ,Chianghsia ,Cretaceous ,Platynota ,Estesia ,biology.animal ,Monstersauria - Abstract
The Late Cretaceous deposits of the Nanxiong Formation, southern China, have yielded some dinosaur bones and many eggs, but there has been little record of the associated fauna. A new locality in Jiangxi Province has recently produced a fossil lizard assemblage including two genera of herbivores and the partial skull and lower jaws of a terrestrial predator. The latter combines large size, the possession of a small number of recurved, well-separated marginal teeth, a blunt rostrum, and rounded cranial osteoderms. It resembles Estesia from the Late Cretaceous of Mongolia, but is distinct in its jaw morphology and the possession of cranial osteoderms. It is therefore placed in a new genus and species, Chianghsia nankangensis. Phylogenetic analysis groups Chianghsia unequivocally with the Platynota, the group to which living monitor lizards and extinct mosasaurs belong. Within Platynota, there is support for the attribution of Chianghsia to Monstersauria, the group that includes the living venomous Gila mons...
- Published
- 2012
21. A challenge to categories: 'What, if anything, is a mosasaur?'
- Author
-
Michael W. Caldwell
- Subjects
Character (mathematics) ,biology ,Varanoidea ,Romer ,Anguimorpha ,Similarity (psychology) ,Zoology ,Geology ,Critical assessment ,biology.organism_classification ,Mosasaur ,Platynota ,Epistemology - Abstract
The concept of “mosasaur” is explored from the perspective of its historical origins, and tested empirically and phylogenetically in order to examine the concept in its modern application. Historical analysis of the origins of the concept of “mosasaur” makes it clear that the term bears significant historical burden (comparative anatomic, empirical, phylogenetic, paleontological, etc.). In order to address the flaws in the concept of mosasaur properly, this treatise critically assesses Camp’s [1923] diagnostic characters for Anguimorpha, Platynota, Varanoidea, and Mosasauroidea, concluding that Camp’s data permit mosasaurs to be viewed only as anguimorphans, not platynotans nor varanoids. A similar critical assessment is given for the characters used to diagnose anguimorphans and varanoids in Estes et al. [1988], concluding here that not a single character out of twenty-two is shared between varanoids and mosasaurs. The character concept developed by Romer [1956] for the “posteriorly retracted nares” of varanoids, and then later mosasaurs, is critically examined and found to be insufficient as a test of similarity of the intended primary homologs. The recent work of Rieppel et al. [2007], Conrad [2008] and Conrad et al. [2010] is critically reviewed as these authors revive the use, and subdivision, of the “posteriorly retracted nares” as a character in anguimorph phylogenetic analysis. Based on these criticisms, it is concluded here that there is no character-based evidence to support phylogenetic hypotheses that mosasaurs are derived aquatic varanoid lizards. A key recommendation of this treatise is that the hypothesis conceiving of mosasaurs as derived aquatic varanoids be abandoned. The final critical review presented in this treatise examines the taxonomic implications, relating to the concept of “mosasaur”, arising from the hypothesis of convergent paddle-like limb evolution in mosasaurs as presented by Bell and Polcyn [2005]. In conclusion, it is recognized that the concept and term “mosasaur” has ceased to exist in any biologically meaningful way, and that the future requires the construction of a new suite of terms and concepts to convey what we now think we know about these animals.
- Published
- 2012
22. Tortricid Moths Reared from the Invasive Weed Mexican Palo Verde,Parkinsonia aculeata, with Comments on their Host Specificity, Biology, Geographic Distribution, and Systematics
- Author
-
Ricardo Segura, John W. Brown, Quiyari Santiago-Jiménez, Jadranka Rota, and Tim A. Heard
- Subjects
Tortricidae ,Neotropics ,Parkinsonia aculeata ,Weed Control ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Playtnota ,biological control ,DNA sequences ,Moths ,Cochylini ,Platynota stultana ,DNA, Ribosomal ,Article ,Host Specificity ,Electron Transport Complex IV ,Rudenia ,taxonomy ,Species Specificity ,Ofatulena ,Botany ,Animals ,Amorbia ,Olethreutinae ,Mexico ,Demography ,Likelihood Functions ,Cochylis ,Base Sequence ,Geography ,Models, Genetic ,biology ,Australia ,Central America ,Fabaceae ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,General Medicine ,Venezuela ,biology.organism_classification ,Platynota ,host plants ,Insect Science ,Introduced Species ,Tortricinae - Abstract
As part of efforts to identify native herbivores of Mexican palo verde, Parkinsonia aculeata L. (Leguminosae: Caesalpinioideae), as potential biological control agents against this invasive weed in Australia, ten species of Tortricidae (Lepidoptera) were reared from Guatemala, Mexico, Nicaragua, and Venezuela: Amorbia concavana (Zeller), Platynota rostrana (Walker), Platynota helianthes (Meyrick), Platynota stultana Walsingham (all Tortricinae: Sparganothini), Rudenia leguminana (Busck), Cochylis sp. (both Tortricinae: Cochylini), Ofatulena duodecemstriata (Walsingham), O. luminosa Heinrich, Ofatulena sp. (all Olethreutinae: Grapholitini), and Crocidosema lantana Busck (Olethreutinae: Eucosmini). Significant geographic range extensions are provided for O. duodecemstriata and R. leguminana. These are the first documented records of P. aculeata as a host plant for all but O. luminosa. The four species of Sparganothini are polyphagous; in contrast, the two Cochylini and three Grapholitini likely are specialists on Leguminosae. Ofatulena luminosa is possibly host specific on P. aculeata. Host trials with Rudenia leguminana also provide some evidence of specificity, in contrast to historical rearing records. To examine the possibility that R. leguminana is a complex of species, two data sets of molecular markers were examined: (1) a combined data set of two mitochondrial markers (a 781-basepair region of cytochrome c oxidase I (COI) and a 685-basepair region of cytochrome c oxidase II) and one nuclear marker (a 531-basepair region of the 28S domain 2); and (2) the 650-basepair "barcode" region of COI. Analyses of both data sets strongly suggest that individuals examined in this study belong to more than one species.
- Published
- 2011
23. First Report of thePlatynotan. sp. (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae) Genus in Prickly Pear (Opuntiaspp.) in the Municipality of Villa Milpa Alta, Mexico DF, Mexico
- Author
-
Samuel Ramírez Alarcón, Haidel Vargas-Madriz, Rafael Pérez-Pacheco, and Néstor Bautista-Martínez
- Subjects
Tortricidae ,Lepidoptera genitalia ,PEAR ,Ecology ,Insect Science ,Botany ,Taxonomy (biology) ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Platynota - Abstract
A new genus of Platynota n. sp. was registered for the first time in Opuntia spp. crops in the municipality of Villa Milpa Alta, Mexico DF. The morphological characteristics of the immature and adult stages are described, as well as their damage to the fruit.
- Published
- 2014
24. Kimmeridgian protoglobigerinids (Foraminifera) from Crussol (SE France)
- Author
-
Ágnes Görög and Roland Wernli
- Subjects
biology ,Geology ,Ecological succession ,biology.organism_classification ,Platynota ,Deep water ,Foraminifera ,Paleontology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Orthosphinctes ,Common species ,chemistry ,Facies ,Carbonate - Abstract
A detailed investigation of the protoglobigerinids from the Kimmeridgian section of the Montagne de Crussol, SE France is presented. This monotonous succession of predominantly carbonate beds represents peri-platform hemipelagic deposits, well dated by ammonites. Three species were determined in thin sections and in isolated forms after extraction by acetolysis. Favusella? parva (Kuznetsova) is the most common species occurring in almost the entire succession from the Orthosphinctes to the Beckeri zones. Favusella hoterivica (Subbotina) has been retrieved less frequently from the Platynota to the Beckeri zones, and it is its oldest occurrence. The rare Globuligerina bathoniana (Pazdrowa) occurs only in the Late Kimmeridgian. Based on our study and the review of the literature a palaeogeographical map was plotted, showing that most of the protoglobigerinid occurrences are in deep water facies of the northern margin and central part of the Tethys. These records demonstrate the presence of Globuligerina bathoniana, G. oxfordiana (Grigelis), Favusella hoterivica, F.? parva and Compactogerina stellapolaris (Grigelis) in the Kimmeridgian.
- Published
- 2010
25. Correlation potential of the Upper Jurassic (lower Kimmeridgian) Platynota Chronozone deposits in northeastern Spain
- Author
-
Luis Moliner and Federico Olóriz
- Subjects
Ammonite ,biology ,Range (biology) ,Paleontology ,Geology ,Biozone ,Biostratigraphy ,biology.organism_classification ,Platynota ,language.human_language ,Orthosphinctes ,language ,Chronozone - Abstract
Ammonite biostratigraphy and its correlation potential are evaluated for the lower Kimmeridgian, Platynota Chronozone, in the eastern Iberian Range, E–NE Spain. The presence of the Orthosphinctes, Ardescia desmoides and Schneidia guilherandense subzones has been confirmed. Four formal ammonite “intra-subzone biodivisions” (i.e. so-called horizons or biohorizons) are recognised, one of them defined for the first time – the Olorizia olorizi “intra-subzone biodivision”. Based on the discovery of new ammonite assemblages, the biostratigraphic scheme proposed at the biozone level is considered to have strong correlation potential for successions deposited in Tethyan epicontinental and oceanic fringe environments. The potential for correlation at the intra-zone level is higher with respect to epicontinental than oceanic fringe deposits, but precise correlation at the subzone and “intra-subzone biodivision” levels between the eastern Iberian Range and SE France remains difficult. An updated subdivision of the Su...
- Published
- 2009
26. An Eocene shinisaurid (Reptilia, Squamata) from Wyoming, U.S.A
- Author
-
Jack L. Conrad
- Subjects
Autapomorphy ,Squamata ,Taxon ,biology ,Ecology ,Lineage (evolution) ,Anguimorpha ,Paleontology ,Green River Formation ,biology.organism_classification ,Platynota ,Chinese crocodile lizard - Abstract
A new fossil anguimorph from the Green River Formation of Wyoming represents the first fossil relative of the living Chinese crocodile lizard, Shinisaurus crocodilurus. Its discovery significantly shortens the missing lineage interval and greatly expands the geographic range of the group, previously known only from southern China and northern Vietnam. Although separated by great temporal and physical (geographic) expanses, the new taxon and Shinisaurus show extraordinary morphological similarity. These include characteristics that might otherwise be considered autapomorphies for Shinisaurus, such as a prefrontal contribution to the naris and a subpalpebral fossa. Re-analysis of anguimorph interrelationships yields the hypothesis that Shinisaurus and its ancient cousin represent a basal radiation of Platynota.
- Published
- 2006
27. Circanota: a new genus of Sparganothini from the Neotropics, and its two new species (Lepidoptera, Tortricidae)
- Author
-
John W. Brown
- Subjects
Systematics ,Costa Rica ,Autapomorphy ,Insecta ,Arthropoda ,Panama ,Zoology ,Lepidoptera genitalia ,Genus ,lcsh:Zoology ,morphology ,Tortricidae ,Animalia ,lcsh:QL1-991 ,systematics ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,biology ,Sparganothoides ,biology.organism_classification ,Platynota ,Tortricoidea ,Genetic divergence ,Lepidoptera ,Type species ,LepidopteraAnimalia ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Ecuador ,Research Article - Abstract
Circanota, new genus, and its two new species, Circanota undulata sp. n. (type species), from Costa Rica and Panama, and Circanota simplex sp. n., from Panama and Ecuador, are described and illustrated. Although superficially similar to some species of Platynota Clemens, 1860, Circanota appears to be more closely related to members of a putative clade within Sparganothini defined by a slender crescent-shaped signum in the corpus bursae of the female genitalia. The most conspicuous autapomorphy for Circanota is the strongly undulate costa of the male and female forewing. Barcode sequence data (i.e., cytochrome oxidase I) from Circanota undulata (n = 12) form a tight cluster with exceedingly limited genetic divergence (less than 0.1%); specimens of Circanota simplex have not been sequenced. In neighbor-joining trees based on COI, Circanota is portrayed nearest Sparganothoides, which is consistent with morphological evidence.
- Published
- 2014
28. Environmental risk assessment of carbosulfan on target and non-target beetles when used as white grub larvicide in the cork oak forest of Mamora (Morocco)
- Author
-
N. Kadiri, Z. Atay Kadiri, Rachida Fegrouche, Driss Ghailoule, Jean-Pierre Lumaret, Université Mohammed V de Rabat [Agdal] (UM5), Centre d’Ecologie Fonctionnelle et Evolutive (CEFE), Université Paul-Valéry - Montpellier 3 (UPVM)-Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-Centre international d'études supérieures en sciences agronomiques (Montpellier SupAgro)-École Pratique des Hautes Études (EPHE), Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université de Montpellier (UM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD [France-Sud])-Institut national d’études supérieures agronomiques de Montpellier (Montpellier SupAgro), Université Mohammed V de Rabat [Agdal], Université Paul-Valéry - Montpellier 3 (UPVM)-Centre international d'études supérieures en sciences agronomiques (Montpellier SupAgro)-École pratique des hautes études (EPHE), and Institut national d'enseignement supérieur pour l'agriculture, l'alimentation et l'environnement (Institut Agro)-Institut national d'enseignement supérieur pour l'agriculture, l'alimentation et l'environnement (Institut Agro)-Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE)
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Wildlife ,environmental risk ,Biology ,Cork ,engineering.material ,01 natural sciences ,Toxicology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,[SDV.SA.SF]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Agricultural sciences/Silviculture, forestry ,Larvicide ,carbosulfan ,Larva ,Melolonthidae ,Tenebrionidae ,Sowing ,Pachychila obtusecostata ,15. Life on land ,Pesticide ,biology.organism_classification ,mortality ,Platynota ,010602 entomology ,Horticulture ,Morocco ,cork oak ,chemistry ,Insect Science ,Sphodroxia maroccana ,[SDE]Environmental Sciences ,engineering ,Carbosulfan ,[SDV.TOX.ECO]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Toxicology/Ecotoxicology ,Pimelia platynota ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
International audience; The protection of new cork oak plantations against the larvae of the beetle Sphodroxia maroccana (Melolonthidae), which destroy the roots of newly planted trees, was provided for many years in the forest of Mamora in Morocco by the use of carbosulfan, usually formulated as dry granules for direct incorporation into the soil at planting. Ecotoxicological tests were conducted in the laboratory on S. maroccana and on two non-target beetle species, namely Pachychila obtusecostata and Pimelia platynota (Tenebrionidae), to measure the acute effects of carbosulfan and evaluate the potential risk associated with inappropriate practices. The mortality was measured at both 4 d and 7 d after ingestion of a known quantity of carbosulfan. The recommended dose by the manufacturer was exceeded by at least four-fold in the Mamora Forest, with obvious environmental risks. Risks were identified for wildlife when the pesticide is misused and spread on the soil around the plants.
- Published
- 2014
29. PeltoschemaReitter, a Hitherto Unrecognised Chrysomeline: Redescription and Synonymy (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae)
- Author
-
Christopher A. Reid and S. A. Ślipiński
- Subjects
Paropsis ,Monophyly ,Type species ,biology ,Genus ,Synonym ,Insect Science ,Zoology ,Trogossitidae ,biology.organism_classification ,Available name ,Platynota - Abstract
Peltoschema Reitter is redescribed as a genus of Chrysomelidae, not Trogossitidae, and is recognised as the valid and oldest available name for Acacicola Lea, Pyrgo Weise (nec Defrance) and Pyrgoides Kelly and Reid (all new synonyms). A lectotype is designated for the type species, Peltoschema filicornis Reitter, which is a senior synonym of Paropsis platynota Lea (new synonym). The monophyly of Peltoschema is discussed, the species-group to which both P. filicornis and the type species of Acacicola belong is defined, and P. filicornis is redescribed.
- Published
- 2001
30. La limite Oxfordien-Kimméridgien établie par une espèce index d'ammonites (Sutneria) (Algarve, Portugal)
- Author
-
Federico Olóriz, Francisco J. Rodríguez-Tovar, and Beatriz Marques
- Subjects
biology ,Ocean Engineering ,Ammonoidea ,Biostratigraphy ,biology.organism_classification ,Platynota ,Paleontology ,Genus ,Biochronology ,Phanerozoic ,Mesozoic ,Index fossil ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Geology - Abstract
Sutneria galar and Sutneria platynota are documented from the Rocha section showing, for the first time, the presence of the genus Sutneria around the Oxfordian-Kimmeridgian boundary in the Algarve (southern Portugal). As in adjacent areas in southern Iberia, it seems that the better represented populations of Sutneria platynota are Schairer types A and C. The data obtained increase our understanding of the biogeographic distribution of the genus Sutneria and reinforce its use as the index fossil for the final Oxfordian and the basal Kimmeridgian, as usually considered in the Mediterranean and Submediterranean provinces.
- Published
- 1998
31. Controlled Atmospheres for Quarantine Control of Three Pests of Table Grape
- Author
-
Elizabeth J. Mitcham, Veronique Bikoba, and Shijun Zhou
- Subjects
Controlled atmosphere ,Ecology ,biology ,Table grape ,General Medicine ,Thripidae ,biology.organism_classification ,Platynota stultana ,Acariformes ,Platynota ,Western flower thrips ,Horticulture ,Insect Science ,Botany ,Acari - Abstract
Two controlled atmosphere treatments (45% CO 2 + 0.5% O 2 and 45% CO 2 + air [11.5% O 2 ]) significantly increased mortality of Platynota stultana Walsingham; Pacific spider mites, Tetranychus pacificus McGregor; and western flower thrips, Frankliniella occidentalis Pergande. The small difference in response of arthropods to the 2 controlled atmosphere treatments indicated greater response to 45% CO 2 + 11.5% O 2 . Temperature (0 and 5°C) had a significant effect on arthropod mortality (i.e., arthropods treated at 0°C showed greater mortality). We detected no effects of exposure to the controlled atmosphere treatments for 10 or 15 d at 0°C on the table grapes. Treatment with 45% CO 2 + 11.5% O 2 at 0°C appeared to be the best method for disinfestation of table grapes of these 3 pests.
- Published
- 1997
32. Platynota stultana Walsingham
- Author
-
Gilligan, Todd M., Brown, John W., and Hoddle, Mark S.
- Subjects
Lepidoptera ,Insecta ,Arthropoda ,fungi ,Tortricidae ,food and beverages ,Animalia ,Platynota stultana ,Biodiversity ,Taxonomy ,Platynota - Abstract
Platynota stultana Walsingham (Tortricidae: Tortricinae) Platynota stultana, the omnivorous leafroller, was introduced into southern California in the late 1800 ���s (Powell and Opler 2009). It has subsequently expanded its range into northern California, while at the same time expanding its host range onto a variety of non-native plants (Powell 1983). This species is considered a pest in greenhouses and vineyards, but it also attacks row crops, citrus, and occasionally avocado. Adults are present year round in southern and central California. Larvae feed primarily in shelters constructed of rolled or folded leaves. Economic damage occurs when larvae web leaves to fruit or feed directly on fruit, causing superficial damage and secondary infection by bacteria and fungi., Published as part of Gilligan, Todd M., Brown, John W. & Hoddle, Mark S., 2011, A new avocado pest in Central America (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae) with a key to Lepidoptera larvae threatening avocados in California, pp. 31-45 in Zootaxa 3137 on page 41, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.204440, {"references":["Powell, J. A. 1983. Expanding geographical and ecological range of Platynota stultana in California (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae). The Pan-Pacific Entomologist, 59, 233 - 239."]}
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Mating disruption to control damage by leafrollers in Virginia apple orchards
- Author
-
Douglas G. Pfeiffer, Philipp Kirsch, W. Kaakeh, Joella C. Killian, and M. W. Lachance
- Subjects
Tortricidae ,Mating disruption ,Codling moth ,Phosmet ,Biology ,Pheromone trap ,biology.organism_classification ,Argyrotaenia velutinana ,Platynota ,Horticulture ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Insect Science ,Sex pheromone ,Botany ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Mating disruption for control of variegated leafroller (VLR), Platynota flavedana (Clemens), tufted apple bud moth (TBM), P. ideausalis Walker, and redbanded leafroller (RBL), Argyrotaenia velutinana (Walker), was studied in Virginia apple orchards in 1989 and 1990. In 1989, each dispenser (1000/ha) contained 190 mg of 67.2% E11–14:Ac, 28.8% Z11–14:Ac, 1.4% E11–14:OH, 0.6% Z11–14:OH, and 2% Z9–12:Ac (a putative generic leafroller disruption blend). Trap captures of VLR, TBM and RBL were reduced by 97%, 51% and 55%, respectively. Average leafroller injury in the interior and edge of the pheromone block was 3.8% and 2.7%, respectively. The conventional control and abandoned blocks had 0.05 and 27.5% injury, respectively. Dispensers containing E11–14:OH (70%) and Z11–14:OH (30%) (close to the natural blend of VLR), more effectively disrupted orientation to pheromone traps by both Platynota spp. than did the generic blend. In 1990, dispensers containing 150 mg of E11–14:OH (70%) and Z11–14:OH (1000/ha) were placed in two 2-ha blocks and one 4-ha block. One pheromone-treated block was sprayed in August with phosmet for codling moth, not timed for leafrollers. Trap captures of VLR and TBM were reduced by almost 100% and 69%, respectively. RBL captures were not reduced by VLR pheromone permeation. Injury from Platynota spp. in pheromone block middles and edges ranged from 0.3–1.7% and 0.3–2.3%, respectively. Injury in conventional blocks ranged from 0–1.1%. RBL injury in pheromone block middles ranged from 0–6.1%, and in edges, 1.7–4.8%. Injury in control blocks ranged from 0–1.1%. Combined leafroller injury in an abandoned block was 18% (s.e. 0.3). Release rates averaged 30 and 32 mg/ha/h for the VLR and generic pheromone dispensers, respectively.
- Published
- 1993
34. Influence of Temperature on the Ovipositional Biology of the Redbanded Leafroller and Tufted Apple Bud Moth (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae)
- Author
-
George C. Rock and R. E. Stinner
- Subjects
Tortricidae ,Malus ,biology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Longevity ,biology.organism_classification ,Fecundity ,Platynota ,Argyrotaenia ,Argyrotaenia velutinana ,Lepidoptera genitalia ,Horticulture ,Insect Science ,Botany ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,media_common - Abstract
Effects of constant temperatures of 10, 15, 20, 25, 30 and 35°C on the preoviposition period and the effects of a constant 25°C on oviposition, fecundity, and longevity of the redbanded leafroller, Argyrotaenia velutinana (Walker), and the tufted apple bud moth, Platynota idaeusalis (Walker), were investigated. Oviposition did not occur at 35°C for either species and only the redbanded leafroller oviposited at 10°C. The threshold for oviposition for RBLR was calculated to be 8.7°C with 29.4 DD necessary for oviposition, while the oviposition threshold for TABM was calculated to be 10.5°C with 33.5 DD needed for oviposition. The mean oviposition periods for the two species did not differ; however, tufted apple bud moth longevity was significantly greater at 25°C. Fecundity was greater for the tufted apple bud moth (301 eggs/female) than for the redbanded leafroller (221 eggs/female).
- Published
- 1990
35. Systematics of Platynotan Lizards
- Author
-
Barr, Braden N.
- Subjects
- Phylogeny, Platynota, Anguimorpha, Systematics, Morphology, Necrosauridae
- Abstract
Abstract: Living platynotan lizards are represented by two families: Helodermatidae, consisting of two species limited to south-western North America and north-western Central America; and Varanidae, with 54 species distributed throughout Africa, south-east Asia and Australia. Modern members of Platynota, universally adapted to a predaceous lifestyle and often specializing in relatively large vertebrate prey, include the largest living lizard and three species known to employ venom. Although relatively depauperate, in terms of extant taxa, the 100 million year record of fossil Platynota reveals a widely distributed and morphologically diverse clade of predatory lizards. Several new taxa have been introduced in the past 30 years, many represented by complete skulls and skeletons yet the relationships among taxa found at the base of Platynota remain largely unresolved. Many basal platynotans have been placed within family Necrosauridae, the type genus of which is the most widely distributed and well represented fossil platynotan. As currently constituted the Necrosauridae is presumed to be paraphyletic and lacks a clear and concise diagnosis as does the type genus Necrosaurus. Amended diagnoses are provided for Necrosaurus and the Necrosauridae and the membership of taxa previously placed within Necrosauridae is examined. Phylogenetic analysis of fossil platynotans recovers a monophyletic Necrosauridae in a sister-group relationship to a clade containing modern varanids. Description of a new genus and species of platynotan from the Maastrichtian of southern Saskatchewan reveals unusual anatomical features, adding to the already diverse morphology represented within Platynota. The newly described species is the oldest member of the Necrosauridae and one of two North American species.
- Published
- 2012
36. Labeling Tufted Apple Bud Moth (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae) with Rubidium: Effect on Development, Longevity, and Fecundity
- Author
-
A. L. Knight, Larry A. Hull, Edwin G. Rajotte, and Shelby J. Fleischer
- Subjects
Tortricidae ,Larva ,Ecology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,fungi ,Longevity ,Biology ,Fecundity ,biology.organism_classification ,Platynota ,Pupa ,Lepidoptera genitalia ,Animal science ,Insect Science ,Instar ,media_common - Abstract
Rubidium (Rb) chloride was incorporated into artificial diet at concentrations of 0, 600, 3,000, and 6,000 mg Rb/liter diet and fed to larvae of tufted apple bud moth, Platynota idaeusalis (Walker). Fifth instars, pupae, male and female adults, unhatched and hatched egg masses, and unhatched egg masses from reciprocal matings of marked and unmarked adults were analyzed for rubidium content. In addition, the effects of Rb on larval and pupal development and adult female fecundity and longevity were measured. All life stages from labeled diet were successfully marked at all three concentrations. The influence of males reared on rubidium-enriched diet was significant in marking unhatched egg masses laid by females reared on control diet. Significant effects were found for the highest rubidium concentration on larval development and adult female longevity and fecundity. A concentration in larval diet of 3,000 mg Rb/liter (17,700 μg/g dry wt) was selected for future field releases of adults to study adult female movement within fruit orchards.
- Published
- 1989
37. A new species of monitor (Reptilia: Platynota) from Northern Australia and a note on the status of Varanus acanthurus insulanicus Mertens
- Author
-
P Horner and M King
- Subjects
geography ,Acanthurus ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,biology ,Zoology ,Aquatic Science ,Subspecies ,biology.organism_classification ,Genealogy ,Platynota ,Varanus acanthurus ,Northern australia ,Archipelago ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Varanidae ,Northern territory ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
A new species of Varanus Merrem (Varanidae: Reptilia), V. baritji sp. nov., from the tropical north of the Northern Territory is described. It most closely resembles V. acanthurus Boulenger but colour and pattern easily distinguish the species. Recently collected specimens of V. acanthurus insulanicus Mertens from the Wessel island chain confirm the status of this subspecies.
- Published
- 1987
38. A palynological investigation of some Lower Kimmeridgian deposits from Spain
- Author
-
R. E. Besems, A. W. Van Erve, and C. F. Love
- Subjects
Palynology ,Ammonite ,biology ,Dinoflagellate ,Paleontology ,Diachronous ,biology.organism_classification ,language.human_language ,Platynota ,Sequence (geology) ,Taxon ,language ,Mesozoic ,Geology - Abstract
The present paper provides the first palynological data from two ammonite controlled sections from the Lower Kimmeridgian (Sutneria platynota Ammonite Zone) in Spain. The Segura de la Sierra sequence is located in the Betic Cordilleras and the Hontanar sequence is located in the Iberian Chain. The palynological assemblages, dominated by dinoflagellate cysts and sporomorphs, include taxa which are well known from other areas to be long-ranging throughout the major part of the Mesozoic. Most noteworthy is the presence of Cicatricosisporites spp. in the material investigated. The impact of this on the assumption that a strong diachronous south-north migration of this taxon existed during Middle and Late Jurassic times is discussed.
- Published
- 1988
39. EFFECT OF FOOD AND PERHAPS LARVAL CROWDING ON DIAPAUSE INITIATION IN TUFTED APPLE BUD MOTH (LEPIDOPTERA: TORTRICIDAE)1
- Author
-
John V. Boyne and George C. Rock
- Subjects
Tortricidae ,Larva ,animal structures ,genetic structures ,biology ,Strain (biology) ,fungi ,Zoology ,Diapause ,biology.organism_classification ,Platynota ,Lepidoptera genitalia ,Insect Science ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Platynota idaeusalis - Abstract
Larvae from a laboratory strain of tufted apple bud moth, Platynota idaeusali (Walker), were reared on semisynthetic diet and excised apple leaves while exposed to naturally-decreasing daylengths. Leaf-reared larvae showed a higher incidence of diapause than larvae reared on diet. The critical daylength for diapause induction in leaf- and diet-reared larvae occurred at ca. 14.8 and 14.3 h, respectively. Larvae reared on semisynthetic diet and exposed to naturally-decreasing daylengths were subjected to different levels of crowding. As the number of individuals reared together in the same container increased, the incidence of diapause increased. Separation of the effects of larval crowding from any possible effects of the quality of the semisynthetic diet on diapause induction was not attempted.
- Published
- 1986
40. Tooth replacement in anguinomorph lizards
- Author
-
Olivier Rieppel
- Subjects
stomatognathic diseases ,stomatognathic system ,Extant taxon ,biology ,Interdental consonant ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Anatomy ,biology.organism_classification ,Platynota ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
The study of tooth replacement in anguinomorph lizards leads to the following conclusions: 1. The true varanid method of tooth replacement is found only in platynotan lizards and may be correlated with the development of plicidentine. 2. The presence of the iguanid method of tooth replacement could be established for three lineages of extant anguid lizards represented by the generaGerrhonotus (Gerrhonotinae),Ophisaurus (Anguinae) andDiploglossus (Diploglossinae).Anguis fragilis shows a modification of the varanid method. All other anguinoids show a mixture of the varanid and iguanid method of tooth replacement as was noted by Edmund (1960). 3. Parallelism is observed in the pattern of tooth replacement. Teiids parallel the Anguinoidea (Edmund, 1960), andAmphisbaena parallels the Platynota (Gans, 1957). Such cases of parallelism reduce the phylogenetic information content of tooth replacement patterns. 4. Similarities of tooth replacement in platynotans and snakes are considered to be superficial. Apart from the interdental position of the replacement teeth and the lack of formation of resorption pits, many differences can be shown to exist in the pattern of tooth formation, and future work is expected to show differences in the replacement process.
- Published
- 1978
41. Attachment and Dispersion of Callidosoma metzi (Acari: Erythraeidae) Parasitizing Platynota idaeusalis (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae)1
- Author
-
M. W. Brown and Cynthia R. L. Adler
- Subjects
Tortricidae ,Lepidoptera genitalia ,biology ,Insect Science ,Mite ,Erythraeidae ,Zoology ,Parasitism ,Acari ,Anatomy ,biology.organism_classification ,Acariformes ,Platynota - Abstract
Larvae of an erythraeid mite, Callidosoma metzi Sharma, Drooz, and Treat, parasitized males of Platynota idaeusalis (Walker) from late May to late July in eastern West Virginia. Parasitism peaked at 29% in late June (1984). Most mites attached to moths at pleural intersegmental membranes, primarily between the thorax and abdomen and between the first two abdominal segments. Dispersion of C. metzi on P. idaeusalis approximated the negative binomial distribution, with k ranging from 0.053–0.657.
- Published
- 1986
42. Development of Platynota flavedana and P. idaeusalis (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae) at Constant Temperatures in the Laboratory
- Author
-
R. L. Horsburgh, Golde I. Holtzman, and Paul J. David
- Subjects
Tortricidae ,Larva ,Malus ,Ecology ,biology ,fungi ,Environmental factor ,medicine.disease_cause ,biology.organism_classification ,Platynota ,Pupa ,Lepidoptera genitalia ,Animal science ,Insect Science ,medicine ,PEST analysis ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Development of Platynota flavedana Clemens and P. idaeusalis (Walker) on a meridic diet was observed at constant temperatures in the laboratory. Lower developmental threshold values for egg, larval, and pupal stages of P. flavedana were 10.6, 8.6, and 9.0°C, respectively. Lower developmental threshold values of 9.7, 7.0, and 8.5°C were estimated for egg, larval, and pupal stages of P. idaeusalis , respectively. Averages of 101.5 DD10.6, 379.6 DD8.6, and 126.0 DD9.0 were required for development of egg, larval, and pupal stages of P. flavedana , respectively. P. idaeusalis required 104.7 DD9.7 442.7 DD7.0, and 132.2 DD8.5 to complete development in the egg, larval, and pupal stages, respectively. Differences in rate of development were observed between food sources for both species.
- Published
- 1989
43. Effects of clipping on Themeda triandra Forsk and Brachiaria platynota (K. Schum.) Robyns in Queen Elizabeth National Park, Uganda
- Author
-
Eric L. Edroma
- Subjects
Clipping (audio) ,biology ,National park ,Forestry ,Brachiaria platynota ,Sporobolus ,biology.organism_classification ,Themeda triandra ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Platynota - Abstract
Summary The effects of clipping height and interval on the productivity of Themeda triandra Forsk and Brachiaria platynota (K. Schum.) Robyns were investigated under controlled conditions. Clipping first stimulated tillering and yield but later depressed them, severely in those cut fortnightly at lower heights. Dry-matter production in both shoots and roots increased with rising clipping height and interval. Plant response to clipping at shorter intervals and heights was plastic, reducing the potential to produce tillers and dry matter. Continuation of the treatment eventually led to depletion of food reserves in the plants and to death. The results confirm that the absence of T. triandra and B. platynota from the mosaic Sporobolus grasslands in Queen Elizabeth National Park is attributable to overgrazing by the wild ungulates. Resume Les effets de la periodicite et la hauteur de coupe sur la productivite de Themeda triandra Forsk et Brachiaria platynota (K. Schum) Robyns, furent etudies sous conditions controlees. La coupe favorise en un premier temps la croissance et le rendement mais le reduit ensuite, et tres fort dans le cas de coupe bi-mensuelle a faible hauteur. La production en matiere seche des pousses et des racines augmente lorsque la hauteur et l'intervalle de coupe sont grands. La reponse de la plante a des coupes plus rapprochees et a faibles hauteur est modulee par une reduction du potentiel de croissance et de production de matiere seche. La continuation de ce traitement peut mener eventuellement a la disparition des reserves nutritives dans les plantes et a la mort. Les resultats confirment que l'absence de T. triandra et B. platynota de la mosaique des savanes aSporobolus dans le Queen Elizabeth National Park est attribuable au surpaturage par les ongules sauvages.
- Published
- 1985
44. Electrophysiological Responses of Four Species of Pest Lepidoptera to Synthetic Acetates and Alcohols2
- Author
-
Martin Jacobson and Victor E. Adler
- Subjects
Diatraea ,Lepidoptera genitalia ,Ecology ,biology ,Heliothis virescens ,Manduca sexta ,Insect Science ,Botany ,General Medicine ,PEST analysis ,biology.organism_classification ,Platynota - Abstract
Forty-six compounds (17 alcohols and 29 acetates) were tested electrophysiologically (electroantennograms) at 100 µg/cartridge on 4 species of lepidopterous insects (male and female Diatraea grandiosella , Dyar, male and female Manduca sexta , (L.), male Heliothis virescens (F.), and male Platynota stullana Walsingham). Those compounds eliciting the greatest response were tested at lower concentrations until a response was no longer obtained. Responses were compared with those elicited by a methylene chloride extract of abdomens of virgin females of the same species. Compounds eliciting the greatest responses for males at the lowest concentration were the acetates of 7-octen-1-ol, 8-nonen-1-ol, trans-5 -decen-1-ol, cis- 6-doclecen-1-ol, trans -6-dodecen-1ol, dodecen-1-ol, cis-8-dodecen-1-ol, and ris-9-dodecen- 1-ol. and tralls-2-hexen-1-ol. Of these compounds, 8-nonen- 1-ol acetate elicited a response from male M. sexta at a dose of 10-0 µg.
- Published
- 1972
45. Control of Platynota stultana a Tortricid Leaf Roller, in Greenhouses.13
- Author
-
Asher K. Ota
- Subjects
Ecology ,biology ,Methomyl ,Good control ,General Medicine ,Field tests ,biology.organism_classification ,Platynota stultana ,Platynota ,Toxicology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Insect Science ,Bacillus thuringiensis - Abstract
In a series of laboratory tests and in field tests in commercial greenhouses, methomyl and Azodrin®(3-hydroxy- N -melhyl- cis -crotonamide dimethyl phosphate) gave excellent control of larvae of the tortricid leaf roller Platynota sultana (Walsingham). Trichlorfon, Matacil® (4-(dimethylamino)- m -tolyl methylcarbamate), and Bacillus thuringiensis Berliner gave as good control as the standard Zectran® (4-dimethylamino-3,5-xylyl methylcarbamate). Eighteen other insecticides gave unsatisfactory control at the doses used, and Dursban® ( O, O -diethyl O -3.5,6-trichloro-2-pyridyl phosphorothioate), though it gave excellent control, was phytotoxic to rose plants.
- Published
- 1969
46. Heliothis spp.: 1 Parasitism and Parasites plus Host Plants and Parasites of the Beet Armyworm, Diamondback Moth and Two Tortricids in the Lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas 2
- Author
-
James A. Harding
- Subjects
Tortricidae ,Veterinary medicine ,Larva ,Diamondback moth ,Ecology ,biology ,Parasitism ,biology.organism_classification ,Platynota ,Agronomy ,Beet armyworm ,Heliothis ,Insect Science ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Trichogramma - Abstract
A 4-yr study of parasitism of Heliothis spp. [ virescens (F.) and zea (Boddie)] showed parasitism of eggs by Trichogramma was highest in August, September and October (22–46%) and larval parasitism highest in April, May and June (5–6%). Nineteen parasite species were recorded. Beet armyworms were found on 6 cultivated and 5 wild hosts. Diamondback moths were found on 5 cultivated hosts and 9 wild hosts. Two species of Tortricidae, Platynota rostrana (Wlk.) and P. flavedana Clemens, were found on cotton and 4 wild hosts. Parasites reared from beet armyworms and diamondback moths are listed.
- Published
- 1976
47. SENSITIVITY OF TUFTED APPLE BUDMOTH (LEPIDOPTERA: TORTRICIDAE) LARVAL INSTARS TO PHOTOPERIODIC INDUCTION OF DIAPAUSE AT 21C
- Author
-
George C. Rock
- Subjects
Tortricidae ,photoperiodism ,Larva ,biology ,Diapause ,biology.organism_classification ,Platynota ,Lepidoptera genitalia ,Horticulture ,Insect Science ,Instar ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Platynota idaeusalis - Abstract
An examination of the sensitivity of the tufted apple budmoth, Platynota idaeusalis (Walker), larval instars to a diapause-inducing photoperiod at a constant 21C revealed that maximum expression of diapause occurred only when all five instars were exposed to a short daylength. No intermediate instar was found in which the developmental program could be switched from a diapause to a non-diapause one, or vice versa.
- Published
- 1985
48. Evidence of an Attractant for the Click Beetle, Melanotus depressus , in the Pheromones of Two Platynota spp. (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae) 1
- Author
-
R. W. Weires
- Subjects
Tortricidae ,Click beetle ,Ecology ,biology ,Pheromone trap ,biology.organism_classification ,Attraction ,Platynota ,Lepidoptera genitalia ,Insect Science ,Sex pheromone ,Botany ,Pheromone ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Pheromone traps for 11 tortricid species were monitored in apple orchards throughout the Hudson and Champlain Valleys of New York. A click beetle, Melanotus depressus (Melshiemer), was found in the traps for the tufted apple budmoth, Platynota idaeusalis Walker, and the variegated leafroller, Platynota flavedana Clemens, but not in those of the other 9 species. Trap counts indicated beetle activity peaked in late May and again in late July at most locations. ( E )-11-tetradecenyl acetate and ( E )-11-tetradecen-1-ol were the Tufted apple budmoth pheromone components, while ( E )-11-tetradecen-1-ol and ( Z )-11-tetradecen-1-ol were the variegated leafroller pheromone components, which resulted in M. depressus attraction.
- Published
- 1976
49. The marl-limestone rhythmites from the Lower Kimmeridgian (Platynota Zone) of the central Prebetic and their relationship with variations in orbital parameters
- Author
-
Francisco J. Rodríguez-Tovar, Eulogio Pardo, Mario Chica-Olmo, and Federico Olóriz
- Subjects
Milankovitch cycles ,biology ,Bedding ,Rhythmite ,Stratification (water) ,Biostratigraphy ,biology.organism_classification ,Platynota ,Sedimentary depositional environment ,Paleontology ,Geophysics ,Space and Planetary Science ,Geochemistry and Petrology ,Marl ,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Geology - Abstract
The origin of the rhythmic marl-limestone bedding recognized in Lower Kimmeridgian (Platynota Zone) succesions of the central Prebetic (Southern Spain) is interpreted. A detailed analysis was carried out on the basis of field observations and mathematical procedures of two sections characterized by the variable alternation of marly and limestone horizons. The study primarily reveals signs of a possible secondary imprint in the stratification. However, we conclude that this imprint cannot have been sufficiently important to cause the recorded stratification or significantly alter the existing primary bedding. The mathematical procedure applied to the thicknesses of the beds reveals the existence of different orders of cyclicity that are not recognizable in the field. We were able to date these cycles by detailed biostratigraphy and the application of Fourier/spectral analysis. The close relationship between the timing calculated for the marl-limestone rhythms recognized in the Lower Kimmeridgian (Platynota Zone) successions and the periodicity assumed for Milankovitch cycles has been shown for the first time in the Prebetic Zone and leads us to accept the influence of orbital variations on sedimentation in the sector that was studied. We have also been able to recognize the influence of local factors which determined differences in the depositional organization in the sections studied.
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.