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Article Reference Photography-based taxonomy is inadequate, unnecessary, and potentially harmful for biological sciences.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2016
Article Reference Termite mounds Effects on Composition and Plant Species Functional Types and Traits in Pendjari Biosphere Reserve (Benin, West – Africa).
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2016
Article Reference Co-introduction success of monogeneans infecting the fisheries target Limnothrissa miodon differs between two non-native areas: the potential of parasites as a tag for introduction pathway
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2019
Article Reference Integrative species delimitation and phylogeny of the branchiate worm Branchiodrilus (Clitellata, Naididae)
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2018
Article Reference Scaldiporia vandokkumi, a new pontoporiid (Mammalia, Cetacea, Odontoceti) from the Late Miocene to earliest Pliocene of the Westerschelde estuary (The Netherlands)
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2017
Article Reference application/x-troff-ms The proportion of flatfish recruitment in the North Sea potentially affected by offshore windfarms
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2019
Article Reference New euprimate postcrania from the early Eocene of Gujarat, India, and the strepsirrhineehaplorhine divergence
The oldest primates of modern aspect (euprimates) appear abruptly on the Holarctic continents during a brief episode of global warming known as the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum, at the beginning of the Eocene (~56 Ma). When they first appear in the fossil record, they are already divided into two distinct clades, Adapoidea (basal members of Strepsirrhini, which includes extant lemurs, lorises, and bushbabies) and Omomyidae (basal Haplorhini, which comprises living tarsiers, monkeys, and apes). Both groups have recently been discovered in the early Eocene Cambay Shale Formation of Vastan lignite mine, Gujarat, India, where they are known mainly from teeth and jaws. The Vastan fossils are dated at ~54.5 Myr based on associated dinoflagellates and isotope stratigraphy. Here, we describe new, exquisitely preserved limb bones of these Indian primates that reveal more primitive postcranial characteristics than have been previously documented for either clade, and differences between them are so minor that in many cases we cannot be certain to which group they belong. Nevertheless, the small distinctions observed in some elements foreshadow postcranial traits that distinguish the groups by the middle Eocene, suggesting that the Vastan primatesdthough slightly younger than the oldest known euprimatesdmay represent the most primitive known remnants of the divergence between the two great primate clades.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2016
Article Reference First mammal species identified from the Upper Cretaceousof the Rusca Montana Basin (Transylvania, Romania)
Multituberculate mammals are scarce in the Late Cretaceous of Europe, being recorded exclusively from the Maastrichtian terrestrial deposits of the Hateg and Transylvanian basins, in Romania. Moreover, they all belong to the endemic and primitive cimolodontan family Kogaionidae. Here, we report multituberculate teeth originating from the Maastrichtian fluviatile sediments of the Rusca Montana Basin (Occidental Carpathians, Poiana Rusca Mountains). This is the westernmost occurrence of these Cretaceous mammals in Romania. These teeth are assigned to Barbatodon oardaensis, the smallest Cretaceous kogaionid species. This study presents the first occurrence of this species outside the Metaliferi sedimentary area (southwestern Transylvania, Romania). The distribution of Romanian Maastrichtian kogaionids is also discussed.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2016
Article Reference Frasnian reef mounds in the Durbuy-Bomal area (eastern border of the Dinant Synclinorium, Belgium)
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2022 OA
Article Reference The highly diversified rugose coral fauna from the Lower Givetian Meerbüsch quarry in the Eifel Hills (Germany).
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2022 OA