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Inproceedings Reference À table ! Production et consommation alimentaires d'un quartier tournaisien du Moyen Âge à l'Époque moderne
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2018
Article Reference A Tale of Five Fishes: First direct evidence of trade in Galilean salted fish on the Carmel coast in the early Islamic period
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2022
Article Reference A tardigrade in Dominican amber
Tardigrades are a diverse group of charismatic microscopic invertebrates that are best known for their ability to survive extreme conditions. Despite their long evolutionary history and global distribution in both aquatic and terrestrial environments, the tardigrade fossil record is exceedingly sparse. Molecular clocks estimate that tardigrades diverged from other panarthropod lineages before the Cambrian, but only two definitive crown-group representatives have been described to date, both from Cretaceous fossil deposits in North America. Here, we report a third fossil tardigrade from Miocene age Dominican amber. Paradoryphoribius chronocaribbeus gen. et sp. nov. is the first unambiguous fossil representative of the diverse superfamily Isohypsibioidea, as well as the first tardigrade fossil described from the Cenozoic. We propose that the patchy tardigrade fossil record can be explained by the preferential preservation of these microinvertebrates as amber inclusions, coupled with the scarcity of fossiliferous amber deposits before the Cretaceous.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2021 OA
Article Reference A taste of time. Foodways and cultural practices in Late Achaemenid-Early Hellenistic Düzen Tepe (SW Anatolia)
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2017
Article Reference A taste of time. Foodways and cultural practices in Late Achaemenid-Early Hellenistic DüzenTepe (SW Anatolia)
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2017
Article Reference A taxonomic revision of European Herpetocypris BRADY and NORMAN, 1889 (Crustacea, Ostracoda)
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Article Reference A taxonomic update of the Typhinae (Gastropoda: Muricidae) with a review of New Caledonia species and the description of new species from New Caledonia, the South China Sea and Western Australia
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2021
Article Reference A techno-economic approach for capacity assessment and ranking of potential options for geological storage of CO2 in Austria
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2016
Article Reference text/h323 A temporary exposure of the Late Miocene Deurne Sand Member in Antwerpen (Flanders, Belgium)
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Article Reference A tight association in genetically unlinked traits in sympatric and allopatric populations of a saltmarsh beetle
Local adaptation likely involves selection on multiple, genetically unlinked traits to increase fitness in divergent habitats. Conversely, recombination is expected to counteract local adaptation under gene flow by breaking down adaptive gene combinations. Western European populations of the salt marsh beetle Pogonus chalceus are characterized by large interpopulation variation at various geographical ranges in two traits related to dispersal ability, i.e. wing size and different allozymes of the mitochondrial NADP?-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase (mtIdh) gene. In this study, we tested whether variation in wing length was as strongly genetically determined in locally adapted populations in a sympatric mosaic compared to allopatric populations, and if variation in mtIDH and wing size was genetically unlinked. We demonstrate that the genetic determination of wing size is very high (h2 = 0.90) in sympatry and of comparable magnitude as geographically separated populations. Second, we show that, although frequencies of mtIDH allozymes are tightly associated with mean population wing size across Western European populations, the correlation is strongly reduced within some of the populations. These findings demonstrate that the divergence involves at least two traits under independent genetic control and that the genetically distinct ecotypes are retained at geographical distances with ample opportunity for gene flow.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications