Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Personal tools

You are here: Home
2922 items matching your search terms.
Filter the results.
Item type



































New items since



Sort by relevance · date (newest first) · alphabetically
Article Reference A remarkable new species of Paraphamartania Engel from Portugal (Diptera, Asilidae)
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Article Reference A replacement name for the genus-group name Nanna Birket-Smith, 1965 (Erebidae: Arctiinae: Syntomini)
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2021
Inbook Reference A review of the Gravettian collections from the excavation of Maisières "Canal" (Prov. of Hainaut, Belgium). A combined study of fossil and non-fossil animal resources for alimentary and technical exploitation
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2020
Article Reference A review of the present-day Australian species of the gastropod subgenus Rissoina (Rissolina) (Rissooidea: Rissoinidae) with descriptions of two new species
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2023 OA
Article Reference A revision of the Thyropygus allevatus group. Part V: Nine new species of the extended opinatus subgroup, based on morphological and DNA sequence data (Diplopoda: Spirostreptida: Harpagophoridae)
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2016
Article Reference A Revision of the Yoyetta abdominalis (Distant) species group of Cicades (Hemiptera: Cicadidae: Cicadettinae), Introducing Eight New Species
Located in Library / RBINS collections by external author(s)
Article Reference A revision of Western Australian Bennelongia (Crustacea, Ostracoda, Cyprididae) – the complementarity of molecular and morphological studies
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications
Article Reference A Santonian record of the nautilid cephalopod Angulithes westphalicus (Schlüter, 1872) from the subsurface of the Campine, north-east Belgium, with comments on regional lithostratigraphic problems
Newly recognised material of the Late Cretaceous nautilid Angulithes westphalicus is described from the subsurface of the eastern part of the Campine in north-east Belgium. This constitutes the first formal documentation of this genus and species from the Cretaceous of Belgium, having been identified amongst a large suite of fossils collected from the Voort Shafts I & II of the Zolder colliery during the first half of the twentieth century. The specimens originate from an interval of marine calcareous sand with a marly glauconiferous base, dated as late middle Santonian (Gonioteuthis westfalicagranulata belemnite Zone) and for which a deepening of the depositional environment is documented. Lithostratigraphically, the specimens occur within the Vaals Formation, within the upper part of the Asdonk Member or alternatively within the lower part of the Sonnisheide Member. The early Campanian age of the Asdonk Member suggested previously is refuted, the age of the Sonnisheide Member needs further study. The position of the siphuncle in A. westphalicus is illustrated for the first time; it is positioned closer to the venter than the dorsum, which confirms the close evolutionary relationship with Angulithes galea, which ranges from the upper Turonian to middle Coniacian in central Europe.
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2023
Article Reference A scanning electron microscope technique for studying the sclerites of Cichlidogyrus
The genus Cichlidogyrus (Monogenea: Ancyrocephalidae) includes more than 90 species, most of which are gill parasites of African cichlid fishes. Cichlidogyrus has been studied extensively in recent years, but scanning electron microscope (SEM) investigations of the isolated hard parts have not yet been undertaken. In this paper, we describe a method for isolating and scanning the sclerites of individual Cichlidogyrus worms. Twenty-year old, formol-fixed specimens of Cichlidogyrus casuarinus were subjected to proteinase K digestion in order to release the sclerites from the surrounding soft tissues. SEM micrographs of the haptoral sclerites and the male copulatory organ are presented. The ability to digest formol-fixed specimens makes this method a useful tool for the study of historical museum collections.
Located in Library / No RBINS Staff publications
Article Reference A scientific name for Pacific oysters
Located in Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2018