RBINS Open Access Library
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be
Congodictya taymansi gen. et sp.nov. a new genus and species of Afrotropical lanternfly related to Coelodictya Jacobi, 1910 (Hemiptera: Fulgoromorpha Fulgoridae)
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/rbins-staff-publications-2018/articlereference.2018-08-08.9441632159
No publisherRBINS Publication(s)RBINS Collection(s)2018/08/08 10:21:43 GMT+1Article ReferencePityokteines vorontzowi (Jakobson, 1896), Scolyte nouveau pour la faune de Belgique (Coleoptera, Curculionidae, Scolytinae)
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/rbins-staff-publications-2018/articlereference.2018-12-19.1778377645
No publisherRBINS Collection(s)2018/12/19 13:43:05 GMT+1Article ReferencePreliminaries of the classification of Agrilus Curt. (Col. Buprestidae): some Indo-Pacific subgenera with modified elytral apices.
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/publications-on-rbins-collections-by-external-author-s/articlereference.2018-12-19.1783683741
No publisherRBINS Collection(s)2018/12/19 14:14:55 GMT+1Article ReferenceThe Laccophilinae Gistel, 1848 of Belize (Coleoptera: Dytiscidae)
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/publications-on-rbins-collections-by-external-author-s/articlereference.2018-04-05.0320803250
No publisherRBINS Publication(s)RBINS Collection(s)2018/04/05 06:47:04 GMT+1Article ReferenceCopelatus yaguarete sp. nov. a new species of the Copelatus erichsoni group from Central America (Coleoptera: Dytiscidae)
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/publications-on-rbins-collections-by-external-author-s/articlereference.2018-04-05.2303439788
No publisherRBINS Publication(s)RBINS Collection(s)2018/04/05 06:53:53 GMT+1Article ReferenceNew species, Combinations and records of Jumping Spiders in the Galapagos Islands (Araneae: Salticidae)
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/rbins-staff-publications-2018/articlereference.2018-04-05.2404869208
No publisherRBINS Publication(s)RBINS Collection(s)2018/04/05 07:06:05 GMT+1Article ReferenceStratigraphy and depositional environments of the Late Famennian (Late Devonian) of Southern Belgium and characterization of the Strud locality
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/rbins-staff-publications-2016/articlereference.2017-01-31.6286092481
The Famennian (Upper Devonian, c. 372 to 359 Ma) strata of Belgium have recently received much attention after the discoveries of early tetrapod remains and outstandingly preserved continental arthropods. The Strud locality has yielded a diverse flora and fauna including seed-plants, tetrapods, various placoderm, actinopterygian, acanthodian and sarcopterygian fishes, crustaceans (anostracans, notostracans, conchostracans and decapods) and a putative complete insect. This fossil assemblage is one of the oldest continental – probably fresh-water – ecosystems with a considerable vertebrate and invertebrate diversity. The study of the palaeoenvironment of the Strud locality is crucial because it records one of the earliest and most important phases of tetrapod evolution that took place after their emergence but before their terrestrialization. It raises the question of environmental and ecological conditions for the Devonian aquatic ecosystem and the selection pressures occurring at the onset of tetrapod terrestrialization. The present study characterized the fluvial facies of the Upper Famennian sedimentary rocks of Strud and the surrounding areas. The exceptional preservation of arthropods and plants in the main fossiliferous layers is explained by rapid burial in the fine-grained sediment of the quiet and confined flood plain environment. Newly investigated fossiliferous sections in the Meuse–Samson area led to the description and correlation of key sections (Strud, Wierde and Jausse sections, complemented by the less continuous Haltinne, Huy and Coutisse sections). Moreover, the investigated sections allowed a review of the age of the fossiliferous horizon, which is now definitely considered to be Late Famennian in age.No publisherRBINS Publication(s)Peer ReviewImpact FactorRBINS Collection(s)2017/01/31 13:51:40 GMT+1Article ReferencePhilippine mossy forest stick insects: first record of the genus Otraleus Günther, 1935 in the country, with four new species, and the new genus Capuyanus gen. nov. (Phasmida, Diapheromeridae, Necrosciinae)
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/rbins-staff-publications-2017/articlereference.2017-01-31.5427874906
No publisherRBINS Publication(s)RBINS Collection(s)Open AccessImpact FactorPeer ReviewInternational Redaction Board2017/01/31 15:30:00 GMT+1Article ReferenceNotes sur le genre Pachydissus Newman, 1838 (Cerambycidae, Cerambycinae, Cerambycini)
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/publications-on-rbins-collections-by-external-author-s/articlereference.2018-10-03.6473948571
No publisherRBINS Collection(s)2018/10/03 13:45:47 GMT+1Article ReferenceA propos d'Aphodius detruncatus Schmidt, 1908 (Coleoptera, Scarabaeoidea, Aphodiidae)
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/publications-on-rbins-collections-by-external-author-s/articlereference.2018-10-03.0471575360
No publisherRBINS Collection(s)2018/10/03 13:52:12 GMT+1Article ReferencePlant-insect interactions in the Selandian (Early Paleocene) Gelinden Fossil Flora (Belgium) and what they mean for the ecosystems after the Cretaceous-Paleogene mass extinction
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/rbins-staff-publications-2023/ZAMBON2023111524
This study aims to quantify the intensity and diversity of plant-insect associations observed in the fossil assemblage of Gelinden, Limburg, Belgium. The site yields a rich collection of well-preserved plant remains, mainly leaves, from a Paleocene European temperate forest. The 780 specimens presented here were scanned using standardized morphotype systems for any trace of damage. This raw data was then used to quantify the intensity and diversity of interactions in the Gelinden flora. This material showed an impressive richness of interactions, contrasting with the poor North American sites covering the period that followed the Cretaceous-Paleogene extinction. Both hosts and interaction types observed at Gelinden are two to three times more abundant than in most American floras, in raw numbers and leaf area affected. This is coherent with what has been observed in the few other studies conducted in Europe, South America and Antarctica, pointing toward more regionalized effects of the extinction than previously assumed based on American findings. This greater richness implies that these sites were either less affected or quicker to recover from the Cretaceous/Paleogene extinction, questioning its global impact, at least on the lower levels of the food web, as discussed in the following paper.No publisherPeer ReviewImpact FactorRBINS Collection(s)2023/05/11 14:31:31 GMT+1Article ReferenceMolecular Identification of an Invasive Sarotherodon Species from the Atchakpa Freshwater Reservoir (Ouémé River Basin, Benin) and Comparison within S. melanotheron Using COI Markers
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/rbins-staff-publications-2021-oa/articlereference.2022-01-13.3585184393
No publisherRBINS Collection(s)PDF availableOpen AccessImpact FactorPeer ReviewInternational Redaction Board2022/01/13 09:50:00 GMT+1Article ReferenceDiving into the unknown: fourteen new species of haplosclerid sponges (Demospongiae: Haplosclerida) revealed along the Peruvian coast (Southeastern Pacific)
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/rbins-staff-publications-2022/articlereference.2022-01-13.4936036300
No publisherRBINS Collection(s)PDF availableOpen AccessImpact FactorPeer ReviewInternational Redaction Board2022/01/13 10:55:00 GMT+1Article ReferenceThe Lanternfly genus Polydictya (Hemiptera: Fulgoromorpha: Fulgoridae) from Sulawesi and neighbouring islands, with the description of three new species
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/rbins-staff-publications/articlereference.2015-01-27.8721585620
No publisherRBINS Publication(s)RBINS Collection(s)Open AccessImpact FactorPeer ReviewInternational Redaction Board2015/01/27 11:25:00 GMT+1Article ReferenceResults of ant collections on Santa Cruz Island within the framework of the 2012 Global Taxonomy Initiative Ant Course at Galapagos (Hymenoptera: Formicidae)
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/rbins-staff-publications/articlereference.2015-01-27.3162664037
No publisherRBINS Publication(s)Peer ReviewInternational Redaction BoardRBINS Collection(s)2015/01/27 13:45:00 GMT+1Article Reference