RBINS Open Access Library
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be
Troisième contribution à l’étude des Monochamini d’Asie du Sud-Est: révidion du genre Pseudomyagrus Breuning, 1943 (Coleoptera, Cerambycidae, Lamiinae)
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/publications-on-rbins-collections-by-external-author-s/reference.2017-05-04.8950873660
No publisherRBINS Collection(s)2017/05/04 07:45:00 GMT+1Article ReferenceTrois nouvelles espèces afrotropicales du genre Pseudopharaphodius Bordat, 1990 (Coleoptera, Scarabaeoidea, Aphodiidae)
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/publications-on-rbins-collections-by-external-author-s/articlereference.2018-10-04.9778337613
No publisherRBINS Collection(s)2018/10/04 08:28:51 GMT+1Article ReferenceTristichopterids (Sarcopterygii, Tetrapodomorpha) from the Upper Devonian tetrapod-bearing locality of Strud (Belgium, upper Famennian), with phylogenetic and paleobiogeographic considerations
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/rbins-staff-publications-2020/articlereference.2021-02-12.7080638366
We describe new material of the tristichopterids cf. Langlieria socqueti and cf. Eusthenodon wangsjoi and other unassignable tetrapodomorph remains from the upper Famennian locality of Strud, Belgium. Because of recent improvements in our tristichopterid knowledge, a new phylogenetic analysis is presented in addition to a paleobiogeographic analysis using the Bayesian binary Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) statistical method. The origin of the whole tristichopterid clade is reconstructed with a very likely western European origin. Much of the early tristichopterid history took place in Euramerica. During the Late Devonian, tristichopterids most probably spread from Euramerica into Gondwana. The highly nested tristichopterid clade formed by Cabonnichthys burnsi, Mandageria fairfaxi, E. wangsjoi, Edenopteron keithcrooki, and Hyneria lindae most likely differentiated in Australia. Then dispersal events occurred from Australia to Euramerica with Hyneria lindae (to eastern North America) and E. wangsjoi (to Greenland/western Europe). The latter dispersal events, during the Famennian, are in agreement with the Great Devonian Interchange, which predicts dispersal events between Gondwana and Euramerica at this time.No publisherPeer ReviewInternational Redaction BoardImpact FactorRBINS Collection(s)2021/02/12 16:55:00 GMT+1Article ReferenceTriphoridae (Gastropoda) from the island of Saint Helena and Ascension Island, with the description of three new species
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/rbins-staff-publications-2021/articlereference.2021-12-06.1764108193
No publisherPeer ReviewInternational Redaction BoardRBINS Collection(s)2021/12/06 14:30:00 GMT+1Article ReferenceTrésors d'un autre âge. Sur la piste des premiers Hommes dans nos contrées
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/rbins-staff-publications/cammaert_tresors_2014
No publisherPopular ScienceRBINS Collection(s)2016/01/18 21:31:22 GMT+1Incollection ReferenceTransfer of the Taxonomic Positions of Some Holotrichia Species (Scarabaeidae, Melolonthinae, Melolonthini)
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/publications-on-rbins-collections-by-external-author-s/articlereference.2019-04-03.1236464816
No publisherRBINS Collection(s)2019/04/03 14:15:21 GMT+1Article ReferenceTracking Five Millennia of Horse Management with Extensive Ancient Genome Time Series
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/rbins-staff-publications-2019/FAGES2019
Summary Horse domestication revolutionized warfare and accelerated travel, trade, and the geographic expansion of languages. Here, we present the largest DNA time series for a non-human organism to date, including genome-scale data from 149 ancient animals and 129 ancient genomes (≥1-fold coverage), 87 of which are new. This extensive dataset allows us to assess the modern legacy of past equestrian civilizations. We find that two extinct horse lineages existed during early domestication, one at the far western (Iberia) and the other at the far eastern range (Siberia) of Eurasia. None of these contributed significantly to modern diversity. We show that the influence of Persian-related horse lineages increased following the Islamic conquests in Europe and Asia. Multiple alleles associated with elite-racing, including at the MSTN “speed gene,” only rose in popularity within the last millennium. Finally, the development of modern breeding impacted genetic diversity more dramatically than the previous millennia of human management.No publisherPeer ReviewImpact FactorRBINS Collection(s)2019/05/21 14:50:00 GMT+1Article ReferenceToxicodryas vexator Greenbaum, Allen, Vaughan, Pauwels, Wallach, Kusamba, Muninga, Mwenebatu, Mali, Badjedjea, Penner, Rödel, Rivera, Sterkhova, Johnson, Tapondjou and Brown, 2021. Eastern Black-and-Yellow Tree Snake. Diet.
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/rbins-staff-publications-2022/articlereference.2023-03-01.7160212773
We report a case of predation by an adult Eastern Black-and-Yellow Tree Snake Toxicodryas vexator (Serpentes : Colubridae) on a juvenile Lord Derby's Scaly-tailed Squirrel Anomalurus derbianus (Rodentia : Anomaluridae) in Yangambi, Tshopo Province, Democratic Republic of the Congo. This is the first documented interaction between these two species.No publisherPeer ReviewOpen AccessPDF availableRBINS Collection(s)2024/02/22 14:02:28 GMT+1Article ReferenceTowards a revision of the Neotropical soldierless termites (Isoptera : Termitidae): redescription of the genus Anoplotermes and description of Longustitermes, gen. nov.
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/rbins-staff-publications/BourguignonEtAl2010
No publisherPeer ReviewImpact FactorInternational Redaction BoardRBINS Collection(s)2013/02/13 09:35:00 GMT+1Article ReferenceTowards a paleoecological and paleogeographical model of ammonoids during Deccan volcanism
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/rbins-staff-publications-2018/inproceedingsreference.2018-11-19.5664765764
No publisherAbstract of an Oral Presentation or a PosterPeer ReviewRBINS Collection(s)2018/11/19 11:55:00 GMT+1Inproceedings ReferenceTo the knowledge of Amphidromus Mirandus Bavay & Dautzenberg, 1912 and Amphidromus heinrichhuberi Thach & Huber in Thach, 2016 with comments on the publication by Barna Pall-Gergely et al (2020)
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/rbins-staff-publications-2021/articlereference.2021-05-10.8538850106
No publisherPDF availableRBINS Collection(s)2021/05/10 14:25:00 GMT+1Article ReferenceTNT: The Neanderthal Tools
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/rbins-staff-publications/inproceedingsreference.2013-02-14.3229205138
No publisherPeer ReviewInternational Redaction BoardRBINS Collection(s)2013/07/30 12:57:02 GMT+1Inproceedings ReferenceTitanodula gen. nov., a new genus of giant Oriental praying mantises (Mantodea: Mantidae: Hierodulinae)
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/rbins-staff-publications-2020/articlereference.2020-12-04.2747374415
No publisherRBINS Publication(s)RBINS Collection(s)PDF availableOpen AccessPeer ReviewInternational Redaction Board2020/12/04 09:50:00 GMT+1Article ReferenceThrowing Activities Among Neolithic Populations from the Meuse River Basin (Belgium, 4500–2500 BC) with a Focus on Adolescents.
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/rbins-staff-publications-2019/articlereference.2020-01-13.9117105661
The anterior band of the medial collateral ligament (MCL) is an important stabilizer for valgus stress at the elbow. When practised intensively and repetitively, activities using overhead throwing motions can injure this ligament and its insertion. If these activities occur when the epiphyses are not yet fully fused, traction forces can result in bony detachments in the area of the MCL insertion. This study was based on commingled graves found in 16 Middle and Late Neolithic caves from Belgium. We recorded the presence of MCL lesions on 196 humeri and studied the relation between lesions, siding, and robusticity. 5.1% of the humeri displayed MCL lesions, which affected only the right robust humeri. Our results suggest a social division in throwing activities in Belgium during the Neolithic. They also suggest that throwing practice started from a young age, which invites us to re-examine the role of teenagers in prehistoric societies.No publisherPeer ReviewInternational Redaction BoardImpact FactorRBINS Collection(s)2020/01/13 11:10:00 GMT+1Article ReferenceThrough the correspondence: the little story of the “Spy bones”.
https://biblio.naturalsciences.be/library-1/rbins-staff-publications/articlereference.2014-01-01.8139293637
In the summer 1886, the Neandertal fossils of Spy were unearthed in the so-called Betche aux Rotches cave. Ever since, they have been through many events and have been the stake of discords, sometimes impassioned, between the various protagonists of their discovery and their conservation. The succession of these events will be redrawn here and the positions of each cleared up in the light of the rereading of two archives collections coming from the discoverers, namely the correspondence collection of Maximin Lohest, which is Mrs Dallemagne-Ophoven’s property, and the correspondence collection of Marcel De Puydt, handed over to the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences (RBINS), which we shall refer to as “the Vercheval collection”.No publisherRBINS Publication(s)Peer ReviewInternational Redaction BoardRBINS Collection(s)2014/01/13 21:11:02 GMT+1Article Reference