Showing 1 - 19 results of 19 for search '"suborder"', query time: 0.05s Refine Results
  1. 1

    Earthworm, suborder Crassiclitellata, cohort Terrimegadrili (Jamieson, 1988) by William T. Crow

    Published 2012-09-01
    “…EENY-532/IN946: Earthworm, suborder Crassiclitellata, cohort Terrimegadrili (Jamieson 1988) (ufl.edu) …”
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  2. 2

    Earthworm, suborder Crassiclitellata, cohort Terrimegadrili (Jamieson, 1988) by William T. Crow

    Published 2012-09-01
    “…EENY-532/IN946: Earthworm, suborder Crassiclitellata, cohort Terrimegadrili (Jamieson 1988) (ufl.edu) …”
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  3. 3

    Nudibranch Suborders Classification based on Densely Connected Convolutional Networks by Timothy Christyan, Safitri Yuliana Utama, Bagus Tri Yulianto Darmawan, Faisal Dharma Adhinata

    Published 2024-03-01
    “…With their body structure that is very similar between one suborder and another, sometimes it is hard to tell apart the suborder of a nudibranch. …”
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    Overwintering of Thrips (Thysanoptera) Under the Bark of the Plane Tree (<i>Platanus</i> x <i>hispanica</i> Mill. ex Münchh.) in Southeastern Poland by Halina Kucharczyk, Marek Kucharczyk, Tomasz Olbrycht

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…Fifteen species, nine from the suborder Terebrantia and six from the suborder Tubulifera, were identified. …”
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  11. 11

    Complete Mitochondrial Genome of <i>Niphon spinosus</i> (Perciformes: Niphonidae): Genome Characterization and Phylogenetic Analysis by Maheshkumar Prakash Patil, Jong-Oh Kim, Seung Hyun Yoo, Jiyoung Shin, Ji-Young Yang, Kyunghoi Kim, Gun-Do Kim

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…Its nucleotide composition, gene arrangement, codon usage patterns, and tRNA secondary structures are identical with other members of the Percoidei suborder. Furthermore, we reconstructed phylogenetic trees based on the 13 PCGs. …”
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  12. 12

    Neoseiulus californicus McGregor: A Predatory Mite Species for Controlling Twospotted Spider Mites in Strawberries by Silvia I. Rondon, James F. Price, Oscar E. Liburd, Roger Francis, Daniel J. Cantliffe

    Published 2023-01-01
    “… Neoseiulus californicus McGregor (Acari: Phytoseiidae) is an oblong, tiny, mobile, predatory mite that feeds on a variety of prey (Fig. 1). It belongs to the suborder Acariforme in the Acari order. The division includes more than 30,000 described species included in the ancient group of Arachnida (Krantz, 1978). …”
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  13. 13

    A NEW FOSSIL CLARIFIES THE ANATOMY AND PHYLOGENETIC RELATIONSHIPS OF THE EOCENE GYMNODONT FISH †<em>ZIGNOICHTHYS OBLONGUS</em> (ZIGNO, 1874) by LORENZO RIDOLFI, GIUSEPPE MARRAMÀ, JAMES TYLER, Giorgio Carnevale

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…This taxon exhibits a combination of features (parasphenoid shaft-like and bearing a ventral flange; non-protractile upper jaw; teeth incorporated into beak-like jaws; premaxilla without ascending process; palatine massive and firmly connected to the ethmo-vomerine region; supracleithrum distinctly oblique) that clearly supports its assignment to the gymnodonts, suborder Tetraodontoidei. The analysis of this new material also demonstrates that the previous apparent absence of plesiomorphic characters (e.g., spiny dorsal fin) was the result of taphonomic biases. …”
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  14. 14

    Evaluation of insertion and deletion polymorphisms of Brazilian Odontoceti by Dafne Adriana Abreu dos Anjos, Anna Luiza dos Santos Donato, Rodrigo Goldenberg-Barbosa, Elizeu Fagundes de Carvalho, Cesar Rogerio Leal do Amaral

    Published 2023-07-01
    “… Brazilian Odontoceti strandings provide substantial information about distribution, health, and genetics of this suborder. Moreover, molecular identification is required and studies in this area have been developed to clarify their distribution and phylogeny, since morphological identification may be infeasible in some degraded samples. …”
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  15. 15

    Use of a Sendai virus-based vector for effcient transduction of pinniped fbroblasts by V. R. Beklemisheva, A. G. Menzorov

    Published 2019-01-01
    “…Pinnipeds are representatives of the suborder Caniformia sharing conservative genomes. There are several ways to deliver reprogramming transcription factors: RNA, proteins, plasmids, viral vectors etc. …”
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  16. 16

    Phylogenetic relationships and divergence times of Odonata inferred from mitochondrial genome by Weidong Huang, Tianyou Zhao, Mingyuan Fan, Yuange Duan, Li Tian, Hu Li, Wanzhi Cai, Fan Song

    Published 2025-02-01
    “…Here, we assembled the largest mitogenome dataset to date, comprising 143 mitogenomes representing three suborders, 18 families, of which 53 mitogenomes were newly sequenced. …”
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  17. 17

    Unveiling the diversity of macrobenthic crustaceans on sandy beaches of the eastern Mexican coast: new records and an updated checklist by María R. Muciño-Reyes, María R. Muciño-Reyes, Edlin Guerra-Castro, Edlin Guerra-Castro, Raúl E. Castillo-Cupul, Carlos E. Paz-Ríos, Nuno Simões, Nuno Simões, Nuno Simões

    Published 2025-02-01
    “…A total of 3,352 organisms were collected, representing 22 species from 17 genera, spanning 14 families, 7 suborders, 5 orders, and 2 superorders. Amphipoda and Isopoda exhibited the highest species richness and abundance. …”
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  18. 18

    Illustrated type catalogue of marine Isopoda (Crustacea: Peracarida) from the Museu Nacional/UFRJ, Brazil by Cristiana S. Serejo, Agatha C. S. Fernandes

    Published 2025-02-01
    “…This paper provides an illustrated catalog of two topotype species and 34 type species of marine isopods deposited at the Crustacea Collection of Museu Nacional/UFRJ, distributed in 22 genera, 12 families and six suborders. This collection is represented by 27 lots of holotypes, 81 lots of paratypes (15 named as allotypes), and two topotypes, published mainly by authors such as Alceu Lemos de Castro and Idalina Brasil-Lima, former researchers of Museu Nacional in the 20th century. …”
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  19. 19

    Contribution à l’étude de la mobilité de l’hallux et de la phylogénie des primates actuels by J Norbert Kuhlmann

    Published 2015-12-01
    “…The morphological and functional differences of the medial cuneometatarsal joint and the modes of hallucidigital prehension help classifying the primates in four categories that do not correspond exactly to the suborders or the parvorders.1) In the Loridae, the Indriidae and the Daubentoniidae, the articular surfaces are concave/ convex and congruent. …”
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