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An Overview and Informal Key of the Ferns of Florida
Published 2005-08-01“…Tropical storms and winds have transported fern spores to Florida from Caribbean islands and resulted in a high diversity of species. …”
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22
Melonworm, Diaphania hyalinata Linnaeus (Insecta: Lepidoptera: Pyralidae)
Published 2003-12-01“… Melonworm, Diaphania hyalinata Linnaeus, occurs throughout most of Central and South America and the Caribbean. The United States is the northern limit of its permanent range, and wintertime occurrence generally is limited to south Florida and perhaps south Texas. …”
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23
Cornsilk Fly, Euxesta stigmatias Loew (Insecta: Diptera: Otitidae)
Published 2004-07-01“…It occurs throughout the Caribbean Islands, Mexico, Central and South America south to Bolivia and Paraguay, and in Florida. …”
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24
Field Identification of Citrus Blight
Published 2005-02-01“…The disease is found in many citrus-producing regions including North America, the Caribbean, South America, South Africa and Australia. …”
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25
Cornsilk Fly, Euxesta stigmatias Loew (Insecta: Diptera: Otitidae)
Published 2004-07-01“…It occurs throughout the Caribbean Islands, Mexico, Central and South America south to Bolivia and Paraguay, and in Florida. …”
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26
Guava Fruit Fly, Anastrepha striata Schiner (Insecta: Diptera: Tephritidae)
Published 2004-11-01“…It, however, has not acquired a well established common name as have others such as the Mexican, Caribbean, and Mediterranean fruit fly. This probably is because it is not considered to be of primary economic importance, although it often is abundant and may be highly destructive to dooryard plantings of some tropical fruits. …”
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27
Guava Fruit Fly, Anastrepha striata Schiner (Insecta: Diptera: Tephritidae)
Published 2004-11-01“…It, however, has not acquired a well established common name as have others such as the Mexican, Caribbean, and Mediterranean fruit fly. This probably is because it is not considered to be of primary economic importance, although it often is abundant and may be highly destructive to dooryard plantings of some tropical fruits. …”
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28
Field Identification of Citrus Blight
Published 2005-02-01“…The disease is found in many citrus-producing regions including North America, the Caribbean, South America, South Africa and Australia. …”
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29
Tropical Hardwood Hammocks in Florida
Published 2004-12-01“…Tropical hardwood hammocks occur in south Florida and along the Florida coastlines where danger from frost is rare and tropical trees and shrubs common to the Caribbean islands (West Indian origin) are able to survive. …”
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30
Tropical Hardwood Hammocks in Florida
Published 2004-12-01“…Tropical hardwood hammocks occur in south Florida and along the Florida coastlines where danger from frost is rare and tropical trees and shrubs common to the Caribbean islands (West Indian origin) are able to survive. …”
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31
Characterization of Mortality from Diabetes Mellitus in Cienfuegos Province during the First Nine Months of 2020
Published 2023-08-01“…<strong>Foundation:</strong> according to the World Health Organization, diabetes causes 300,000 deaths a year in Latin America and the Caribbean and in the Cienfuegos province since 2020 it ranks as the seventh cause of death. …”
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Assessment of multidecadal precipitation seasonality in the panama canal watershed
Published 2025-04-01“…New Hydrological Insights for the Region: Three spatial domains of similar patterns of seasonal and geographical distribution of rainfall were delineated in PCW by clustering the precipitation-seasonality time series. Stations in the northeastern and northwestern domains of the PCW experience higher average daily precipitation, influenced by the interplay of the annual movement of the ITCZ33 Intertropical Convergence Zone across Panama and weather systems over the Caribbean Sea. …”
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33
Fálétí’s Philosophical Sensibility
Published 2021-12-01“…In Irele and Gikandi’s edited volumes, The Cambridge History of African and Caribbean Literature (2004), Fálétí only managed an appearance in the bibliography that featured four of his works—Wọn Rò Pé Wèrè Ni ́ (1965), Ọmọ Olókùn Ẹṣin (1969), Baṣòrun Gáà (1972) and Ìdààmú Páàdì Mínkáílù (1974). …”
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