I.—Note on the Gigantic Land Tortoise (Testudo Ammon, Andrews), from the Upper Eocene of Egypt

1904 ◽  
Vol 1 (11) ◽  
pp. 527-530 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. W. Andrews

In the course of his excavations in the Upper Eocene beds of the Fayûm during the early part of 1902, Mr. H. J. L. Beadnell unearthed a remarkably fine shell of a very large species of Testudo. A brief description of this specimen was afterwards published in Cairo by the present writer, and it was made the type of a new species, Testudo Ammon. At the same time Mr. Beadnell gave a short account of the beds in which it was found, and of the methods employed by him for its preservation and transport to the Museum in Cairo.

Zootaxa ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 5020 (2) ◽  
pp. 328-336
Author(s):  
MASSIMO OLMI ◽  
DMITRY V. VASILENKO ◽  
LEONARDO CAPRADOSSI ◽  
EVGENY E. PERKOVSKY ◽  
ADALGISA GUGLIELMINO

Lonchodryinus groehni sp. nov. (Hymenoptera: Chrysidoidea: Dryinidae) is described from Baltic amber. The new species is close to L. balticus Olmi & Guglielmino, 2012, but it can be distinguished for the different OPL/POL ratio and 2r-rs&Rs vein of the fore wing. A key to the fossil species of Lonchodryinus and a comparison with the extant species L. ruficornis (Dalman, 1818) are presented.  


2020 ◽  
Vol 296 (1) ◽  
pp. 185-192
Author(s):  
Àlex Ossó ◽  
José Luis Domínguez ◽  
Antonio De Angeli ◽  
Fernando A. Ferratges

A new species of Dynomene from the Priabonian (Upper Eocene) of the central Pyrenees in Aragón (Spain) is described as the first record of the genus from the Iberian Peninsula. The new species reveals close similarities to other dromioid species described from the Priabonian of Hungary. The panopeid Eoacantholobulus oscensis Ossó & Domínguez, 2017, from the same locality, is reviewed and transferred to the genus Sculptoplax, after comparisons with specimens of Sculptoplax rigida Müller & Collins, 1991 from the Priabonian of Italy. The present note again provides evi- dence of the close relationship between the Late Eocene decapod crustacean faunas of the western-most Tethys and the Pyrenean basins.


Zootaxa ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 4819 (3) ◽  
pp. 544-556 ◽  
Author(s):  
EVGENY E. PERKOVSKY ◽  
MASSIMO OLMI ◽  
DMITRY V. VASILENKO ◽  
LEONARDO CAPRADOSSI ◽  
ADALGISA GUGLIELMINO

A new species of pincer wasps, Bocchus schmalhauseni sp. nov. (Dryinidae) is described from Rovno amber (Ukraine). The amber piece was collected in the Vladimirets District in the north-west of the Rovno region. Taking into account this new record, a total of five species of Dryinidae are registered from Rovno amber. A key to the fossil species of Bocchus Ashmead is presented. The possible reasons for the different distribution of Dryinus species on both coasts of Subparathetys are discussed.


Palaeoworld ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 23 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 321-326 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chen-Yang Cai ◽  
Alfred F. Newton ◽  
Di-Ying Huang ◽  
Liang Tang

Parasitology ◽  
1942 ◽  
Vol 34 (2) ◽  
pp. 138-140
Author(s):  
G. D. Bhalerao

Through the courtesy of Prof. Ali Akhtar, Afghanistan, the writer examined about eight flukes obtained from the trachea of the spoon-bill, Platalea leucorodia var. major. A short account is given of the species, and its affinities are discussed below.


Zootaxa ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 2408 (1) ◽  
pp. 47 ◽  
Author(s):  
MERLIJN JOCQUE ◽  
LUC BRENDONCK ◽  
BRUCE J RIDDOCH ◽  
KOEN MARTENS

The ostracod fauna of southern Africa remains ill-known, in spite of the fact that the temporary pools of this zoogeographical region hold degrees of endemicity comparable only to those of the ancient lakes of East Africa. The present contribution describes a new species of the cypridid genus Amphibolocypris, A. arida sp.nov., and announces the existence of at least two further new species from the same area. The genus, up to now presumed monospecific, might constitute an extensive radiation across southern Africa. Unusually large species-specific differences in hemipenis outline morphology appear to indicate that speciation occurred through sexual, rather than through natural selection. The occurrence of the claw-like subapical seta on the walking limb in at least four genera could be a case of convergent evolution, at least in one, maybe even in two cases between species of different genera and even subfamilies.


1845 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. 157-158
Author(s):  
Richard Parnell

The author obtained, in the early part of last September, at Brixham, in Devonshire, seven specimens of a species of Gurnard, which has been known for thirty years past to the fishermen there under the name of Finned Captains. This he ascertained to be the Trigla lucerna of Brunner. The species is known as an inhabitant of the Mediterranean, where it was first noticed by Rondeletius, but mistaken by him for the T. cuculus of Linnæus. Since then, Brunner noticed it at Marseilles, Risso at Nice, Leach at Malta, and Cuvier at Naples; but it had not been previously observed by any naturalist on the British coasts. The largest specimen obtained by the author is 10½ inches long. The back is light red, the pectoral fins dark blue, the sides marked by a silvery band from the gill-cover to the tail; the lateral line smooth, and formed by numerous semicircular plates, beautifully radiated at their free margin ; the scales thin, large, and entire; the second ray of the first dorsal fin very long, so as to reach, when folded down, beyond the sixth ray of the second dorsal fin. (See Plate.)


Zootaxa ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 5006 (1) ◽  
pp. 106-109
Author(s):  
STANISLAV I. MELNITSKY ◽  
VLADIMIR D. IVANOV ◽  
EVGENY E. PERKOVSKY

A new caddisfly species Plectrocnemia kirmikhia sp. nov. (Polycentropodidae) is described from Priabonian Rovno amber (Upper Eocene, 33.9–37.8 million years old). Now the family Polycentropodidae is represented in Rovno amber by 16 named species, and the genus Plectrocnemia includes 5 described species in this locality.


1923 ◽  
Vol 60 (5) ◽  
pp. 199-216 ◽  
Author(s):  
Herbert L. Hawkins

(a) Palæontological.—A new genus of the Holectypoida, Metholectypus, is described. Its only known species, M. trechmanni sp.n., shows remarkable superficial similarity with Lanieria lanieri. It is argued that these two genera may be divergent end-forms of the Coenholectypus stock.A large species of Heterosalenia (H. occidentalis sp.n.) gives occasion for discussion of the affinities of that genus. Arguments are put forward to show that Heterosalenia and Pseudosalenia may be composite genera, including occasional orthogenetic offshoots from a persistent stock (perhaps Hemicidaris) consisting of individual, or group, cases of an exaggeration of fundamental tendencies that may be accounted for on a Mendelian basis. A similar relation is believed to unite and disintegrate Salenia and Hyposalenia.A new species of Botriopygus (B. rudistarum sp.n.) shows a very simple stage in the production of petals and phyllodes.(b) Stratigraphical.—Since all the determinable species and one of the genera are considered to be new, exact comparison of faunas is impossible. This is the only crumb of comfort that I can give to Jamaican stratigraphers. They must make what use of it they can; but to a palæontologist it is almost immaterial. The two alternative published views as to the horizons of the three beds from which the Echinoids come are (i) Trechmann's opinion that the whole series is probably Maëstrichtian, and (ii) Hill's belief that the lower part is Cretaceous (presumably uppermost) and the upper part Eocene. In the light of the results derived from study of the Echinoids, these two views seem very little different, and both untenable.The solitary specimen from the Barrettia beds (Metholectypus trechmanni) invites comparison with Lanieria from Cuba. The horizon of the latter is not known definitely, but is accepted as Cretaceous. The only other member of the family to which Lanieria belongs is Discholectypus, an Albian genus.The specimens from the shales overlying the Barrettia beds and beneath the Rudist Limestones are Leiocidaris sp. and Hemiaster sp. The former is closely comparable with L. hemigranosus from an approximately Cenomanian horizon in Texas. The latter, whose preservation prevents satisfactory comparison, suggests affinity with Cenomanian or Turonian species of Hemiaster rather than with any from higher horizons.The excellently represented species from the Rudist Limestone are Heterosalenia occidentalis and Botriopygus rudistarum spp.n. The latest previous record for Heterosalenia is from the base of the Senonian, and that represents by a long way the latest appearance of the family to which it belongs. Even if the explanation of the “genus” given above (sect, vi) be admitted, the fact remains that no form from which H. occidentalis could be derived is known from above the “Coniacian”. Botriopygus is chiefly developed in the Lower Cretaceous, but seems to range almost throughout the period. The simple structure of the new species points to a lower, rather than a higher, position.This record of simple deduction obviously excludes all likelihood of a Tertiary date for any part of the sequence considered. It fails, equally, to indicate any specially high Cretaceous zones. Further, it can hardly be a coincidence that the stages suggested by the Echinoids are in conformity with the known sequence of the beds. The literal evidence is, then, that we have in these three members of the Jamaican Cretaceous system a time-range from the base of the Upper Cretaceous to about the base of the Senonian. Some latitude in interpretation may be allowed, but it does not seem that Mäestrichtian could be included, at least for the parts of the Rudist Limestone represented by the Echinoids.This result came as a great surprise to me; and it will, I fear, give a shock to West Indian stratigraphers. But with the evidence available “I can do no other”. It is possible, of course, that the West Indies was a region to which belated forms retreated to die, so that these types were surviving long after their extinction elsewhere; but there is no existing authority for assuming this—I suggest it out of sympathy with those workers to whom my conclusions may be disconcerting.


1957 ◽  
Vol 31 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 33-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yeh Liang-Sheng

1. Eufilaria sergenti Seurat, 1921 is recorded from the areolar tissue of the legs and neck of the White-crested Jay-Thrush, Garrulax leucolophus from the Himalayas.2. A new species of filarial worm Chandlerella braziliensis is described from the Green-billed Toucan from Brazil. It differs from other species of Chandlerella in the presence of small preanal papillae.3. Chandlerella and Splendidofilaria which are considered as synonymous by some recent authors are considered to be valid genera by the present writer.4. The genus Buckleyfilaria Singh, 1949 is shown to be a synonym of Pseudaprocta Shikhobalova, 1930, and the genotype becomes Pseudaprocta buckleyi (Singh, 1949) n.comb.


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