The first record of genus Gryllomorpha Fieber in Romania (Orthoptera: Gryllidae: Gryllomorphinae)

Zootaxa ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 4543 (4) ◽  
pp. 581
Author(s):  
IONUȚ ȘTEFAN IORGU ◽  
DRAGAN CHOBANOV ◽  
MARIUS SKOLKA ◽  
RĂZVAN ZAHARIA ◽  
ELENA IULIA IORGU

Although the fauna of Dobrogea (south-eastern Romania and north-eastern Bulgaria) is relatively well studied, the discovery of a crevice cricket was quite unexpected. Described from Ukraine and known to occur in Bulgaria, Greece, Turkey, Kazakhstan and possibly Uzbekistan, Gryllomorpha miramae is now recorded for the first time in Romania. 

Pathogens ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (7) ◽  
pp. 853
Author(s):  
Jacek Karamon ◽  
Małgorzata Samorek-Pieróg ◽  
Jacek Sroka ◽  
Ewa Bilska-Zając ◽  
Joanna Dąbrowska ◽  
...  

The aim of this study is to confirm the presence and molecular identification of Echinococcus tapeworms in wolves from south-eastern Poland. An investigation was carried out on the intestines of 13 wolves from south-eastern Poland. The small intestines were divided into three equal segments. Each segment was separately examined using the sedimentation and counting technique (SCT). The detected Echinococcus tapeworms were isolated and identified by PCRs and sequencing (nad1 and cox1 genes). Additionally, DNA isolated from the feces of wolves positive for Echinococcus tapeworms was examined with two diagnostic PCRs. The intestines of one wolf were positive for E. granulosus s.l. when assessed by SCT; the intestine was from a six-year-old male wolf killed in a communication accident. We detected 61 adult tapeworms: 42 in the anterior, 14 in the middle, and 5 in the posterior parts of the small intestine. The PCRs conducted for cox1 and nad1 produced specific products. A sequence comparison with the GenBank database showed similarity to the deposited E. ortleppi (G5) sequences. An analysis of the available phylogenetic sequences showed very little variation within the species of E. ortleppi (G5), and identity ranged from 99.10% to 100.00% in the case of cox1 and from 99.04 to 100.00% in the case of nad1. One of the two diagnostic PCRs used and performed on the feces of Echinococcus-positive animals showed product specific for E. granulosus. This study showed the presence of adult E. ortleppi tapeworms in wolves for the first time.


2019 ◽  
Vol 78 (2) ◽  
pp. 147-154 ◽  
Author(s):  
Salvatore Brullo ◽  
Cristian Brullo ◽  
Salvatore Cambria ◽  
Gianpietro Giusso del Galdo ◽  
Pietro Minissale ◽  
...  

Abstract Poa jubata A. Kern., an annual South-eastern European species, is reported for the first time from Italy. It is a therophyte linked to temporary ponds with soils flooded during the winter period. It is a very rare and enigmatic species, currently known only from a few localities of the Balkan Peninsula. Recently, it was surveyed in an Apulian wetland, near Brindisi, where it grows with several other annual hygrophytes. For its taxonomical isolation, it is included in a monospecific section, as P. sect. Jubatae. In addition to a detailed description, the chromo-some complement (2n = 14) of this species is examined for the first time and a new iconography is provided.


2012 ◽  
Vol 49 (3) ◽  
pp. 187-188
Author(s):  
E. Dzika

AbstractOctomacrum europaeum (Monogenea: Octomacridae) was collected, for the first time in north-eastern Europe, from the gills of spirlin (Alburnoides bipunctatus). Morphometric characters were compared with those of other populations and conform to the original description of the species.


2003 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 1-5 ◽  
Author(s):  
José Martins Silva-Jr ◽  
Ivan Sazima

The whalesucker Remora australis (Echeneidae) is an oceanic diskfish found attached to cetaceans only and its habits are therefore poorly known. At the Fernando de Noronha Archipelago, off North-eastern Brazil, spinner dolphins Stenella longirostris (Delphinidae) regularly congregate in large groups in a shallow bay, which allows for underwater observations of their behaviour and their fish associates. In the course of a broader study of this elusive diskfish, we had the opportunity to made multiple records of two whalesucker couples (three of the fish naturally marked) attached to the same individual dolphin in two different years, over periods of 47 and 87 days respectively. In all the sightings the whalesucker individuals of a couple were recorded side-by-side and positioned on their host’s belly. We surmise that at least one of the couples was a reproductive pair, as the belly of the larger fish was noticeably swollen in the last sighting, and the bulge on its belly was bilateral and extended almost uniformly to the vent, a strong indication of fully mature gonads. Moreover, its size matched those of the mature females of this diskfish species. To our knowledge, this is the first time that attachment fidelity of the whalesucker to any cetacean host is documented in the wild. We hypothesize that attachment fidelity to the same individual host increases the whalesucker’s chance to mate, and suggest further that the highly social nature of the spinner dolphins facilitates encounters between potential mating partners. Our study indicates that host fidelity possibly is not an uncommon feature of the whalesucker behaviour, albeit difficult to recognise. In one of the above recorded whalesuckers the natural marking was a crescentic scar characteristic of the wounds inflicted by the cookiecutter Isistius brasiliensis (Dalatiidae), a first record of the attack of this shark to any diskfish species.


2021 ◽  
pp. 51-64
Author(s):  
FELIX SCHLAGINTWEIT ◽  
KOOROSH RASHIDI ◽  
ABDOLMAJID MOSAVINIA

The micropalaeontological inventory of the shallow-water carbonates of the Paleocene Chehel-Kaman Formation cropping out in the Kopet-Dagh Basin of north-eastern Iran is poorly known. New sampling has evidenced for the first time the occurrence of layers with abundant calcareous green algae including Dasycladales and Halimedaceae. The following dasycladalean taxa have been observed: Jodotella veslensis Morellet & Morellet, Cymopolia cf. mayaense Johnson & Kaska, Neomeris plagnensis Deloffre, Thyrsoporella-Trinocladus, Uteria aff. merienda (Elliott) and Acicularia div. sp. The studied section is devoid of larger benthic foraminifera and can be referred to the middle-upper Paleocene (SBZ 2-4) due to the presence of Rahaghia khorassanica (Rahaghi). Some of the dasycladalean taxa are herein reported for the first time not only from Iran but also the Central Neotethyan realm.


2015 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elif Eker-Develi

Nephroselmis pyriformis(N. Carter) Ettl is reported for the first time from the north-eastern Mediterranean Sea coast. The species was isolated from the samples collected on 21 September 2013. The morphology of live cells is described based on light microscopy. Photographic and video images of the species are also presented.


2020 ◽  
Vol 298 (2) ◽  
pp. 197-202
Author(s):  
W. James Kennedy ◽  
Andrew S. Gale

The classic Lower Turonian Mammites nodosoides Zone fauna of the Akrabou Formation of Goulmima in south-eastern Morocco has yielded a specimen of Kamerunoceras ganuzae (Wiedmann, 1960), the first record of the genus from the fauna; the species was originally described from the Ganuza section in Navarra Province, north-eastern Spain.


2015 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thelma Lúcia Pereira Dias ◽  
Ellori Laíse Silva Mota

Spawning ofCassis tuberosais recorded and described for the first time, based on observations carried out in the Tamandaré reefs, north-eastern Brazil. The specimen was laying over gravel substrate surrounded by macroalgae at a depth of 2 m.Cassis tuberosauses an algal frond of the genusPadinato lay its eggs. The oothecae consists of approximately 200 vasiform capsules, orange in colour. The spawn ofCassis tuberosais quite similar to that produced by its congener,Cassis madagascariensis; however,Cassis tuberosaspawns in the soft substrate provided by algal fronds whileCassis madagascariensisutilizes coarse, carbonate sand. Considering thatCassis tuberosais the target of multiple commercial purposes, to expand our knowledge about its biology could contribute towards protecting the essential habitat of reproductively active individuals.


Fossil Record ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 77-86
Author(s):  
H. Jähnichen ◽  
E. Kahlert

Nymph-fragments (and detached cerci) of the may-fly <i>Ephemeropsis trisetalis</i> Eichwald and the water-beetle <i>Coptoclava longipoda</i> Ping, a coleopteran and a shell-fragment of the conchostracan <i>Turfanograpta</i> sp. are described for the first time from Lower Cretaceous paper-shales of Bajan-Khongor, Mongolia. The assemblage <i>Lycoptera</i> (fishes included in the Order Osteoglossiformes, Fam. Lycopteridae)-<i>Ephemeropsis-Coptoclava</i> correlates with Lower Cretaceous deposits in Transbaikalia, Mongolia and North-Eastern China. The fern-species <i>Adiantopteris sewardi</i> (Yabe) Vassiljevskaja and <i>Adiantopteris toyoraënsis</i> (Oishi) Vassiljevskaja occur in fine-sandstones of Bajan-Khongor (Jähnichen & Kahlert 1972). Their importance as Early Cretaceous flora-elements is discussed. <br><br> Larvenfragmente und isolierte Cerci der Eintagsfliege <i>Ephemeropsis trisetalis</i> Eichwald und vom Wasserkäfer <i>Coptoclava longipoda</i> Ping, und ein Schalenfragment der Conchostrake <i>Turfanograpta</i> sp. werden erstmalig aus unterkretazischen Dysodilen von Bajan-Khongor in der Mongolei beschrieben. Die Faunengemeinschaft <i>Lycoptera</i> (Fische der Ordnung Osteoglossiformes, Fam. Lycopteridae)-<i>Ephemeropsis-Coptoclava</i> tritt gleichzeitig in unterkretazischen Ablagerungen von Transbaikalien, Mongolei, und im nordöstlichen China auf. Das Vorkommen der Farnspezies <i>Adiantopteris sewardi</i> (Yabe) Vassil-jevskaja und <i>Adiantopteris toyoraënsis</i> (Oishi) Vassiljevskaja in Feinsandsteinen von Bajan-Khongor (Jähnichen & Kahlert 1972) und deren Wichtigkeit als unterkretazische Florenelemente werden diskutiert. <br><br> doi:<a href="http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mmng.20000030104" target="_blank">10.1002/mmng.20000030104</a>


Zootaxa ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 2615 (1) ◽  
pp. 66 ◽  
Author(s):  
DIEGO BALDO ◽  
RAÚL MANEYRO ◽  
GABRIEL LAUFER

Melanophryniscus atroluteus (Miranda-Ribeiro) is a poorly known species of the M. stelzneri species group; it inhabits open areas of north-eastern Argentina, southern Brazil, south-eastern Paraguay, and northern Uruguay. In this correspondence we describe the tadpole external morphology of this species for the first time.


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