Present day bio-invasions in the Volga-Ural Region: from the South to the North or from the East to the West? Cameraria ohridella (Lepidoptera: Gracillariidae) in the Lower and Middle Volga

Zootaxa ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 4624 (4) ◽  
pp. 583-588
Author(s):  
VASILIY ANIKIN

The occurrence of the invasive horse-chestnut leaf miner, Cameraria ohridella, in the cities of Saratov and Samara in the Volga Region was recorded for the first time in 2018. Possible pathways of species penetration from the southern parts of European Russia are discussed. 

2020 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 61-72
Author(s):  
R. K. Adygamov

Islam, which originated in the Arabian Peninsula, spread up to the Atlantic Ocean in the West, up to India in the East and up to and across the Middle Volga region in the North. The details of the Islamic law and, more precisely, the features of worship in each regional case depended on the features of the nature and climate resp. on the circumstances of the economy as well as on the ethnic resp. cultural customs and traditions. The practice of Islamic worship in the northernmost region of Pax Islamica, i. e. in the Volga-Kama region, also supposed important questions to resolve. The Muslim legal thought should deal with the other length of day and night in comparison to the Middle East. Short nights and long days in summer, a large number of cloudy days in the Volga-Ural region have led theologians to seek ways to determine the time of beginning of fasting period and the month of Ramadan especially for this land. In particular, Sh. Marjani and M. Bigeev have paid their attention to this theme. The paper examines namely these attempts to adapt the rules of worship to the diversity of natural zones.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna Cedro ◽  
Grzegorz Nowak

Abstract Common horse-chestnut is frequently infested by the insect pest horse-chestnut leaf miner [HCLM; Cameraria ohridella (Deschka & Dimić, 1986), Gracillariidae, Lepidoptera]. The larvae, feeding on leaf parenchyma, cause browning and dehydration of leaves, which may be shed as early as in summer. The major aims of this study were: (1) to assess the effect of infestation by HCLM on ring-width dynamics in common horse-chestnut; (2) to determine the date of invasion of the pest; and (3) to compare the growth-climate response in the period before and after the invasion of HCLM. In 2017 in north-western Poland, samples from 30 horse-chestnut trees for the dendrochronological analysis were taken with help of a Pressler increment borer. The ring-width chronology was developed using standard dendrochronological methods. Dendroclimatological analyses were made in 2 periods: before the determined date of HCLM invasion (till the year 1999) and after the invasion (in 20002016). In 2000, in spite of favourable weather conditions, a reduced growth rate was observed in 91% of the analysed trees. The period of strong reductions lasted till 2010. Before the invasion, radial growth rate was dependent on temperature and precipitation in May and June of the current year, whereas after the invasion, the growth-climate response was dependent on temperature and precipitation in the preceding year and the correlation was stronger. Surprisingly, in recent years (2011–2016), in spite of infestation by HCLM every year, the health condition of the analysed trees has improved and tree-ring width has increased.


Author(s):  
Grenville A. J. Cole
Keyword(s):  
The West ◽  

In the summer of 1890, in the company of Mr. L. W. Fulcher, I again visited Mynydd Mawr, on the west of the Snowdon area, in the hope of obtaining specimens of Riebeckite larger than those on which Mr. Harker and Professor Bonney based their observations in 1888, when they independently pointed out the occurrence of this mineral for the first time in the British Isles. Previous traverses of the dome-shaped mass had shown how uniform in structure and how minutely crystalline the rock of Mynydd Mawr was over all its surface; we accordingly examined the columnar cliffs on the north and west, paying especial attention to the great western hollow, where denudation allows one to stand almost in the centre of the intrusive neck. But even here we were somewhat disappoinied, and our specimens are only slightly coarser in grain than those studied with such striking results by Professor Bonney.


2013 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 63-93 ◽  
Author(s):  
Timothy Darvill ◽  
Friedrich Lüth ◽  
Knut Rassmann ◽  
Andreas Fischer ◽  
Kay Winkelmann

An extensive high-resolution geophysical survey covering 2 km2was undertaken to the north of Stonehenge in June and October 2011. The survey is important in providing, for the first time, abundant detail on the form and structure of the Stonehenge Cursus, including the recognition of entrances in both of the long sides. Much additional information about the internal form of round barrows in the Cursus Round Barrow Cemetery, the course of the Avenue, the course of the so-called Gate Ditch, and numerous tracks and early roads crossing the landscape was recorded. A series of previously unrecognized features were identified: a pit-arc or cove below a barrow on the west side of King Barrow Ridge, a square-shaped feature surrounded by pits on the east side of Stonehenge Bottom, and a linear ditch on the same solstical axis, and parallel to, the southern section of the Stonehenge Avenue. An extensive scatter of small metallic anomalies marking the position of camping grounds associated with the Stonehenge Free Festival in the late 1970s and early 1980s raise interesting conservation and management issues.


Zootaxa ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 4312 (3) ◽  
pp. 580 ◽  
Author(s):  
SCHEJTER LAURA ◽  
BERTOLINO MARCO ◽  
CALCINAI BARBARA

In this contribution, we describe a new Demospongiae species, Antho (Plocamia) bremecae sp. nov., from the west slope of Burdwood bank, a poorly studied region in the SW Atlantic Ocean. We also recorded for the first time in the region two other microcionid species, Clathria (Axosuberites) nidificata and Clathria (Microciona) antarctica. In addition, a regional checklist of Microcionidae from Burdwood Bank and neighboring areas, including Malvinas (Falkland) Islands, Tierra del Fuego Province and the North of the Scotia Arc (South Georgia and Shag Rocks) is provided. 


2015 ◽  
Vol 112 (1) ◽  
pp. 197-203 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frantisek WEYDA ◽  
Jitka PFLEGEROVA ◽  
Tereza STASKOVA ◽  
Ales TOMCALA ◽  
Eva PRENEROVA ◽  
...  

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