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Every year since 2003 The Association for the Environment and Nature Protection of Germany (Bund fur Umwelt und Naturschutz Deutschland) chooses a butterfly or moth and announces it The Butterfly of the Year (Schmetterling des Jahres). This status is gained by some rare or declining species which has to be protected and sustained. Last year's butterfly was The Purple Emperor (Apatura iris). The ...
The Lepidopterists' Society was created in 1947 by students Charles L. Remington and Harry K. Clench in Cambridge, Massachusetts. They announced to their colleagues the intention to create a society which would be aimed at popularizing the studying of Lepidoptera. They decided to publish on a regular basis a thematic bulletin and also promote everyway the exchange of butterflies/moths and ideas ...
According to a survey made by Butterfly Conservation and the Centre for Ecology and Hydrology (CEH) nearly three-quarters of all UK butterflies and moths have shown its reducing over the last decade when even rather common Lepidoptera have depopulated by 24%. The survey results show that the most reducing species are The Pearl-bordered Fritillary (Boloria euphrosyne), The Duke of Burgundy ...
A new Lepidoptera user Lev Bely begins posting to the Community news and other curious stuff of butterflies and moths from all over the world. You are welcome to comment those same as all other Community posts.
Oeneis tarpeia lives in the vicinity of the Zhdanovsky backwater in the Kstovsky district of the Nizhny Novgorod region and at the Sormovsky cemetery in Nizhny Novgorod (on a clearing along the power line - there it is alone). Both populations are stable, observed every year.
Only an academic (COR member) can regularly receive 100 rubles or more, provided that he is the director of a research institute or the rector of a university, i.e. he distributes the bonus fund himself. If we take into account grants and economic agreements, this list will certainly expand.
There weren't many people who wanted to check their citation, but they all got a quick response with the result. Who else wants to know how, how much and where he quotes - there is a possibility. By the way, you can find out not only the citation of the works of a certain author, but also the journal. As an example, let's take Eversmannia, which has been so hotly advertised recently on ...
Well, another interesting thing has surfaced: the dimorphism of Psophus stridulus females, possibly with a dispersal value: http://molbiol.ru/forums/index.php?showtopic=133669&st=1992#
As far as I know, anything is possible for money. There should be companies involved in "commercial sequencing" on the Internet, or something like that.In St. Petersburg, I could suggest contacts.
Names of States should be capitalized...... Mine is yours, don't understand.... it's not a shame to embarrass yourself, is it?This post was edited by Entoterra - 18.01.2012 14: 18
no one will answer the subject there.can you tell us here proven online shops, without inflated prices and with a good assortment?I don't think there are many of them.This post was edited by Cloyster - 13.01.2012 23: 36
it is necessary to be able to distinguish from 3 types, for example, known from Tishechkin, 1988 from the Moscow region.in my imho, the Genus is common in dry meadows, apparently on some cereals.. sometimes dominant among the cicadas, "poor" coenoses...... I can see the kind of sluggishness in alcohol fees, who will pass it on?...
Can anybody elaborate on the difference between this shot and that one: http://lepidoptera.pro/species/plebejus-argus/.
It is quite possible that the splinter will not even be in the cells of the intestine, but in its lumen. If a gene needs to be transduced into insect cells, it may be better to use an appropriate viral vector. To work with insects, baculovirus vectors are often used (they are, however, fungal).
Due to some major renewals of the website species database the manual adding of species is temporarily unavailable. Thus, for a while there can be longer delays than usual in getting published photos of butterflies/moths which are not yet databased. Photos of already databased species are published properly, as always.
Ah, yeah, that's my blunt. They have such big differences in forewings that there can be no questions. Goes to M. jurtina.
You're talking about the formal side, but I was asking about something else, something high.And I think that there is nothing "high" in the description of the new taxon, this is a formality.The more it hurts my eyes when journalists write " * * * A NEW SPECIES OF BUTTERFLIES has BEEN DISCOVERED!!!*** "-- which nah is open?!! Is this a law of physics?!