Survey of the Microcoryphia (Insecta) of the northeastern United States and adjacent provinces of Canada. American Museum novitates

17 p. : ill., maps 26 cm. Includes bibliographical references (p. 16-17). A survey of the Microcoryphia of New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania as well as the New England states and the Canadian provinces of New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and Newfoundland showed four species present. Petrobius brevis...

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Main Authors: Wygodzinsky, Pedro W., Schmidt, Kathleen.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: New York, N.Y. : American Museum of Natural History 1980
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2246/5387
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spelling ftamnh:oai:digitallibrary.amnh.org:2246/5387 2023-05-15T17:22:21+02:00 Survey of the Microcoryphia (Insecta) of the northeastern United States and adjacent provinces of Canada. American Museum novitates no. 2701 Microcoryphia Wygodzinsky, Pedro W. Schmidt, Kathleen. 1980 6410745 bytes application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/2246/5387 eng en_US eng New York, N.Y. : American Museum of Natural History American Museum novitates no. 2701 http://hdl.handle.net/2246/5387 QL1 .A436 no.2701 1980 Archaeognatha -- Northeastern States Archaeognatha -- Canada Eastern Insects -- Northeastern States Insects -- Canada text 1980 ftamnh 2022-03-24T06:33:19Z 17 p. : ill., maps 26 cm. Includes bibliographical references (p. 16-17). A survey of the Microcoryphia of New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania as well as the New England states and the Canadian provinces of New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and Newfoundland showed four species present. Petrobius brevistylis and Trigoniophthalmus alternatus were probably introduced from Europe on ballast; Pedetontus saltator, new species, and Machiloides petauristes, new species, are native. Petrobius canadensis Paclt, 1969, is synonymized with Petrobius brevistylis Carpenter, 1913. The presence of Petrobius maritimus (Leach) in North America is not confirmed. Machilis variabilis Say, described from 'North America,' is not identifiable. Males were not found among the hundreds of specimens of North American Trigoniophthalmus alternatus examined, making a parthenogenetic mode of reproduction highly likely. Males were rare in Petrobius brevistylis (approximately 3 percent of all specimens examined), and were not discovered among the limited material of the new species of Pedetontus and Machiloides"--P. [1]. Text Newfoundland American Museum of Natural History: AMNH scientific publications Canada
institution Open Polar
collection American Museum of Natural History: AMNH scientific publications
op_collection_id ftamnh
language English
topic QL1 .A436 no.2701
1980
Archaeognatha -- Northeastern States
Archaeognatha -- Canada
Eastern
Insects -- Northeastern States
Insects -- Canada
spellingShingle QL1 .A436 no.2701
1980
Archaeognatha -- Northeastern States
Archaeognatha -- Canada
Eastern
Insects -- Northeastern States
Insects -- Canada
Wygodzinsky, Pedro W.
Schmidt, Kathleen.
Survey of the Microcoryphia (Insecta) of the northeastern United States and adjacent provinces of Canada. American Museum novitates
topic_facet QL1 .A436 no.2701
1980
Archaeognatha -- Northeastern States
Archaeognatha -- Canada
Eastern
Insects -- Northeastern States
Insects -- Canada
description 17 p. : ill., maps 26 cm. Includes bibliographical references (p. 16-17). A survey of the Microcoryphia of New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania as well as the New England states and the Canadian provinces of New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and Newfoundland showed four species present. Petrobius brevistylis and Trigoniophthalmus alternatus were probably introduced from Europe on ballast; Pedetontus saltator, new species, and Machiloides petauristes, new species, are native. Petrobius canadensis Paclt, 1969, is synonymized with Petrobius brevistylis Carpenter, 1913. The presence of Petrobius maritimus (Leach) in North America is not confirmed. Machilis variabilis Say, described from 'North America,' is not identifiable. Males were not found among the hundreds of specimens of North American Trigoniophthalmus alternatus examined, making a parthenogenetic mode of reproduction highly likely. Males were rare in Petrobius brevistylis (approximately 3 percent of all specimens examined), and were not discovered among the limited material of the new species of Pedetontus and Machiloides"--P. [1].
format Text
author Wygodzinsky, Pedro W.
Schmidt, Kathleen.
author_facet Wygodzinsky, Pedro W.
Schmidt, Kathleen.
author_sort Wygodzinsky, Pedro W.
title Survey of the Microcoryphia (Insecta) of the northeastern United States and adjacent provinces of Canada. American Museum novitates
title_short Survey of the Microcoryphia (Insecta) of the northeastern United States and adjacent provinces of Canada. American Museum novitates
title_full Survey of the Microcoryphia (Insecta) of the northeastern United States and adjacent provinces of Canada. American Museum novitates
title_fullStr Survey of the Microcoryphia (Insecta) of the northeastern United States and adjacent provinces of Canada. American Museum novitates
title_full_unstemmed Survey of the Microcoryphia (Insecta) of the northeastern United States and adjacent provinces of Canada. American Museum novitates
title_sort survey of the microcoryphia (insecta) of the northeastern united states and adjacent provinces of canada. american museum novitates
publisher New York, N.Y. : American Museum of Natural History
publishDate 1980
url http://hdl.handle.net/2246/5387
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre Newfoundland
genre_facet Newfoundland
op_relation American Museum novitates
no. 2701
http://hdl.handle.net/2246/5387
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