Academic literature on the topic 'Petrobiellus'

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Journal articles on the topic "Petrobiellus"

1

Kaplin, V. G. "A NEW SPECIES OF THE BRISTLETAIL GENUS PETROBIELLUS SILVESTRI, 1943 (MICROCORYPHIA: MACHILIDAE, PETROBIELLINAE) FROM KURIL ISLANDS." Far Eastern entomologist 523 (June 4, 2025): 14–24. https://doi.org/10.25221/fee.523.3.

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A new species Petrobiellus iturupiensis Kaplin, sp. n. is described from the coast of Iturup Island. Among the described congeners, this new species is most similar to P. takunagae Silvestri, 1943 but differs from latter in the structure of the eyes, ocelli, maxillary palps, urosternites and urocoxites, posterior angle of urosternites, and number of divisions in male parameres.
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2

Kaplin, V. G. "A new species of bristletails of the genus Petrobiellus (Microcoryphia: Machilidae) from Sakhalin." Zoosystematica Rossica 29, no. 1 (2020): 17–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.31610/zsr/2020.29.1.17.

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Petrobiellus sachalinensis sp. nov. from the northwest of Sakhalin Island (Russia) is described and illustrated. It is compared with the three other known species of the genus, P. takunagae Silvestri, 1943 from Honshu Island (Japan), P. curvistylis Uchida, 1954 from Hachijo-jima Island (Japan), and P. kusakini Kaplin, 1980 from Simushir Island (Russia). The new species can be distinguished from the congeners by the colour of body and scales, by distribution of pigment, by colour and shape of paired ocelli, and by structure of compound eyes, maxillary palps, legs, urites, and ovipositor.
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3

Kaplin, Vladimir G. "A new species of bristletails of the genus Petrobiellus (Microcoryphia: Machilidae) from Sakhalin." Zoosystematica Rossica 29, no. 1 (2020): 17–22. https://doi.org/10.31610/zsr/2020.29.1.17.

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<em>Petrobiellus sachalinensis&nbsp;</em><strong>sp. nov.</strong>&nbsp;from the northwest of Sakhalin Island (Russia) is described and illustrated. It is compared with the three other known species of the genus,&nbsp;<em>P. takunagae&nbsp;</em>Silvestri, 1943 from Honshu Island (Japan),&nbsp;<em>P. curvistylis&nbsp;</em>Uchida, 1954 from Hachijo-jima Island (Japan), and&nbsp;<em>P. kusakini&nbsp;</em>Kaplin, 1980 from Simushir Island (Russia). The new species can be distinguished from the congeners by the colour of body and scales, by distribution of pigment, by colour and shape of paired ocelli, and by structure of compound eyes, maxillary palps, legs, urites, and ovipositor.
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4

Klass, Klaus-Dieter, and Natalia A. Matushkina. "The exoskeleton of the female genitalic region in Petrobiellus takunagae (Insecta: Archaeognatha): Insect-wide terminology, homologies, and functional interpretations." Arthropod Structure & Development 41, no. 6 (2012): 575–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.asd.2012.06.003.

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5

Klass, Klaus, and Natalia Matushkina. "The exoskeleton of the male genitalic region in Archaeognatha, with hypotheses on the early evolution and the morphological interpretation of genitalia in insects." Arthropod Systematics & Phylogeny 76, no. 2 (2018): 235–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/asp.76.e31928.

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The ventral exoskeleton of abdominal segments 7 – 9, including the phallic organs (belonging to segment 9 or 10), is described for five archaeognathan species: Machilis hrabei and Lepismachilis notata (Machilidae-Machilinae), Pedetontus unimaculatus (Machilidae-Petrobiinae), Petrobiellus takunagae (Machilidae-Petrobiellinae), and Machilinus sp. (Meinertellidae). In the focus are the segmental patterns of sclerites and formative elements, and fine structures of the cuticular surface. The results are compared with earlier descriptions of these body parts in Archaeognatha. Hypotheses of homonomy (transsegmental and male-female) and homology at the level of Ectognatha (= Insecta) are proposed and insect-wide terminologies applied. Morphological interpretations are revised, if required, with a focus on the segmental assignment and other aspects of the male genital opening and phallic organs. A data matrix of 39 male genitalic characters is composed as a source of information for subsequent phylogenetic and taxonomic work on Archaeognatha. Some discussions on character evolution are given; few apomorphies agree with previous molecular results of a clade Petrobiellinae + Meinertellidae, but phylogenetic conclusions remain limited due to poor data for outgroup comparison (mainly for Zygentoma). We compare and discuss the occurrence of genitalic specialities (= structural differences compared to pregenital segments) on segments 7 – 9 in both sexes. The new data shows that male Archaeognatha exhibit many genitalic specialities on segment 9 and few on segment 8, whereas females show many on segments 9 and 8 and on the posterior part of segment 7; the male specialities are largely a subset of the female ones, except for structures categorised as phallic in the male being largely absent in the female (with possible exceptions). Based mainly on the genitalic specialities common to both sexes, we discuss two discrete scenarios for the early sex-shared evolution of the genitalic region in stem-Insecta: (1) The ‘aquaeductal hypothesis’ proposes that water-uptake from crevices was the initial driving force of structural specialities that today mainly serve for genitalic functions. (2) The ‘sensorial hypothesis’ proposes that improving the sensorial exploration of the substrate was the driving force.
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6

Klass, Klaus, and Natalia Matushkina. "The exoskeleton of the male genitalic region in Archaeognatha, with hypotheses on the early evolution and the morphological interpretation of genitalia in insects." Arthropod Systematics & Phylogeny 76 (June 29, 2018): 235–94. https://doi.org/10.3897/asp.76.e31928.

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Abstract:
The ventral exoskeleton of abdominal segments 7 – 9, including the phallic organs (belonging to segment 9 or 10), is described for five archaeognathan species: Machilis hrabei and Lepismachilis notata (Machilidae-Machilinae), Pedetontus unimaculatus (Machilidae-Petrobiinae), Petrobiellus takunagae (Machilidae-Petrobiellinae), and Machilinus sp. (Meinertellidae). In the focus are the segmental patterns of sclerites and formative elements, and fine structures of the cuticular surface. The results are compared with earlier descriptions of these body parts in Archaeognatha. Hypotheses of homonomy (transsegmental and male-female) and homology at the level of Ectognatha (= Insecta) are proposed and insect-wide terminologies applied. Morphological interpretations are revised, if required, with a focus on the segmental assignment and other aspects of the male genital opening and phallic organs. A data matrix of 39 male genitalic characters is composed as a source of information for subsequent phylogenetic and taxonomic work on Archaeognatha. Some discussions on character evolution are given; few apomorphies agree with previous molecular results of a clade Petrobiellinae + Meinertellidae, but phylogenetic conclusions remain limited due to poor data for outgroup comparison (mainly for Zygentoma). We compare and discuss the occurrence of genitalic specialities (= structural differences compared to pregenital segments) on segments 7 – 9 in both sexes. The new data shows that male Archaeognatha exhibit many genitalic specialities on segment 9 and few on segment 8, whereas females show many on segments 9 and 8 and on the posterior part of segment 7; the male specialities are largely a subset of the female ones, except for structures categorised as phallic in the male being largely absent in the female (with possible exceptions). Based mainly on the genitalic specialities common to both sexes, we discuss two discrete scenarios for the early sex-shared evolution of the genitalic region in stem-Insecta: (1) The 'aquaeductal hypothesis' proposes that water-uptake from crevices was the initial driving force of structural specialities that today mainly serve for genitalic functions. (2) The 'sensorial hypothesis' proposes that improving the sensorial exploration of the substrate was the driving force.
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