Academic literature on the topic 'Sematurinae'

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Journal articles on the topic "Sematurinae"

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Jing, Mei-dong, and Yi-tong Ma. "Two new species and two new records of Homidia (Collembola, Entomobryidae) from China." ZooKeys 1135 (December 15, 2022): 181–212. https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1135.89373.

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Homidia, one of the largest genera of the family Entomobryidae, is widely distributed in China. To date, 46 species of this genus are present in China and account for approximately 60 % of all known species of the genus. In the present paper, two new species of Homidia are described from China: H. acutus sp. nov. and H. changensis sp. nov. The former is discriminated by the brown to blue-violet pigment present on whole dorsal body and by pointed tenent hairs. The latter is characterised by having only scattered traces of brown pigment on tergites, and by the special macrochaetal formula of coxae. Additionally, two known species of the genus, H. linhaiensis Shi, Pan & Qi, 2009 and H. socia Denis, 1929, are reported from Jiangxi Province for the first time, and some of their taxonomic characters are described. A key to the Chinese species of the genus is provided.
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Zhou, Rong, Ling Huang, and Yi-Tong Ma. "Smooth post-labial chaetae in Homidia (Collembola, Entomobryidae) and the description of four new species from China with the aid of DNA barcoding." ZooKeys 1213 (September 25, 2024): 41–73. https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1213.123839.

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Four new species of <i>Homidia</i> are described from the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, China. <i>Homidia longiantenna</i> sp. nov. is characterised by its long antenna and slightly expanded post-labial chaetae; <i>H. guangxiensis</i> sp. nov. by the presence of smooth chaetae on the post-labium and posterior face of the ventral tube; <i>H. huapingensis</i> sp. nov. by the presence of smooth post-labial chaetae and pointed tenent hairs; and <i>H. oligoseta</i> sp. nov. by the pointed tenent hairs and fewer macrochaetae on Abdomen IV. Additions to the original description of <i>Homidia acutus</i> Jing &amp; Ma, 2022 are also provided.
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Zhang, Guo-Qiang, Yu-Xin Zhao, and Feng Zhang. "Revisiting the type species of the genus Homidia (Collembola, Entomobryidae)." ZooKeys 1176 (August 22, 2023): 1–11. https://doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1176.109104.

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Homidia cingula Börner, 1906, the type species of the genus Homidia Börner, 1906, is widespread from India to Southeast Asia, but its detailed morphological characteristics have not yet been described. We examined the morphology of specimens of H. cingula from Indonesia and southwestern China and confirmed their conspecific status by comparing their DNA barcoding sequences. We also compared the morphology of H. cingula with other two closely related species, confirming the valid species status of H. subcingula Denis, 1948. Our study provides new taxonomic and molecular data for the genus Homidia.
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Cock, Matthew J. W., and Gerardo Lamas. "Case 3531SematuraDalman, 1825 (Insecta, Lepidoptera, sematuridae): proposed precedence overManiaHübner, 1821." Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature 68, no. 3 (2011): 184–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.21805/bzn.v68i3.a11.

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Turner, Thomas, and Vaughan A. Turland. "Scientific Note: Clarification of the nomenclature and distribution of Mania aegisthus (Fabricius, 1781) (Lepidoptera: Geometroidea: Sematuridae)." Tropical Lepidoptera Research 32, no. 2 (2022): 113–17. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7246235.

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Minet, Joel. "Tentative reconstruction of the ditrysian phylogeny (Lepidoptera: Glossata)." Insect Systematics & Evolution 22, no. 1 (1991): 69–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/187631291x00327.

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AbstractThe Ditrysia, which comprise the great majority of extant Lepidoptera, are divided into thirty superfamilies (instead of the fifteen to twenty usually recognized). Several of them are conceived in a new sense and one is newly proposed: the Choreutoidea. The Dudgeoneidae are reassigned to the Cossoidea, the Sematuridae and Uraniidae to the Geometroidea, while the Anthelidae and Lasiocampidae are placed in the Lasiocampoidea, a superfamily differing from the Bombycoidea mainly in retaining unfused prothoracic coxae in the larva. The Alucitoidea comprise the Tineodidae, Oxychirotidae and Alucitidae, and the Drepanoidea the Epicopeiidae and Drepanidae. Sister group relationships are recognized between the following superfamilies: Yponomeutoidea / Gelechioidea, Cossoidea / Sesioidea, Alucitoidea / Pterophoroidea, Hesperioidea / Papilionoidea and Drepanoidea / Geometroidea. Reliable monophyletic groups are the Mimallonoidea + Lasiocampoidea + Bombycoidea and the Hedyloidea + Rhopalocera. A few clades are suggested at a higher level, e.g. the Apoditrysia, the Obtectomera (based on two autapomorphies: pupa with fixed abdominal segments 1-4, and imago with modified pulvilli) and the Macrolepidoptera (mainly based on the shape of the first axillary sclerite in the forewing base). Several other changes are introduced: the ' Pseudocossinae' are restricted to the Madagascan genus Pseudocossus Kenrick (possibly belonging in the Brachodidae); the Macropiratinae (stat. n.) are regarded as the most primitive Pterophoridae; the Charideinae are transferred from the Zygaenidae to the Thyrididae; within the Thyrididae, the Argyrotypinae are regarded identical with the Siculodinae (syn. n.). Finally, two families are newly proposed within the Apoditrysia: the Simaethistidae (fam. n.) and Whalleyanidae (fam. n.). The superfamily relationships of these two families have not been determined.
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Tavares, Eduardo Vasconcelos, Saulo Dal Bó, and Alessandre Pereira-Colavite. "Scientific Note: First record of Sematuridae (Lepidoptera: Geometroidea) moths in the Atlantic Forest of Brazil, north of the São Francisco river, and description of the male genitalia of Coronidia orithea (Cramer, [1780])." Tropical Lepidoptera Research 35, no. 1 (2025): 31–33. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15359953.

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Cock, Matthew J. W. "A preliminary catalogue of the moths (Lepidoptera except Papilionoidea) of Tobago, West Indies." Insecta Mundi 2017, no. 585 (2017): 1–58. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5169300.

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Call, Elsa, Christoph Mayer, Victoria Twort, Lars Dietz, Niklas Wahlberg, and Marianne Espeland. "Museomics: Phylogenomics of the Moth Family Epicopeiidae (Lepidoptera) Using Target Enrichment." Insect Systematics and Diversity 5, no. 2 (2021). http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/isd/ixaa021.

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Abstract Billions of specimens can be found in natural history museum collections around the world, holding potential molecular secrets to be unveiled. Among them are intriguing specimens of rare families of moths that, while represented in morphology-based works, are only beginning to be included in genomic studies: Pseudobistonidae, Sematuridae, and Epicopeiidae. These three families are part of the superfamily Geometroidea, which has recently been defined based on molecular data. Here we chose to focus on these three moth families to explore the suitability of a genome reduction method, target enrichment (TE), on museum specimens. Through this method, we investigated the phylogenetic relationships of these families of Lepidoptera, in particular the family Epicopeiidae. We successfully sequenced 25 samples, collected between 1892 and 2001. We use 378 nuclear genes to reconstruct a phylogenetic hypothesis from the maximum likelihood analysis of a total of 36 different species, including 19 available transcriptomes. The hypothesis that Sematuridae is the sister group of Epicopeiidae + Pseudobistonidae had strong support. This study thus adds to the growing body of work, demonstrating that museum specimens can successfully contribute to molecular phylogenetic studies.
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"Opinion 2352 (Case 3531) Sematura Dalman, 1825 (Insecta, Lepidoptera, sematuridae): precedence over Mania Hübner, 1821 not given." Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature 72, no. 1 (2015): 86–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.21805/bzn.v72i1.a3.

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Book chapters on the topic "Sematurinae"

1

Heppner, John B., David B. Richman, Steven E. Naranjo, et al. "Sematuridae." In Encyclopedia of Entomology. Springer Netherlands, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-6359-6_4117.

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Hangay, George, Severiano F. Gayubo, Marjorie A. Hoy, et al. "American Swallowtail Moths (Lepidoptera: Sematuridae)." In Encyclopedia of Entomology. Springer Netherlands, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-6359-6_183.

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