Academic literature on the topic 'Western USA beetle fauna'

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Journal articles on the topic "Western USA beetle fauna"

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Niemiller, Matthew L., Kirk S. Zigler, Amata Hinkle, et al. "The Crystal-Wonder Cave System: A New Hotspot of Subterranean Biodiversity in the Southern Cumberland Plateau of South-Central Tennessee, USA." Diversity 15, no. 7 (2023): 801. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/d15070801.

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The Crystal-Wonder Cave System developed in the Western Escarpment of the southern Cumberland Plateau in the Interior Low Plateau karst region of south-central Tennessee, USA is a global hotspot of cave-limited biodiversity. We combined historical literature, museum accessions, and database occurrences with new observations from bio-inventory efforts conducted between 2005 and 2022 to compile an updated list of troglobiotic and stygobiotic biodiversity for the Crystal-Wonder Cave System. The list of cave-limited fauna includes 31 species (23 troglobionts and 8 stygobionts) with 28 and 18 speci
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Will, Kipling, Riva Madan, and Han Hsu. "Additions to the knowledge of Nevada carabid beetles (Coleoptera: Carabidae) and a preliminary list of carabids from the Great Basin National Park." Biodiversity Data Journal 5 (June 13, 2017): e12250. https://doi.org/10.3897/BDJ.5.e12250.

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Additions to the list of Carabidae known for Nevada, USA and carabid beetles found in the Great Basin National Park, NV are reported with notes on ecology and identification resources. For 79 species of carabids, we present 57 new state records, two state records previously reported in online resources, one confirmation of a previous questionable record for the state, and report 22 records for the Great Basin National Park that includes three new state records.
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Dearborn, Richard G., Robert E. Nelson, Charlene Donahue, Ross T. Bell, and Reginald P. Webster. "The Ground Beetle (Coleoptera: Carabidae) Fauna of Maine, USA." Coleopterists Bulletin 68, no. 3 (2014): 441–599. http://dx.doi.org/10.1649/072.068.0317.

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Dearborn, Richard G., Robert E. Nelson, Charlene Donahue, Ross T. Bell, and Reginald P. Webster. "The Ground Beetle (Coleoptera: Carabidae) Fauna of Maine, USA." Coleopterists Bulletin 68, no. 3 (2014): 441–599. https://doi.org/10.1649/072.068.0317.

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Dearborn, Richard G., Nelson, Robert E., Donahue, Charlene, Bell, Ross T., Webster, Reginald P. (2014): The Ground Beetle (Coleoptera: Carabidae) Fauna of Maine, USA. The Coleopterists Bulletin 68 (3): 441-599, DOI: 10.1649/072.068.0317, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1649/072.068.0317
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SIKES, DEREK S. "The beetle fauna of the state of Rhode Island, USA (Coleoptera): 656 new state records." Zootaxa 340, no. 1 (2003): 1. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.340.1.1.

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A summary and discussion of new state records from a recently assembled checklist of Coleoptera species known from the state of Rhode Island (270,660 hectares), USA, is presented. The checklist includes 2,208 species, is available on the World Wide Web, and will be published as a book by the Rhode Island Natural History Survey in 2003. The current status of the taxonomic and faunistic knowledge of southern New England Coleoptera is discussed. Six hundred and fifty six apparent new state species records for Rhode Island are presented, which constitute 30% of the total state beetle fauna. Three
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Sikes, Derek S. "The beetle fauna of the state of Rhode Island, USA (Coleoptera): 656 new state records." Zootaxa 340, no. 1 (2003): 1–38. https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.340.1.1.

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Sikes, Derek S. (2003): The beetle fauna of the state of Rhode Island, USA (Coleoptera): 656 new state records. Zootaxa 340 (1): 1-38, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.340.1.1, URL: https://biotaxa.org/Zootaxa/article/view/zootaxa.340.1.1
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Pitcher, Kristopher A., and Donald A. Yee. "The Predaceous Diving Beetle Fauna (Coleoptera: Dytiscidae) in Highway-Associated Aquatic Habitats in Southern Mississippi, USA." Coleopterists Bulletin 72, no. 3 (2018): 525–30. https://doi.org/10.1649/0010-065X-72.3.525.

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Pitcher, Kristopher A., Yee, Donald A. (2018): The Predaceous Diving Beetle Fauna (Coleoptera: Dytiscidae) in Highway-Associated Aquatic Habitats in Southern Mississippi, USA. The Coleopterists Bulletin 72 (3): 525-530, DOI: 10.1649/0010-065X-72.3.525, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1649/0010-065x-72.3.525
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Roman, Królik, Lasoń Andrzej, Grzywocz Janusz, and Gazurek Tomasz. "Oedemera viridula Seidlitz, 1899 (Coleoptera: Oedemeridae) nowy w faunie Polski gatunek chrząszcza oraz informacje o jego występowaniu w innych krajach Zachodniej Palearktyki." Acta entomologica silesiana 29, online004 (2021): 1–5. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4668136.

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<strong><em>Oedemera viridula</em> Seidlitz, 1899 (Coleoptera: Oedemeridae) a new beetle species to the Polish fauna and information about its occurrence in other countries of the Western Palearctic.</strong> <em>Oedemera viridula </em>Seidlitz, 1899 (Coleoptera: Oedemeridae) is a species of beetle new to the fauna of Poland. New localities in Eastern Beskid Mts., Małopolska Upland, Masovian Lowland, Podlasie Lowland, Wielkopolska-Kujawy Lowland and the Lower and Upper Silesia are reported. The distribution sites of this species in Bulgaria, Romania, Slovakia and Turkey were also given.
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Bone and Nelson. "Improving Mountain Pine Beetle Survival Predictions Using Multi-Year Temperatures Across the Western USA." Forests 10, no. 10 (2019): 866. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/f10100866.

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Global climate change has led to an increase in large-scale bark beetle outbreaks in forests around the world, resulting in significant impacts to forest ecosystems, timber economies, and forest-dependent communities. As such, prediction models that utilize temperature for estimating future bark beetle locations and consequential tree mortality are critical for informing forest management decision-making in an attempt to mitigate and adapt to pending and current outbreaks. This is especially true for physiological models that account for the effects of overwinter temperatures on bark beetle su
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Yen, Alan L., and Amanda J. Kobelt. "The composition and seasonal changes in the beetle (Coleoptera) fauna of the western Victorian basalt plains native grasslands." Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria 121, no. 2 (2009): 228. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/rs09228.

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The western Victorian basalt plains native grasslands are recognised as one of the most endangered plant communities in Australia. Since European settlement, they have been cleared, grazed, and fragmented and are now found as small scattered remnants. No general invertebrate surveys were undertaken in these grasslands until the 1990s, and this paper reports on the beetles associated with 12 native grassland sites that were sampled seasonally between 1992 and 1993. A total of 114 beetle morphospecies from 26 families were collected, dominated by members of four families (Carabidae, Staphylinida
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Books on the topic "Western USA beetle fauna"

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Slipinski, Adam, and John Lawrence, eds. Australian Beetles Volume 2. CSIRO Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/9780643097315.

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This three-volume series represents a comprehensive treatment of the beetles of Australia, a relatively under-studied fauna that includes many unusual and unique lineages found nowhere else on Earth. &#x0D; Volume 2 contains 36 chapters, providing critical information and identification keys to the genera of the Australian beetle families included in suborders Archostemata, Myxophaga, Adephaga and several groups of Polyphaga (Scirtoidea, Hydrophiloidea, Scarabaeoidea, Buprestoidea and Tenebrionidae). Each chapter is richly illustrated in black and white drawings and photographs. The book also
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Burton, Antoinette, Renisa Mawani, and Samantha Frost, eds. Biocultural Empire. Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9781350454231.

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Human species supremacy is one of the most persistent fictions at work in the field of modern British imperial history today.This open access collection challenges that assumption, and investigates what histories of empire look like if reimagined as the effect of biocultural, chemical and cultural processes, rather than the result of effectsbyhumans that have been visiteduponcultural landscapes, fauna and biomes. In understanding the boundaries between human and nonhuman worlds as porous and open to mutual transformation, and foregrounding interspecies interactions,Biocultural Empireseeks to u
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Book chapters on the topic "Western USA beetle fauna"

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Müller-Motzfeld, Gerd. "Historical Changes in the Carabid Beetle Fauna of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania." In Ecological Studies. Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-12539-3_13.

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PAGANI, MARK, and MICHAEL A. ARTHUR. "STABLE ISOTOPIC STUDIES OF CENOMANIAN-TURONIAN PROXIMAL MARINE FAUNA FROM THE U.S. WESTERN INTERIOR SEAWAY." In Stratigraphy and Paleoenvironments of the Cretaceous Western Interior Seaway, USA. SEPM (Society for Sedimentary Geology), 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.2110/csp.98.06.0201.

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Garcia, William J., Glenn W. Storrs, and Stephen F. Greb. "The Hancock County tetrapod locality: A new Mississippian (Chesterian) wetlands fauna from western Kentucky (USA)." In Wetlands through Time. Geological Society of America, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/2006.2399(08).

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Nyborg*, Torrey, and E. Bruce Lander*. "Vertebrate paleontology and Cenozoic depositional environments of Death Valley National Park, California, USA." In Field Excursions from Las Vegas, Nevada: Guides to the 2022 GSA Cordilleran and Rocky Mountain Joint Section Meeting. Geological Society of America, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/2022.0063(01).

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ABSTRACT The vertebrate paleontology, lithostratigraphies, and depositional environments of the Cenozoic continental Titus Canyon and Furnace Creek Formations have been the subjects of several recent investigations. The two units are exposed in the Amargosa Range in northeastern Death Valley National Park, Inyo County, southeastern California, USA. Fossil tracks and trackways are preserved in playa mudflat deposits of the Pliocene Furnace Creek Formation at the Cow Creek tracksite on the western slope of the central Funeral Mountains. The tracksite includes footprints of birds and land mammals
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Hodges, Montana, Tahlor Newby, Holli Swarner, et al. "Detrital zircon geochronology of a fossiliferous Miocene paleochannel." In The Virtue of Fieldwork in Volcanology, Sedimentology, Structural Geology, and Tectonics—Celebrating the Career of Cathy Busby. Geological Society of America, 2025. https://doi.org/10.1130/2025.2563(05).

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ABSTRACT A plethora of fauna and flora of uncertain age was recently discovered in fluvial sedimentary rocks of the Mokelumne River drainage of the western Sierra Nevada foothills (California, USA). These fossils are preserved in the Mokelumne paleochannel and show great biodiversity containing mastodon, gomphothere, camel, rhino, horse, dog, rodent, mustelid, tapir, peccary, tortoise, turtle, fish, bird, and abundant tree fossils. Prior to this study, biochronology loosely constrained the age of the fossils to 15–5 Ma and the stratigraphy to either the Valley Springs Formation or Mehrten Form
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Swarner, H., C. J. Busby, A. Deino, et al. "Geology of the Mokelumne paleochannel at the Miocene Zoo, Sierra Nevada foothills, California, USA." In The Virtue of Fieldwork in Volcanology, Sedimentology, Structural Geology, and Tectonics—Celebrating the Career of Cathy Busby. Geological Society of America, 2025. https://doi.org/10.1130/2025.2563(06).

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ABSTRACT The Mokelumne paleochannel is one of a series of E-W–oriented, Eocene to late Miocene paleochannels that provide constraints on the topographic and tectonic evolution of the Sierra Nevada range. One of the largest fossil troves in California, hereafter referred to as the “Miocene Zoo,” was recently discovered in the Miocene Mehrten Formation, in the lower reaches of the Mokelumne paleochannel in the western Sierra Nevada foothills. The site has captured media attention and is now the subject of intense paleontological study; it includes cameloids with necks as long as giraffes, rhinos
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