Limnobatodes paradoxus Hussey, 1925 is a primitive hydrometrid, described from a single female specimen collected in 1923 at Tela, Honduras (Hussey 1925). Following the original description, very few records of this species have been reported in literature, and locality indications are not detailed: Brazil (Cobben 1968), Peru (Andersen 1977), and French Guiana (Polhemus & Polhemus 1995). Andersen (1977, 1982) quoted "British Honduras" [= Belize] instead of Honduras, and this mistake was subsequently repeated by Schuh and Slater (1995) (see Moreira, 2014). This taxon was not listed by Heckman (2011) in his monograph on the Heteroptera of South America. Excellent illustrations of this species, in comparison with those of other Heteroptera, have been provided by several authors (cf. Hussey 1925; Cobben 1968, 1978; Andersen 1977, 1982). Nothing is known about the habitat and life history of Limnobatodes paradoxus (Andersen 1977; Polhemus & Polhemus 1995).
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http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3811.3.12 | DOI Listing |
Zootaxa
September 2019
Instituto de Biología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, apdo. postal 70153, Ciudad de México 04510, México.
Two new genera, Nepiomistus, gen. nov., and Protenoroides, gen.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZootaxa
June 2014
Natural History Museum of the University of Florence, Zoological Section "La Specola", via Romana 17, I-50125, Florence, Italy. Institute of Agroenvironmental and Forest Biology, CNR - National Research Council of Italy, via Salaria 29.300, I-00015, Monterotondo Scalo (Rome), Italy; Email:
Limnobatodes paradoxus Hussey, 1925 is a primitive hydrometrid, described from a single female specimen collected in 1923 at Tela, Honduras (Hussey 1925). Following the original description, very few records of this species have been reported in literature, and locality indications are not detailed: Brazil (Cobben 1968), Peru (Andersen 1977), and French Guiana (Polhemus & Polhemus 1995). Andersen (1977, 1982) quoted "British Honduras" [= Belize] instead of Honduras, and this mistake was subsequently repeated by Schuh and Slater (1995) (see Moreira, 2014).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Gen Physiol
November 1925
Brady Laboratory of Pathology and Bacteriology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven.
Pepsin in solution is inactivated by the radiations from a mercury arc in quartz. It would seem that the effective radiations are those in the ultra-violet region of the spectrum. The form of the curve describing the course of the inactivation is the same as that found for monomolecular chemical change.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Gen Physiol
November 1925
Laboratory of Biophysical Research, Department of Pathology, Cornell University Medical School, and The Memorial Hospital, New York.
The radiochemical inactivation of invertase by beta radiation from the radioactive products in equilibrium with radium emanation can be explained quantitatively on the same basis as that of trypsin and pepsin previously reported; namely, the rate of change in the logarithm of the concentration of the active enzyme with respect to the variable, W, is constant, under the conditions of irradiation described, when the volume of solution exposed is constant. When, within the limits stated in this paper, this volume (V) is varied, the rate of radiochemical change is inversely proportional to V; i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Gen Physiol
September 1925
Laboratories of The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research.
1. The inactivating effect of soft x-rays on trypsin in solutions of various degrees of concentration has been studied. 2.
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