8 results match your criteria: "Russia St. Petersburg State University St. Petersburg Russia.[Affiliation]"

The structure of testes and ovaries can be described in its simplest form by the number of follicles and ovarioles they contain. Sixty-five years after the last review of the internal reproductive systems in true bugs (Heteroptera), the data accumulated today on the number of testicular follicles and ovarioles in their gonads are summarized. In addition, data on the number and type (mesadenia/ectadenia) of accessory glands are given.

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, a new species of Gesneriaceae from Ha Giang Province, northern Vietnam, is here described and illustrated. It has many branched stems, diamond-shaped involucre with two cirrose opposite apices, a pink corolla, red spotted inside, and a flowering time in January-February. Among congeners with an externally hairy corolla, this new species is morphologically close to and .

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Chromosomal and DNA barcode analysis of the Staudinger, 1881 species complex (Lepidoptera, Nymphalidae).

Comp Cytogenet

June 2021

Department of Karyosystematics, Zoological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Universitetskaya nab. 1, St. Petersburg 199034, Russia Zoological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences St. Petersburg Russia.

The species of the Staudinger, 1881 complex are distributed in Central Asia. Here we show that this complex is a monophyletic group including the species, , Sheljuzhko, 1929 and Fruhstorfer, 1917. The haploid chromosome number n=29 is found in and and is, most likely, a symplesiomorphy of the complex.

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Five new genera of the subfamily Cylapinae (Insecta, Heteroptera, Miridae) from Australia.

Zookeys

January 2021

University of New South Wales, Evolution and Ecology Research Centre, School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences, Randwick, Sydney, Australia University of New South Wales Sydney Australia.

Cylapinae is one of the poorly studied groups within the megadiverse family Miridae (Insecta: Heteroptera). In this paper, five monotypic genera from Australia are described as new to science. Two of those taxa, and , and and are assigned to the tribe Cylapini.

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Karyotype reinvestigation does not confirm the presence of two cryptic species and interspecific hybridization in the () complex in the Crimea (Lepidoptera, Lycaenidae).

Comp Cytogenet

October 2019

Department of Karyosystematics, Zoological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Universitetskaya nab. 1, St. Petersburg 199034, Russia Zoological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences St. Petersburg Russia.

The karyotype of the blue butterflies from the Angarskiy Pass (Crimea), previously attributed to Polyommatus (Agrodiaetus) poseidon (Herrich-Schäffer, 1851), was re-examined. In all 19 studied individuals, we found the haploid chromosome number n = 26, including 7 pairs of relatively large and 19 pairs of relatively small chromosomes. According to the chromosome number and karyotype structure, the studied population does not differ from P.

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Two types of highly ordered micro- and macrochromosome arrangement in metaphase plates of butterflies (Lepidoptera).

Comp Cytogenet

January 2019

Department of Karyosystematics, Zoological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Universitetskaya nab. 1, St. Petersburg 199034, Russia Zoological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences St. Petersburg Russia.

In karyotype of many organisms, chromosomes form two distinct size groups: macrochromosomes and microchromosomes. During cell divisions, the position of the macro- and microchromosomes is often ordered within metaphase plate. In many reptiles, amphibians, birds, insects of the orthopteran family Tettigoniidae and in some plants, a so called "reptilian" type organization is found, with microchromosomes situated in the center of metaphase plate and with macrochromosomes situated at the periphery.

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Review of the subgenus Plumiger of , with description of a new species (Heteroptera, Miridae, Halticini).

Zookeys

November 2018

National Museum of Natural History, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, 1 Tsar Osvoboditel Blvd., 1000 Sofia, Bulgaria National Museum of Natural History, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences Sofia Bulgaria.

The Caucasian subgenus Plumiger Horváth, 1927 of the halticine genus Fieber, 1870 is revised. A key, updated diagnoses, and data on distribution are given for the subgenus and its four species, including (Georgia and Dagestan), and the previously unknown male of Drapolyuk, 1989. Illustrations of the male and female genitalia, photographs of the dorsal habitus, and SEM micrographs of selected structures are provided for all species of the subgenus.

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In memory of Ingemar Gustavsson 23 International Colloquium on Animal Cytogenetics and Genomics (23 ICACG) took place in June 9-12, 2018 in Saint-Petersburg, Russia. Organized biennially, the Colloquium runs from 1970. From its very start this meeting is associated with the name of Ingemar Gustavsson to whom we dedicated the Colloquium 2018.

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