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Insects of North Carolina; Order Thysanura or Silver-fish and allies; Collembola or Springtails; Orthoptera, or Roaches, Grasshoppers and allies; Isoptera or Termites; Neuroptera or Lacewings, etc; Ephemerida or may-flies; Odonata or Dragonflies; Plecoptera or Stone-flies; Corrodentia or Bark Lice; Mallophaga or Bird Lice; Mallophaga, Hosts of; Trysanoptera or Thrips; Anoplura or Sucking Lice; Hemiptera or True Bugs; Homoptera or Leaf Hoppers, Cicadas, etc; Homoptera, Hosts of Scale insects; Dermaptera or Earwigs; Coloeptera or Beetles; Strepsiptera or Stylopids; Mecoptera or Scorpion-flies; Trichoptera or Caddis-flies; Lepidoptera or Butterflies and Moths; Diptera or Two-winged flies; Siphonaptera or fleas; Hymenoptera or Wasp-like insects; Near insects; Class Arachnida; Order Araneae or Spiders; Opiliones or Harvestmen; Acarina or Mites and Ticks; Chelonthida or Pseudo-scorpions; Scorpionida or Scorpions; Class Diplopoda or Millipedes; Chilopoda or Centipedes; Myrientomata or Proturans; Crustacea in part, or Sowbugs and Crayfish; Comparison of numbers of other creatures with number of insects in North Carolina.
This publication provides a comprehensive review of the nomenclature and distribution of the Geadephaga of America, north of Mexico. Overall 2439 valid species-group taxa in 208 genera are catalogued along with their synonyms. Besides the usual information pertaining to author(s), date and page of publication, the type locality, location of name-bearing type, first reference establishing each synonym, and etymology for many patronymic names are provided for species-group names. Genus-group names are listed with the author(s), year of publication, page citation, type species with manner of fixation and etymology for most. The geographical distributions of all species-group taxa are briefly summarized and their state and province records are indicated. About 2500 references are listed with publication dates for many in order to assess priority of names.Several new nomenclatural acts are introduced including one new genus-group taxon, one new replacement name, three changes in precedence, five new genus-group synonymies, 65 new species-group synonymies, one new species-group status, and 12 new combinations.The work includes also a discussion of the notable private North American carabid collections, a synopsis of all extant world geadephagan tribes and subfamilies, a brief faunistic assessment of the fauna, a list of North American fossil Geadephaga, a list of North American Geadephaga larvae described or illustrated, a list of species described from specimens mislabeled as from North America, and a list of unavailable names listed from North America.
A thorough update of Arnett's The Beetles of the United States, American Beetles, Volumes I and II cover the genera of beetles that occur in Alaska, Canada, and the contiguous United States. Built on the foundation of the original work and almost completely rewritten with contributions from more than 60 coleopterists, these volumes describe each fa
A primary aim of this catalog is to offer an accounting for each species as originally proposed and for the first usage only of all its name combinations (including valid names, synonymies, and misspellings) that have been published for our area. We follow the policy outlined by the 1985 Code of Zoological Nomenclature for nonmenclatorial proposes that a dissertation for an advanced educational degree is not published unless it satisfies the criteria present in Articles 8 and 9.
The authors of the Thomas Say monograph The Cicadas of North America North of Mexico return with a revised and expanded edition of their bestselling work, presented in full color. The new edition includes 172 species and 22 subspecies of cicadas found in continental North America north of Mexico, representing 18 genera from eight tribes in three subfamilies within the family Cicadidae. The higher taxonomy is updated from the first edition, based on more recently proposed taxa. Information on the distribution of each species is now provided.