|
|
|
Registros recuperados: 47 | |
|
|
Pizzetta, Jules. |
De nos jours encore, les produits de la pêche sont en beaucoup de lieux la principale base de l'alimentation. Les populations ichthyophages sont d'ailleurs des plus belles et des plus fortes qu'on connaisse. Les Norvégiens et les Suédois, dignes descendants des Normands qui, au IXe et au Xe siècle, faisaient trembler l'Europe, se nourrissent presque exclusivement de poissons, et, sans aller chercher si loin, les villages de pêcheurs de nos côtes se distinguent par la vigueur physique, et la valeur morale de leurs habitants. |
Tipo: Text |
|
Ano: 1880 |
URL: http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00034/14496/11797.pdf |
| |
|
| |
|
|
Burat, Amédée. |
Les voyages et la villégiature sur les bords de la mer sont passés dans nos mœurs ; c'est un nouveau besoin, non seulement pour ceux qui veulent étudier, mais pour le nombre bien plus grand de ceux qui veulent voir. Celte attraction est d'ailleurs motivée par des causes multiples . La vue de la mer est la source d'impressions les plus diverses ; son aspect varie suivant la lumière qui en dessine les horizons, suivant les vents qui en mouvementent la surface , suivant le flot ou le jusant des marées dont les vagues représentent en quelque sorte la vie de la mer et celle de la navigation. [OCR NON CONTRÔLE] |
Tipo: Text |
Palavras-chave: Histoire; France; Géographie; Océanographie; Côte. |
Ano: 1880 |
URL: http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00002/11326/7863.pdf |
| |
|
|
Jentink, F.A.. |
After having examined Gray’s type of Acanthomys leucopus) and compared that animal with my description of Mus leucopus ²), Alston comes to the conclusion 3), “that I have been misled by Gray’s very insufficient description”. I am the first to agree with Alston in this statement. I am much indebted to Mr. Alston for his minute description of the Mus in question, s. n. Mus terrae-reginae. If I had known that Gray’s leucopus has the tail shorter than head and body and the fur above dark reddishand not greyish-brown, I should certainly not have made a mistake in confounding these two distinct species. But I believe it quite impossible to recognize species if they are described so incompletely and inexactly as is the case with the greater part of Gray’s... |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
|
Ano: 1880 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/508653 |
| |
|
|
Harold, E. von. |
I believe not to be mistaken in referring to this species a female specimen of a large Heliocopris having the elytra of an opaque black with a silky gloss, very inconspicuously striated and covered all over by an extremely delicate rugosity. The head is semicircular, with the anterior margin faintly undulated; the vertex flat, granulated, limited anteriorly by a stout transverse keel, faintly tridentate; in front of this keel the profile of the head is gradually inclined towards the exterior border, and is covered all over by a transverse rugosity, in the interstices of which a fine but very distinct punctuation may be observed. The pronotum is granulated all over; the elevated dorsal portion is limited anteriorly by a faintly arched ridge; interiorly,... |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
|
Ano: 1880 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/509344 |
| |
|
|
Putzeys, J.. |
Closely allied to Therates Wallacei Thoms. ¹) and found in the same locality. It may perhaps prove to be only a variety of that species. Thorax blue; elytra green with the whole base and the apex yellow, the sutural spines are even shorter, and the legs are entirely testaceous with the exception of the tarsi of the anterior pair and the apical joints of those of the middle and hind legs. — Length 12 mm. |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
|
Ano: 1880 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/508945 |
| |
|
|
Ritsema Cz., C.. |
Allied to Xylocopa tarsata Smith, but larger. Length 23 mm.; alar expanse 44 mm. — Black, with black pubescence, except a spot of ferrugineous hairs on the outer margin of the posterior metatarsus. The head densely punctured, and densely covered with black pubescence on the face which is armed with four glossy tubercles: one between the antennae, another on the middle of the front margin of the clypeus, opposite to the median tubercle of the labrum, and two on the middle of the lateral margins of the clypeus. |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
|
Ano: 1880 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/508434 |
| |
|
|
Man, J.G. de. |
Milne Edwards, Observ. sur la classification des Crustacea, 1852, pag. 145. Hilgendorf, in Baron von der Decken’s Reise, pag. 83. In the collection of our Museum there are specimens of this species from the Indian Archipelago (Celebes, Amboina, Ceram and Java) and from the island of Nossi-Bé near Madagascar, which entirely agree with one another. The median furrow of the front however is never so narrow and small as has been figured by Milne Edwards (1. c. pl. III, fig. 4). This species may be distinguished at first sight by the characteristical shape of the larger hand, and is distributed throughout the Indo-Pacific Region from Zanzibar to Hongkong and the Fiji Islands. |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
|
Ano: 1880 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/509073 |
| |
|
|
Schlegel, H.. |
Les Tinamous forment une tribu d’oiseaux parfaitement isolée et circonscrite, et bornée à la partie de l’Amérique comprise entre le Mexico méridional et la Patagonie. Ils se rattachent, toutefois, naturellement à l’ordre des Gallinae, tout en offrant certaines affinités avec l’ordre des Autruches. Illiger a, le premier, fixé l’attention sur une de ces affinités. Il dit dans son „Prodromus, p. 245”, du Tinamus major: „rostri mira conformitas cum rostro Rheae est.” — Wagler a été beaucoup plus loin. Il avait reconnu toutes les relations qui existent entre le squelette des Tinamous et celui des Autruches, et va même jusqu’à réunir ces oiseaux dans le même ordre; mais son travail, dont la publication a probablement été arrêtée par la mort prématurée et... |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
|
Ano: 1880 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/508283 |
| |
|
|
Power, G.. |
Omnino castaneo-fuscus, parum nitidus, sutura maculisque 2 obsoletis in elytris magis saturatis. Capite latitudine vix breviore, antice angustiore, ad basin tuberculis 4 instructo; rostro supra infraque sulcato, ad apicem parum dilatato; antennis ante rostri medium insertis, subcylindricis, articulis 2—8 transversis, perfoliatis, 9—10 magis elongatis, 11 longitudine duobus precedentibus conjunctis fere aequali acuteque attenuato. Thorace sulcato, impunctato. Elytris subparallelis, apice rotundatis ibique prope suturam leviter excisis, profunde sulcatis. Corpore subtus impunctato, metasterno abdominisque segmentis duobus primis sulcatis. — Long. 7½ mm., lat. 1 3/5 mm. Entirely of a chestnut color, hardly shining. The head is rounded above, about as long as... |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
|
Ano: 1880 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/508978 |
| |
|
|
Hubrecht, A.A.W.. |
In the above-mentioned note, published six months ago, several new species of Nemerteans were described and at the same time an attempt was made to a classification of the group, which should he in accordance with the results arrived at through the comparative study of a more extensive number of species and genera than had been at the disposal of any of my predecessors. I am indebted for this plentiful supply of working-material to the constant support of Prof. Ant. Dohrn and his assistants, and I feel especially obliged for their kindness in forwarding to me — either alive or in excellent state of preservation — further specimens for comparison or determination ever since my departure from Naples. |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
|
Ano: 1880 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/509015 |
| |
|
|
Ritsema Cz., C.. |
In a small but very interesting collection of Coleoptera from the island of Sumbawa recently presented to the Leyden Museum by his Excellence, the Governor General of Dutch India J. W. van Lansberge, I found two specimens of a new species of the above mentioned genus. It occupies a position quite by itself in the genus, the pronotum being entirely smooth without a central fovea, and the elytra being irregularly punctate-striate. It has the first mentioned characteristic in common with F. integricollis Thoms. of the Marianne Islands, the second with F. sublaevis Palis. (= nigritus Westw.) of West-Africa and with F. anthracinus Klug of Madagascar. I propose to name this new and interesting species |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
|
Ano: 1880 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/509334 |
| |
|
|
Man, J.G. de. |
The carcinological collections of the Leyden Museum consist, besides of the European types, chiefly of forms from the East Indies and from the Japanese seas, the former being collected by the various travellers of our establishment, the latter being the types of the celebrated work of Mr. de Haan. We cannot therefore be too grateful to have found in Mr. J. A. Kruyt, Dutch Consul at Djeddah, Arabia, a man, who purposes to collect the Fauna of the Red Sea for the Museum. He already has made an interesting beginning, by presenting to us a remarkable collection of fishes aud invertebrate animals; it is of the carcinological part of the latter that I may be allowed to say a few words. |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
|
Ano: 1880 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/508750 |
| |
|
|
Reitter, E.. |
Nigrum, nitidissimum, antennis, clava excepta, femoribus rufis, tibiis tarsisque rufo-piceis, oculis subdistantibus; prothorace sat dense punctato, antrorsum lateribusque lineatim marginato, ante basin linea transverse arcuata et secunda media ante scutellum longitudinali, antrorsum abbreviata, grosse punctatis, impresso; elytris subtiliter punctatis, stria suturali fortiter impressa, in fundo punctis minutis perspicuuis, linea basali grosse punctatis; pygidium, propygidium subtusque fere laevis. — Long. 3,3 mm. Entirely black and very shining; the antennae except the club, and the femora rusty-red, the tibiae and tarsi dark brown; upper surface finely although very distinctly and rather densely punctured; under surface with hardly any punctures. The... |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
|
Ano: 1880 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/508840 |
| |
|
|
Schlegel, H.. |
A single skin of this bird was contained in a large collection of birds, made, in 1877, during an expedition to Macassar and the neighboring isle of Saleyer, under the leading of the well known botanical traveller, Mr. Teysman. The bird in question belongs evidently to the group of the Timaliae, strongly characterized like the whole tribe of Formicivorae to which it belongs by the vaulded form of the tail, a characteristic which is found back in the owls in a most remarkable way. |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
|
Ano: 1880 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/508473 |
| |
|
|
Schlegel, H.. |
The late Director of the British Museum, Dr. J. E. Gray in establishing this species, (Catalogue of Monkeys, London, 1 Dec. 1870, p. 133) assigns to it the following characteristics: “Back iron-grey, with a rufous tinge; the hairs black, with a subapical rufous band, and the lower part leadcoloured; throat whitish; patch on rump at base of tail yellowish. — Hapalemur griseus, Schlegel et Pollen, Faune Madagasc. p. 6, t. 3 et 7, fig. 4. (skull without upper cutting-teeth) — Habits Madagascar. — This may be Hapalemur olivacea; but that species is very imperfectly described, and it is said to have a different form of the hinder part of the lower jaw; but what the difference is, is not mentioned; and I do not see any difference in the hinder part of the lower... |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
|
Ano: 1880 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/508717 |
| |
|
|
Harold, E. von. |
Niger, flavo-setulosus, capite antice rotundato, medio carinula transversa, postice carina tridentata, thorace rugose punctato, medio baseos breviter sulcato, elytris interstitiis leviter convexis, asperato-punctatis, pedibus rufopiceis, tarsis obscure rufis. ♂. — Long. 6 mm. Body of a somewhat elongated oval shape, depressed on the superior surface of the elytra, black, the thorax with a faint metallic hue; the surface sparingly covered with short yellowish hairs. The head rounded anteriorly, finely and rather densely punctuated, intermixed with a rather considerable number of large punctures; the middle of the head with a small transverse keel which is slightly arched; the posterior margin of the head tridentate, the median tooth a little shorter but... |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
|
Ano: 1880 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/508999 |
| |
|
|
Taschenberg, O.. |
Body elongate, of a yellowish brown colour. The inclination of the upper surface of the head commences immediately in front of its hind margin; on a level with the first joint of the antennae this inclination suddenly increases. In front of the point of insertion of the maxillary palpi the head forms an inconspicuous tooth-like projection. The joints of the maxillary palpi are of about the same length. The triangular maxillae are pointed and rather long. The groove for the antennae is so situated that its hind margin divides the lateral surface of the head into an equal anterior and posterior half. The eye, which is comparatively light coloured, is situated very low, touching the inferior border of the head. The antennae are very similar to those of Pulex... |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
|
Ano: 1880 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/509125 |
| |
|
|
Jentink, F.A.. |
Hitherto only a small number of well defined species of Hares are known from Africa, viz: one or two species from Algiers and Tunis; eleven have been described as inhabiting the N. E. parts of Africa as far as Somáliland, while Waterhouse ¹) has pointed out that in South Africa there exist three well-marked species of Hares. Two of these species have been captured also at Tette and Quellimane, 17° S. L. ²). But no naturalist ever saw a Hare from the West-Coast of Africa. About ten years ago Mr. D. Sala, a naturalist attached to the Leyden Museum, discovered a Hare in the neighbourhood of Mossamedes (Benguela). This specimen will form the type of a new species as it differs from all the hitherto described species, and I propose to call it after its... |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
|
Ano: 1880 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/509086 |
| |
Registros recuperados: 47 | |
|
|
|