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Registros recuperados: 22 | |
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Wade-Murphy, J.; Konijnenburg-van Cittert, J.H.A. van. |
In 1951, W.J. Jongmans published the description of a small flora from Bintan Island in the Riau Archipelago of Indonesia, based on material from one fossil locality in the Bintan Formation (Late Triassic). The complete fossil plant collection from Bintan includes specimens from four localities, all of which were examined for the first time in this study. Twenty-one taxa were determined, compared to an earlier four, and three earlier determinations were revised. Of these 21 taxa, 14 were attributed to the Bennettitales, including eleven leaf species, one Williamsonia sp., and two other fertile and stem organs. The other components of the flora were limited to twigs and cones of Brachyphyllum sp., leaves of Podozamites sp. and leaves of Nilssonia sp., in... |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
Palavras-chave: Palaeobotany; Southeast Asia; Bennett itales; Taphonomy; Palaeogeography; 38.21. |
Ano: 2008 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/314208 |
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Ruchisansakun, S.; Suksathan, P.; Niet, T. van der; Smets, E.F.; Saw-Lwin; Janssens, S.B.. |
A revision of the Balsaminaceae of Myanmar is presented based on herbarium collections and a field trip in 2015. Sixty-five species, unevenly distributed across one monotypic (Hydrocera) and one species-rich genus (Impatiens), are recognised. An identification key to species is presented. Twenty species are new records for the country, 17 names are typified and seven species names are synonymized. For each species, a description of the morphology, phenology, ecology and distribution range is provided. |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
Palavras-chave: Hydrocera; Impatiens; Southeast Asia; Taxonomy. |
Ano: 2018 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/671470 |
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Lim, S.-C.; Voogd, N.J. de; Tan, K.-S.. |
A surprisingly high number of shallow water sponge species (197) were recorded from extensive sampling of natural intertidal and subtidal habitats in Singapore (Southeast Asia) from May 2003 to June 2010. This is in spite of a highly modified coastline that encompasses one of the world’s largest container ports as well as extensive oil refining and bunkering industries. A total of 99 intertidal species was recorded in this study. Of these, 53 species were recorded exclusively from the intertidal zone and only 45 species were found on both intertidal and subtidal habitats, suggesting that tropical intertidal and subtidal sponge assemblages are different and distinct. Furthermore, only a third of the fouling species of sponges from a previous study was... |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
Palavras-chave: Intertidal; Southeast Asia; Sponge assemblage; Subtidal; Tropical; 42.72. |
Ano: 2012 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/447989 |
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van Noordwijk, Meine; World Agroforestry Centre; M.Vannoordwijk@cgiar.org; Poulsen, Michael K.; NORDECO; mkp@nordeco.dk; Rahayu, Subekti; World Agroforestry Centre; S.RAHAYU@CGIAR.ORG; Rutishauser, Ervan; Center for International Forestry Research; er.rutishauser@gmail.com; Theilade, Ida; Forest and Landscape of Denmark, University of Copenhagen ; idat@life.ku.dk; Widayati, Atiek; World Agroforestry Centre; A.WIDAYATI@CGIAR.ORG; An, Ngo The; Hanoi University of Agriculture; ntan@hua.edu.vn; Bang, Tran Nguyen; Department of Environmental Management, Faculty of Natural Resources and Environment, Hanoi University of Agriculture; trannguyenbang@gmail.com; Budiman, Arif; WWF-Indonesia; ABudiman@wwf.or.id; Enghoff, Martin; NORDECO; me@nordeco.dk; Jensen, Arne E.; NORDECO; aejmanila@gmail.com; Kurniawan, Yuyun; WWF-Indonesia; YKurniawan@wwf.or.id; Li, Qiaohong; Kunming Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences; qiaohong@mail.kib.ac.cn; Mingxu, Zhao; Kunming Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences; zhaomingxu@mail.kib.ac.cn; Schmidt-Vogt, Dietrich; Kunming Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences; schmidt-vogt@mail.kib.ac.cn; Prixa, Suoksompong; National University of Laos; soukpri@yahoo.com; Thoumtone, Vongvisouk; National University of Laos; thvongvisouk@gmail.com; Warta, Zulfira; WWF-Indonesia; zwarta@wwf.or.id; Burgess, Neil; Centre for Macroecology, Evolution and Climate, Department of Biology, University of Copenhagen; WWF-US Conservation Science Program; UNEP-World Conservation Monitoring Center, Cambridge; NDBurgess@bio.ku.dk. |
Will community monitoring assist in delivering just and equitable REDD+? We assessed whether local communities can effectively estimate carbon stocks in some of the world’s most carbon rich forests, using simple field protocols, and we reviewed whether community monitoring exists in current REDD+ pilots. We obtained similar results for forest carbon when measured by communities and professional foresters in 289 vegetation plots in Southeast Asia. Most REDD+ monitoring schemes, however, contain no community involvement. To close the gulf between United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change texts on involving communities and field implementation realities, we propose greater embedding of community monitoring within national REDD+ pilot... |
Tipo: Peer-Reviewed Reports |
Palavras-chave: Biodiversity; Climate Community and Biodiversity Alliance standard; Forest carbon; Governance; Livelihood; Monitoring; Payment for Ecosystem Service programs; REDD+; Southeast Asia. |
Ano: 2013 |
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van Bueren, Martin. |
Over the past 220 years since European settlement, Australia has amassed a diverse array of historic heritage places. Currently there are approximately 200,000 places listed on statutory heritage lists across the nation. Owing to the public-good nature of heritage, community values for the preservation of historic places (both quality and quantity dimensions) is not readily observable from market transactions. Yet this information is critical for efficient management of heritage. This study uses a survey technique (Choice Modelling) to estimate value estimates. To the author's knowledge, it is the first study to use this approach to understand community preferences for alternative protection outcomes at a national level as opposed to site specific... |
Tipo: Conference Paper or Presentation |
Palavras-chave: General equilibrium modelling; Infrastructure; Poverty; Southeast Asia; Community/Rural/Urban Development. |
Ano: 2007 |
URL: http://purl.umn.edu/10420 |
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Huber, B.A.. |
The main aim of the present paper is to delimit ‘true’ Spermophora, i.e. the group of species most closely related to the type species S. senoculata (Dugès). Apart from the type species, only three previously described species are included in this core group (S. estebani Simon, S. paluma Huber, S. yao Huber), together with nine newly described species: S. kerinci, S. tumbang, S. dumoga, S. maros, S. deelemanae, S. palau, S. kaindi, S. luzonica, and S. sumbawa. Except for the Holarctic and anthropophilic type species, all species have limited distributions in Southeast Asia, northeastern Australia, and the Pacific Islands, where they inhabit the leaf litter layer of tropical forests as well as caves. A tight correlation is documented in Spermophora between... |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
Palavras-chave: Araneae; Pholcidae; Spermophora; Revision; Taxonomy; Southeast Asia; Pacific; 42.74. |
Ano: 2005 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/210731 |
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Meyer, Karsten. |
The monophyletic genus Melastoma (Melastomataceae) is centred in Southeast Asia, but extends to India, South China, Japan, northern Australia, and Oceania. It comprises 22 species, two subspecies, and three varieties. Two new species, Melastoma sabahense and M. minahassae, and a new variety, M. sanguineum var. ranauensis, are described; two species are reduced to subspecies and variety, respectively, and the genus Otanthera is transferred to Melastoma. In many species, especially M. malabathricum, morphological characters vary locally, which resulted in the taxonomic recognition of numerous geographically restricted entities here considered synonyms. Most species of Melastoma are pioneers with a high dispersal capacity. This may have resulted in small,... |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
Palavras-chave: Melastoma; Otanthera; Revision; Southeast Asia. |
Ano: 2001 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/524922 |
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Hall, R.. |
Geology provides the basis for understanding distributions of faunas and floras in Southeast Asia but only via a complex interplay of plate movements, palaeogeography, ocean circulation and climate. Southeast Asia grew incrementally by the addition of continental fragments, mainly rifted from Australia, and added to the margins of Sundaland as a result of subduction. Sundaland was an almost permanent land area from the beginning of the Mesozoic. The addition of the continental fragments of Southwest Borneo and later East Java–West Sulawesi formed a much larger emergent land area by the Late Cretaceous that extended from Indochina to West Sulawesi. Subduction resumed at the Sundaland margin in the Eocene and this led to widespread rifting within Sundaland,... |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
Palavras-chave: Indonesian Gateway; Plate tectonics; Palaeogeography; Southeast Asia. |
Ano: 2009 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/525351 |
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Descombes, Patrice; Leprieur, Fabien; Albouy, Camille; Heine, Christian; Pellissier, Loic. |
Aim In interaction with past climate changes, it is likely that plate tectonics contributed to the shaping of current global species diversity, but so far this has not been statistically quantified at the global level. Here, we tested whether plate tectonics since the breakup of Gondwana left an imprint on current patterns of species richness of amphibians, birds and mammals. Location Global. Methods We reconstructed the absolute positions of continental plates since the Early Cretaceous and used this information to derive variables of latitudinal shifts and potential exchanges among landmasses that could have modulated species richness. Using a multi-model inference approach combining both contemporary and historical variables, we quantified the... |
Tipo: Text |
Palavras-chave: Amphibian; Bird; Continental drift; Diversity; Indo-Pacific; Madagascar; Mammal; Plate tectonics; Southeast Asia; Wallace line. |
Ano: 2017 |
URL: https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00373/48413/48711.pdf |
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Kojima, J.. |
The taxonomy of the "species" treated as subspecies of Ropalidia flavopicta (= R. flavopicta-complex) by van der Vecht (1962) were reexamined. Four forms in the complex other than the species in the Philippine Islands are concluded to be valid species: R. flavopicta (Smith), R. javanica van der Vecht, R. ochracea van der Vecht, and R. ornaticeps (Cameron). The two subspecies of the Philippine species, R. flavobrunnea van der Vecht, namely lapiniga Kojima and iracunda Kojima, are sunk into the nominate species. A new species is described based on a female listed under "R. flavopicta flavobrunnea " by van der Vecht (1962). |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
Palavras-chave: Hymenoptera; Vespidae; Polistinae; Ropalidia flavopicta; Southeast Asia; 42.75. |
Ano: 1996 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/318789 |
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Schori, M.; Utteridge, T.M.A.. |
Three new species of Gomphandra (Stemonuraceae / Icacinaceae s.l.) are described from Malesia, and a new name is proposed for a misidentified species. Gomphandra palustris is known from peat swamp forests in Borneo, Sarawak, G. halconensis is known from the Philippines, Mindoro, Mt Halcon, and G. conklinii from the Philippines, Ifugao Province, Banaue. Gomphandra rarinervis is offered as a new name for Stemonurus puberulus, which was incorrectly synonymised with G. papuana by Sleumer. This commonly collected taxon is known from Madang and Morobe Provinces in Papua New Guinea and does not overlap in distribution with G. papuana. |
Tipo: Article / Letter to the editor |
Palavras-chave: Gomphandra; Icacinaceae; New species; Southeast Asia; Stemonuraceae; Stemonurus. |
Ano: 2010 |
URL: http://www.repository.naturalis.nl/record/526275 |
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Registros recuperados: 22 | |
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