1972
DOI: 10.1007/978-94-015-7159-3_13
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Les Arachnides de Madagascar

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1
1

Citation Types

0
3
0

Year Published

1981
1981
2019
2019

Publication Types

Select...
4
3
1

Relationship

0
8

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 12 publications
(4 citation statements)
references
References 13 publications
0
3
0
Order By: Relevance
“…Outside of the Mediterranean region, E. mirabiJjs has been previously found in Chile, Madagascar and South Australia. The only Chilean record is from San Bernardo (Cekalovic 1984;Conde 1974), whilst in Madagascar, E. mirabiJjs has only been found in the vicinity of Antananarivo (Legendre 1972;Remy 1950Remy , 1960. Eukoenenia mirabiJjs was first recorded from Australia by Savory (1935), who later (Savory 1964) stated that " .. .in 1933 Koenenia mirabiJjs was found on the lower slopes of Mount Osmond, Adelaide, whither it had most probably been imported."…”
Section: Distributionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Outside of the Mediterranean region, E. mirabiJjs has been previously found in Chile, Madagascar and South Australia. The only Chilean record is from San Bernardo (Cekalovic 1984;Conde 1974), whilst in Madagascar, E. mirabiJjs has only been found in the vicinity of Antananarivo (Legendre 1972;Remy 1950Remy , 1960. Eukoenenia mirabiJjs was first recorded from Australia by Savory (1935), who later (Savory 1964) stated that " .. .in 1933 Koenenia mirabiJjs was found on the lower slopes of Mount Osmond, Adelaide, whither it had most probably been imported."…”
Section: Distributionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…1 -4, 9 -12, 21-22, 25-43, 52-68, 86, 94-98, 106-125, 133 -136, 145-149, 158-160, 165-169, 181-185, 196-200, 211-215, 227-228, 231-234, 239-386, 580-583, Tabs. 1-4) Grosphus Simon, 1880: 377-378;Karsch, 1886: 77;Pocock, 1889a: 348-349;Kraepelin, 1891: 70 (in part); Pocock, 1893: 312 (in part); Kraepelin, 1895: 84 (in part); Kraepelin, 1899: 32 (in part); Kraepelin, 1900: 11-12 (in part); Birula, 1917a: 164 (in part); Birula, 1917b: 55 (in part); Fage, 1929: 640-642 (in part); Werner, 1934: 270 (in part); Vachon, 1969: 483 (in part); Legendre, 1972: 428 (in part); Stahnke, 1972: 130 (in part); Vachon, 1974: 906 (in part); Vachon, 1975Vachon, : 1598; Lamoral & Reynders, 1975: 507 (in part); Francke, 1985: 8, 15 (in part); Sissom, 1990: 101 (in part); Lourenço, 1995a: 101 (in part); Lourenço, 1996a: 44;Lourenço, 1996b: 5, 8 (in part); Kovařík, 1998: 109 (in part); Fet & Lowe, 2000: 130 (in part); Lourenço, 2001b: 640 (in part); Prendini, 2001: 16-17, 32, 33-35;Fet et al, 2003: 2, 5-6;Lourenço, 2003a: 577 (in part); Lourenço, 2003c: 153-154 (in part); Lourenço & Goodman, 2003a: 26-27;Soleglad & Fet, 2003a: 26;Soleglad & Fet, 2003b: 19, 66-68, 78-79, 88, 90, 154 (in part); Lourenço, 2004a: 31-33 (in part); Lourenço et al, 2004: 232 (in part); Prendini, 2004a: 39, 41-42;Prendini, 2004b: 115;Fet et al, 2005: 3, 7-8, 10, 23, 26, 29;Prendini & Wheeler, 2005: 481...…”
Section: Diagnosis Of the 'Grosphus' Groupmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There are many ancient groups. The ancestors of the spider Archaea lived at the time of Gondwanaland (Legendre, 1972), the megacontinent that linked Australia and South America to Africa well over 100 million years ago, as did the ancestors of the Malagasy boa (Jolly, 1980). Boas became extinct in Africa presumably after the break up of Gondwanaland-there are only pythons in Africa today.…”
Section: Much Of Madagascar's Wildlife Is Threatened and Remains Poormentioning
confidence: 99%