The presence of one or two species of damselflies of the genus Ischnura in the Canary Islands has been a matter of debate in the recent years. The first published records listed I. senegalensis as the only zygopteran inhabiting the archipelago, but this proved to be wrong, and until recently, all specimens of Ischnura captured in the islands were unanimously regarded as belonging to I. saharensis. Recent photographic evidence, however, is compatible with the presence of I. senegalensis. In this study, we give morphological and genetic evidence of the presence of I. senegalensis in the Canary Islands, and we discuss the importance of voucher specimens to correctly identify very similar species
Copyright © Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2011.We report here the prevalence of parasitism by...
The present paper is the result of an examination of some type specimens in the Brussels Museum, col...
1. Geographically widespread species provide excellent opportunities to investigate how phenotypes c...
Confirmation of the presence of Ischnura senegalensis (Rambur, 1842) on the Canary Islands. — The pr...
The first record of a zygopteran breeding population in the Cape Verde archipelago is presented. A s...
In this paper, 47 specimens of dragonflies and damselflies collected by H. Lindberg and his assistan...
Despite the great technological progress that has aided taxonomical identification, taxonomical issu...
Baetis (Rhodobaetis) canariensis s.l. was considered to be the most common species of mayfly (Epheme...
Dragonflies from the Cape Verde Islands, collected between 1960 and 1989 and kept in institutes in P...
In 2005 we started a study of the ecology and evolutionary history of damselflies of the genus Nesob...
Literature and personal information on the distribution of I. hastata and other odon. spp. in the Az...
5. Ischnura pumilio (Charpentier, 1825) Conservation and breeding status: LC (EU), LC (IT), LC (M...
[EN] Mayflies were collected on Tenerife, Gomera, La Palma and Fuerteventura. Of the six species re...
Examination of type material deposited in the IRSNB (Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences, Br...
(Fabricius, 1798). Reported by R. MacLachlan (1889) and K.J. Valle (1933) from Esmir and Tanger. Al...
Copyright © Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2011.We report here the prevalence of parasitism by...
The present paper is the result of an examination of some type specimens in the Brussels Museum, col...
1. Geographically widespread species provide excellent opportunities to investigate how phenotypes c...
Confirmation of the presence of Ischnura senegalensis (Rambur, 1842) on the Canary Islands. — The pr...
The first record of a zygopteran breeding population in the Cape Verde archipelago is presented. A s...
In this paper, 47 specimens of dragonflies and damselflies collected by H. Lindberg and his assistan...
Despite the great technological progress that has aided taxonomical identification, taxonomical issu...
Baetis (Rhodobaetis) canariensis s.l. was considered to be the most common species of mayfly (Epheme...
Dragonflies from the Cape Verde Islands, collected between 1960 and 1989 and kept in institutes in P...
In 2005 we started a study of the ecology and evolutionary history of damselflies of the genus Nesob...
Literature and personal information on the distribution of I. hastata and other odon. spp. in the Az...
5. Ischnura pumilio (Charpentier, 1825) Conservation and breeding status: LC (EU), LC (IT), LC (M...
[EN] Mayflies were collected on Tenerife, Gomera, La Palma and Fuerteventura. Of the six species re...
Examination of type material deposited in the IRSNB (Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences, Br...
(Fabricius, 1798). Reported by R. MacLachlan (1889) and K.J. Valle (1933) from Esmir and Tanger. Al...
Copyright © Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2011.We report here the prevalence of parasitism by...
The present paper is the result of an examination of some type specimens in the Brussels Museum, col...
1. Geographically widespread species provide excellent opportunities to investigate how phenotypes c...