نتایج جستجو برای: canary islands

تعداد نتایج: 36027  

Journal: :Bulletin of entomological research 2007
C Magaña B Beroiz P Hernández-Crespo M Montes de Oca A Carnero F Ortego P Castañera

The banana weevil (BW), Cosmopolites sordidus (Coleoptera: Curculionidae), is one of the most important insect pests of bananas and plantains. The mobility and the origin of BW infestations at the Canary Islands (Tenerife, La Gomera and La Palma) have been analysed using Random Amplified Polymorphic DNA (RAPD) as molecular markers. Populations from Costa Rica, Colombia, Uganda and Madeira were ...

Journal: :Psychiatria Danubina 2012
Francisco J Acosta Samuel G Siris Elena Díaz María Salinas Patricia Del Rosario José L Hernández

SUICIDAL BEHAVIOR IN SCHIZOPHRENIA AND ITS RELATIONSHIP TO THE QUALITY OF PSYCHOTIC SYMPTOMS AND INSIGHT A CASE REPORT Francisco J. Acosta, Samuel G. Siris, Elena Díaz, María Salinas, Patricia del Rosario & José L. Hernández Mental Health Research Program, Service of Mental Health, General Health Care Programs Direction, Canary Health Service, Pérez del Toro Street s/n, Gran Canaria, Canary Isl...

2015
Jano Núñez-Zapata Paloma Cubas David L. Hawksworth Ana Crespo

The genetic diversity and population structure of the foliose lichenized fungus Parmelina tiliacea has been analyzed through its geographical range, including samples from Macaronesia (Canary Islands), the Mediterranean, and Eurosiberia. DNA sequences from the nuclear ribosomal internal transcribed spacer, the mitochondrial large subunit ribosomal RNA gene, and the translation elongation factor...

2004
Suhejla Hoti Carmelo Leon Michael McAleer

International tourism is an important source of service exports to Spain and its regions, particularly the Canary Islands. Tourism is the major industry in the Canary Islands, accounting for about 22% of GDP. This paper examines time series of international tourism demand to the Canary Islands collected by the National Airport Administration (AENA) at airports from information regarding the num...

2006
Filipe Alberto Sophie Arnaud-Haond Carlos M. Duarte Ester A. Serrão

The seagrass Cymodocea nodosa forms a unique community in the Canary Islands, where it is classified as an endangered species. Biogeographic theory predicts that clonal species on islands near their distributional limits might show lower proportions of sexual (versus clonal) reproduction, lower genetic diversity, and higher differentiation. We addressed these hypotheses by comparing the genetic...

Journal: :Zootaxa 2014
Frank Wieland Kai Schütte Julia Goldberg

For many years researchers studying the fauna of the Canary Islands have only sparsely treated the charismatic insect order of praying mantises (Mantodea). By studying the known literature it becomes obvious that there are several inconsistencies regarding mantodean taxonomy as well as the number of actual species and their distribution within the archipelago. In the present contribution, the l...

Journal: :Emerging Infectious Diseases 2007

2012
Catalina Monzón-Argüello Ciro Rico Pascual Calabuig Adolfo Marco Luis Felipe

Loggerhead sea turtles (Caretta caretta) originating from the Western Atlantic carry out one of the largest marine migrations, reaching the eastern Atlantic and Mediterranean Sea. It has been proposed that this transatlantic journey is simply a consequence of drifting, with the lack of a target destination and a passive dispersal with oceanic currents. This predicts that the size of the source ...

2008
José Mangas Viñuela

The Canary archipelago comprises seven main volcanic islands and several islets that form a chain extending for ~ 500 km across the eastern Atlantic, between latitudes 27°N and 30°N, with its eastern edge only 100 km from the NW African coast (Figures 1 & 2). The Canary Islands developed in a geodynamic setting characterized by Jurassic oceanic lithosphere formed during the fi rst stage of open...

Journal: :Zootaxa 2013
Jurate De Prins Willy De Prins Eliane De Coninck Akito Y Kawahara Megan A Milton Paul D N Hebert

This paper deals with two European species, Phyllonorycter mespilella (Hübner, 1805) and P. trifasciella (Haworth, 1828), that have colonized the subtropical Canary Islands. The Rosaceae leaf miner, P. mespilella, is recorded for the first time from Lanzarote and La Palma, while the Caprifoliaceae leaf miner, P. trifasciella, is recorded from Tenerife. We present the diagnoses of these species ...

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