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Fabian Haas

Researcher at International Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology

Publications -  30
Citations -  1640

Fabian Haas is an academic researcher from International Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pygidicranidae & Forficulidae. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 30 publications receiving 1488 citations. Previous affiliations of Fabian Haas include Max Planck Society & University of Jena.

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Do new Access and Benefit Sharing procedures under the Convention on Biological Diversity threaten the future of biological control

TL;DR: The practice of biological control in relation to the principles of ABS is described, illustrated extensively by case studies and successes obtained with biological control, and the very limited monetary benefits generated in biological control are emphasised.
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Phylogenetic Relationships of the Suborders of Coleoptera (Insecta)

TL;DR: One hundred seven external and internal characters of larval and adult representatives of 28 genera of the coleopteran suborders were analyzed cladistically and supported the monophyly of all four suborders and a branching pattern.
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The function of resilin in beetle wings.

TL;DR: This account shows the distribution of elastic elements in hind wings in the scarabaeid Pachnoda marginata and coccinellid Coccinella septempunctata and suggests that resilin provides the wing with elasticity in order to be deformable by aerodynamic forces.
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Elastic joints in dermapteran hind wings: materials and wing folding.

TL;DR: In Dermaptera, the antagonistic movements of folding and unfolding are achieved in two different ways, resilin and cerci, which is unique and is suggested to be prevention of material failure.
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Dermaptera hindwing structure and folding: new evidence for familial, ordinal and superordinal relationships within Neoptera (Insecta)

TL;DR: The evolution of the dermapteran wing-folding mechanism is discussed and the hindwing is presented as a working "origami" model, which will fold as in living earwigs, and the functional role of the wing base in wing folding is examined.