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Life‐Histories and Larval Habits of the Tiger Beetles (Cicindelidæ).

Victor Ernest Shelford
- 01 Mar 1908 - 
- Vol. 30, Iss: 197, pp 157-184
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This article is published in Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society.The article was published on 1908-03-01 and is currently open access. It has received 66 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Cicindela & Tiger.

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Insects and climate

B. P. Uvarov
Journal Article

Invertebrate lebensspuren of holocene floodplains: their morphology, origin and paleoecological significance

TL;DR: Although rocks of floodplain origin are volumetrically important, they contain relatively few trace fossils and identification of tracemakers for rocks of Floodplain origin is as difficult as for marine rocks.
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A test for the adequacy of bioindicator taxa: Are tiger beetles (Coleoptera: Cicindelidae) appropriate indicators for monitoring the degradation of tropical forests in Venezuela?

TL;DR: The use of tiger beetles (Coleoptera: Cicindelidae) as indicators for monitoring habitat degradation in tropical forests has been investigated in this article, where the authors analyzed the general habitat associations of 47 of the 51 species of this insect family known to occur in Venezuela.
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Miocene invertebrate trace fossils from a braided river environment, western Nebraska, U.S.A

TL;DR: Lower Miocene crossstratified sands of the Gering and Monroe Creek Formations exposed on Scotts Bluff National Monument in western Nebraska, U.S.A., were deposited by migrating sand bars in a braided river system similar to the modern Platte River in eastern Nebraska and, like the Platte, contain local lenses of parallel stratified sediment that accumulated in ponded areas of abandoned channels as mentioned in this paper.
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Further studies on the effect of variations in the temperature on animal tissues

TL;DR: In Hydra as well as Protozoa, a lowering of the temperature brings about certain definite structural changes that result in the formation of an undifferentiated resting stage that serve to accelerate the development and metamorphosis of the chrysalids of Cecropia.