Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-vdxz6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-24T11:27:09.225Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Results of the Royal Society Expedition to Southern Chile, 1958-59: Lygaeidae (Hemiptera), with the Description of a New Subfamily

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 May 2012

G. G. E. Scudder
Affiliation:
Department of Zoology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, B.C.

Extract

The Royal Society Expedition to southern Chile, 1958-59, was concerned with a study of the area known as Archiplata (Kuschel, 1960), the southwest part of South America which formed an isolated land mass in the Tertiary and which is the part of the Neotropical region showing affinities with New Zealand, Australia, South Africa, the islands of the South Pacific, Atlantic and Indian Oceans, and the Juan Fernandez Islands.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Entomological Society of Canada 1962

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Ashlock, P. D. 1957. An investigation of the taxonomic value of the phallus in the Lygaeidae (Hemiptera-Heteroptera), Ann. ent. Soc. Amer. 50: 407426.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cameron, T. W. M. 1960. Southern intercontinental connections and the origin of the southern Mammals, in Cameron, T. W. M. (ed.) Evolution: its Science and Doctrine, Toronto.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
China, W. E., and Miller, N. C. E.. 1959. Check-list and keys to the families and sub-families of the Hemiptera-Heteroptera, Bull. Brit. Mus. (Nat. Hist.) Ent. 8(1): 145.Google Scholar
Couper, R. A. 1960. Southern Hemisphere Mesozoic and Tertiary Podocarpaceae and Fagaceae and their palaeogeographic significance, Proc. roy. Soc. (B) 152: 491500.Google Scholar
Darlington, P. J. 1960. The zoogeography of the southern cold temperate zone, Proc. roy. Soc. (B) 152: 659668.Google Scholar
Davis, N. T. 1961. Morphology and phylogeny of the Reduvioidea (Hemiptera: Heteroptera). Part II. Wing Venation, Ann. ent. Soc. Amer. 54: 340354.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Drake, C. J., and Davis, N. T.. 1959. A new subfamily, genus and species of Lygaeidae (Hemiptera - Heteroptera) from Australia, J. Wash. Acad. Sci. 49: 1926.Google Scholar
Elton, C. S. 1925. The dispersal of insects to Spitsbergen, Trans. ent. Soc. Lond. 73: 289299.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Freeman, J. A. 1945. Studies in the distribution of insects by aerial currents. I. The insect population of the air from ground level to 300 ft., J. Anim. Ecol. 14: 128154.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gislen, T. 1948. Aerial plankton and its conditions of life, Biol. Rev. 23: 109126.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Glick, P. A. 1939. The distribution of insects, spiders, and mites in the air, U.S. Dept. Agric. Tech. Bull. 673: 1150.Google Scholar
Godley, E. J. 1960. The botany of southern Chile in relation to New Zealand and the Subantarctic, Proc. roy. Soc. (B) 152: 457475.Google Scholar
Gressitt, J. L. 1961. Problems in the zoogeography of Pacific and Antarctic Insects, Pacific Insects Mon. 2: 194.Google Scholar
Hardy, A. C., and Milne, P. S.. 1938. Studies in the distribution of insects by aerial currents. Experiments in aerial tow-netting from kites. J. Anim. Ecol. 7: 199229.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hutchinson, G. E. 1934. Report on terrestrial families of Hemiptera-Heteroptera, Yale North India Expedition, Mem. Conn. Acad. Arts and Sci. 10: 119146.Google Scholar
Holdgate, M. W. 1960 a. The Royal Society Expedition to southern Chile, Proc. roy. Soc. (B) 152: 434441.Google Scholar
Holdgate, M. W. 1960 b. The fauna of the mid-Atlantic islands, Proc. roy. Soc.(B) 152: 550567.Google Scholar
Johnson, C. G. 1953. The aerial dispersal of aphids, Discovery 13: 1922.Google Scholar
Johnson, C. G. 1956. Distribution and dispersal of aphids in the air, Mitt. Biol. Bundestanst. Berlin Dahlem 85: 2223.Google Scholar
Johnson, C. G. 1957. The distribution of insects in the air and the empirical relation of density to height, J. Anim. Ecol. 26: 479494.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, C. G., and Southwood, T. R. E.. 1949. Seasonal records in 1947 and 1948 of flying Hemiptera-Heteroptera, particularly Lygus pratensis L., caught in nets 50 ft. to 3,000 ft. above the ground, Proc. R. ent. Soc. Lond. (A) 24: 128130.Google Scholar
Kormilev, N. A. 1952. Lygaeidae (Hemiptera), in Kuschel, G., Los Insectos de las Islas Juan Fernandez, Rev. Chil. Ent. 2: 714.Google Scholar
Kormilev, N. A. 1955. Notas sobre Lygaeidae Neotropicales 1 (Hemiptera) La subfamilia Cyminae (Stal) en la Argentina, Acta. Sci. Inst. Cienc. Nat. Buenos Aires 2: 18.Google Scholar
Kormilev, N. A. 1957. Los Insectos de las Islas Juan Fernandez. Lygaeidae (Suplemento) (Hemiptera), Rev. Chil. Ent. 5: 385389.Google Scholar
Kuschel, G. 1960. Terrestrial zoology in southern Chile, Proc. roy. Soc. (B) 152: 540550.Google Scholar
Le Gros Clark, W. 1959. The antecedants of man, an introduction to the evolution of the Primates, Edinburgh.Google Scholar
Leston, D., Pendergrast, J. G., and Southwood, T. R. E.. 1954. Classification of the terrestrial Heteroptera (Geocorisae), Nature, Lond. 174: 9192.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pantin, C. F. A. et al. 1960. A discussion on the biology of the southern cold temperate zone, Proc. roy. Soc. (B) 152: 429677.Google Scholar
Scudder, G. G. E. 1957. The higher classification of the Rhyparochrominae (Hem., Lygaeidae), Ent. mon. Mag. 93: 152156.Google Scholar
Scudder, G. G. E. 1959. The female genitalia of the Heteroptera: morphology and bearing on classification, Trans. R. ent. Soc. Lond. 111: 405467.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sein, M. K. 1961. Nothofagus pollen in the London Clay, Nature, Lond. 190: 10301031.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Skottsberg, C. 1960. Remarks on the plant geography of the southern cold temperate zone, Proc. roy. Soc. (B) 152: 447457.Google Scholar
Slater, J. A., and Hurlbutt, H. W.. 1957. A comparative study of the metathoracic wing in the family Lygaeidae (Hemiptera: Heteroptera), Proc. ent. Soc. Wash. 59: 6779.Google Scholar
Wolfenbarger, D. O. 1946. Dispersion of small organisms. Distance dispersion rates of Bacteria, Spores, Seeds, Pollen and Insects: incidence rates of diseases and injuries, Amer. Midi. Nat. 35: 1152.CrossRefGoogle Scholar