Academic literature on the topic 'Haining Shi (China)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Haining Shi (China)"

1

BIN, WEI, and XUN BIAN. "New descriptions of Eugryllacris (Orthoptera: Gryllacrididae: Gryllacridinae) from China." Zootaxa 5048, no. 2 (October 6, 2021): 279–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5048.2.8.

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A new material on the Eugryllacris from China is considered. One new synonym and two new species are proposed based on the specimens from Yunnan and Hainan provinces viz. Eugryllacris binotata Liu & Bian, 2021 syn. nov., Eugryllacris nigriabdominis Bin & Bian sp. nov. and Eugryllacris hainanensis Bin & Bian sp. nov.. Besides, a supplementary description of tegmen of Eugryllacris fanjingshanensis Bian & Shi, 2016 is made. All the materials are deposited in the Guangxi Normal University.
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BIN, WEI, and XUN BIAN. "New descriptions of Eugryllacris (Orthoptera: Gryllacrididae: Gryllacridinae) from China." Zootaxa 5048, no. 2 (October 6, 2021): 279–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5048.2.8.

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A new material on the Eugryllacris from China is considered. One new synonym and two new species are proposed based on the specimens from Yunnan and Hainan provinces viz. Eugryllacris binotata Liu & Bian, 2021 syn. nov., Eugryllacris nigriabdominis Bin & Bian sp. nov. and Eugryllacris hainanensis Bin & Bian sp. nov.. Besides, a supplementary description of tegmen of Eugryllacris fanjingshanensis Bian & Shi, 2016 is made. All the materials are deposited in the Guangxi Normal University.
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He, Zhi-Xin, Li-Bin Ma, Tao Zhang, and Xiao-Lan Miao. "Flospes gen. nov. (Orthoptera, Trigonidiidae, Trigonidiinae), a genus of swordtail crickets from China, with two new species and new combinations." ZooKeys 1090 (March 24, 2022): 113–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1090.77830.

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We propose the genus Flospesgen. nov. for two new species, Flospes guangxiensissp. nov. and Flospes viridipennissp. nov., obtained from Guangxi and Hainan provinces, China, respectively, based on male genitalia traits. Three other species with similar genitalia are placed in the new genus: Flospes fujianensis (Wang et al., 1999), comb. nov., Flospes hainanensis (He et al., 2010), comb. nov., and Flospes denticulatus (Liu & Shi, 2011), comb. nov. The new species are described, illustrated, and their ranges are given.
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4

Zhong, Cairong, Donglin Li, and Ying Zhang. "Description of a new natural Sonneratia hybrid from Hainan Island, China." PhytoKeys 154 (August 3, 2020): 1–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/phytokeys.154.53223.

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Here, we describe, illustrate and compare a new natural hybrid, Sonneratia × zhongcairongii Y. S. Wang & S. H. Shi (Sonneratiaceae), with its possible parent species. Based on its morphological characteristics and habitat conditions, this taxon is considered to represent a sterile hybrid between S. alba and S. apetala. In China, the new hybrid is only reported in the mangrove forest in Dongzhai Harbour, Hainan Island. It has intermediate characteristics with its parents by elliptical leaf blades, peltate stigma, terminal or axillary inflorescence with 1–3 flower dichasia, cup – shaped calyx (4–6 calyx lobes) and no petals. We also provide a key for the identification of Sonneratia species.
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LAO, CHUANGYU, NIKO KASALO, FAN GAO, WEIAN DENG, and JOSIP SKEJO. "Review of the Chinese species of the genus Scelimena Serville, 1838 (Tetrigidae: Scelimeninae: Scelimenini)." Zootaxa 5200, no. 4 (October 31, 2022): 321–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.5200.4.2.

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A brief preliminary revision of the genus Scelimena Serville, 1838 (Tetrigidae: Scelimeninae: Scelimenini) from PR China is presented. Scelimena pyrroma Lao, Kasalo, Gao, Deng et Skejo sp. nov. is described from Hainan, Ding'an, based on a female holotype and a male paratype, and an additional photograph of a female in the natural habitat from Wuzhi National Nature Reserve (Wuzhi-shan Mountain). Specimens of this new species were hitherto reported from Hainan as S. dentiumeris (Hancock, 1907), a species endemic to Borneo. The new species is easily distinguished from its congeners by the presence of prominent yellow humeral tubercles and by the lateral pronotal spines directed forwards. The new species from Hainan and S. chinensis (Hancock, 1915) from Vietnam are assigned to Scelimena producta species group based on the similarity with S. producta (Serville, 1838), which is characterized by the humeral angles with tubercles, wide vertex, and toothed ventral margins of hind femora, while S. boettcheri Günther, 1938 from Palawan is assigned to Scelimena discalis species group, based on the tuberculated median carina. Scelimena dammermanni Günther, 1938, stat. nov., hitherto regarded as a subspecies of S. producta, is elevated to a species level because it lacks ventral spines on the hind legs, present in all S. producta individuals. New synonymy is established: Scelimena melli Günther, 1938, =Scelimena brevispina Cao et Zheng, 2011, syn. nov.; =Scelimena wulingshana Zheng, 1993, syn. nov.; =Eufalconoides guizhouensis Zheng et Shi, 2006, syn. nov. Scelimena melli, S. guangxiensis Zheng et Jiang, 1994 from southern China and S. kempi (Hancock, 1915) from NE India are assigned to S. bellula species group on the basis of similarity to S. bellula Storozhenko et Dawwrueng, 2015. Further research should determine whether S. spicupennis Zheng & Ou, 2003 represents a valid species or a synonym of another Scelimena species, as well as if S. nitidogranulosa Günther, 1938 and S. guangxiensis Zheng & Jiang, 1994 represent separate species or whether they are conspecific. Specimens of S. nitidogranulosa from Hainan reported by Liang & Zheng in 1998 are in fact Platygavialidium sinicum Günther, 1939. Scelimena songkrana Zha et Wen, 2017 is recorded from China for the first time. A key to Scelimena species found in PR China is also provided.
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6

YEUNG, HO YUEN, and JIAN-HUAN YANG. "Acoustic characteristics of the island-endemic Parapelophryne scalpta (Anura: Bufonidae) from Hainan Island, China." Zootaxa 4890, no. 2 (December 2, 2020): 296–300. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4890.2.11.

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The Hainan Pygmy Toad Parapelophryne scalpta (Liu & Hu) is the single species of the genus Parapelophryne Fei, Ye & Jiang in the Family Bufonidae (Frost 2020) and is endemic to China’s Hainan Island, which lies within the tropics at 18°09′–20°10′N, 108°37′–111°03′E, with a land area of ca. 33,900 km2. The taxonomy status of this species has obtained much debates since its discovery: it was originally described by Liu et al. (1973) as a member of the genus Nectophryne Buchholz & Peters then allocated to Pelophryne Barbour by Ye & Fei (1978). On the basis of its unique morphological characters, Fei et al. (2003) erected a new genus Parapelophryne to discriminate P. scalpta from other bufonids. Some researchers, however, still listed the species under the genus Pelophryne (Stuart et al. 2008; Shi et al. 2011). Recently, the validity of the genus Parapelophryne is further confirmed by Matsui et al. (2015) on the basis of molecular analyses. Interestingly enough, Matsui et al. (2015)’s result showed that this extremely small-sized toad is a sister taxon of the large-sized toads of the genus Bufo Garsault, which is mainly distributed in temperate and subtropical regions of Eurasia (Frost 2020). Parapelophryne scalpta is a forest-dependent species and only inhabits in well-preserved evergreen broadleaf forests (Fei & Ye 2016). It is the smallest toad species in China with snout-vent length of 19–23 mm in adult males and 24–27 mm in females (Fei & Ye 2016). Due to their small size and elusive habits, little is known about the natural history of P. scalpta and its acoustic characteristics are still undocumented (Fei & Ye 2016). During a herpetological survey in Hainan in 2015, we luckily detected male calls of P. scalpta and obtained a short but clear record of the advertisement call of the species. Herein, we describe the acoustic characteristics and calling behavior of Parapelophryne scalpta.
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7

Hu, Lei, Zhe Fang, Mingda Zhang, Liangcun Jiang, and Peng Yue. "Facilitating Typhoon-Triggered Flood Disaster-Ready Information Delivery Using SDI Services Approach—A Case Study in Hainan." Remote Sensing 14, no. 8 (April 11, 2022): 1832. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/rs14081832.

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Natural disaster response and assessment are key elements of natural hazard monitoring and risk management. Currently, the existing systems are not able to meet the specific needs of many regional stakeholders worldwide; traditional approaches with field surveys are labor-intensive, time-consuming, and expensive, especially for severe disasters that affect a large geographic area. Recent studies have demonstrated that Earth observation (EO) data and technologies provide powerful support for the natural disaster emergency response. However, challenges still exist in support of the entire disaster lifecycle—preparedness, response, and recovery—which build the gaps between the disaster Spatial Data Infrastructure (SDI) already-in-place requirements and the EO capabilities. In order to tackle some of the above challenges, this paper demonstrates how to facilitate typhoon-triggered flood disaster-ready information delivery using an SDI services approach, and proposes a web-based remote sensing disaster decision support system to facilitate natural disaster response and impact assessment, which implements on-demand disaster resource acquisition, on-the-fly analysis, automatic thematic mapping, and decision report release. The system has been implemented with open specifications to facilitate interoperability. The typhoons and floods in Hainan Province, China, are used as typical scenarios to verify the system’s applicability and effectiveness. The system improves the automation level of the natural disaster emergency response service, and provides technical support for regional remote-sensing-based disaster mitigation in China.
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8

SHEN, CHU-ZE, PEI-KUN GUO, and ZHU-QING HE. "A pilot phylogeny study of Nemobiinae inferred from 18S, 28s and COI genes, with descriptions of two new genera and a new species from Hainan, China (Orthoptera: Grylloidea: Trigonidiidae)." Zootaxa 4778, no. 2 (May 14, 2020): 383–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4778.2.9.

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The phylogenetic tree of Chinese Nemobiinae species was reconstructed based on one mitochondrial COI fragment and two nuclear ribosomal loci (18S and 28S). According to both of concatenated and coalescent trees, Dianemobius, Polionemobius and Pteronemobius (except P. jianfenglingensis Liu & Shi) were shown to be monophyletic with highly nodal supports. As to P. jianfenglingensis, it should be moved into a newly established genus, Giganemobius Shen & He gen. nov. In addition, a new mute species named as Qionemobius hsterus Shen & He gen. nov. & sp. nov. was reported. It differs from other genera by having six apical spurs on hind tibia, but lacking forewings. The type specimens are deposited in Museum of Biology, East China Normal University (ECNU).
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9

Fang, Zixing, and Robert L. Bailey. "Compatible Volume and Taper Models with Coefficients for Tropical Species on Hainan Island in Southern China." Forest Science 45, no. 1 (February 1, 1999): 85–100. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/forestscience/45.1.85.

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Abstract Compatibility of a volume-taper equation system is generally defined to mean that volumes determined by integrating the taper curve from groundline to total tree height are algebraically identical to those obtained from the total volume or appropriate volume ratio equations. This constraint was applied to a previously published model as a boundary condition using the constant of integration resulting from the solution of the differential equation. Four cases are discussed that apply to different solutions of the differential equation. This set of models, all based on the same geometric assumption, makes a very flexible system for modeling stem taper. We fitted the resulting taper models and corresponding tip volume equations simultaneously to stem-measurement data for 23 tropical species growing on Hainan Island in southern China. The simplest case among the four (case I-a) was acceptable for some species, but for some others, a more general case (case II-b) was needed. We compared the results for the simplest and the most general cases of this system with a published geometric model having only a point constraint at dbh and with a published variable exponent taper equation. We examined how well each one predicted upper-stem diameters, merchantable height for a given upper-stem diameter, and total stem volume. Our taper models always had the smallest bias and standard error of estimates for total volume estimation. The variable exponent taper equation was the best for predicting upper-stem diameter and merchantable height. The advantages of a taper system with a geometric rationale are discussed, and two examples of easy extensions of our taper model are shown in the appendix. For. Sci. 45(1):85-100.
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10

Zhang, Z. Z., S. Pan, and S. F. Li. "First Report of Chrysanthemum chlorotic mottle viroid in Chrysanthemum in China." Plant Disease 95, no. 10 (October 2011): 1320. http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/pdis-04-11-0335.

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During the spring of 2008, a chrysanthemum plant showing mild mottle on young leaves was observed in a garden in Beijing, China. After the plant was moved into a greenhouse, symptoms became severe with obvious yellowing and complete chlorosis on new leaves. In addition, when a survey was conducted for chrysanthemum diseases in 2010, plants with mild chlorotic spots on leaves were also found occasionally in a commercial field in Hainan, China. These symptoms resembled symptoms induced by Chrysanthemum chlorotic mottle viroid (CChMVd). Therefore, total RNA of 13 samples collected from Beijing (cultivar unknown) and Hainan (cv. Golden) was extracted according to Li et al. (2) and tested for CChMVd by northern blot hybridization using DIG-labeled CChMVd cRNA probe (1). All samples were CChMVd positive, and the healthy control was negative. The viroid was further confirmed by reverse transcription (RT)-PCR using CChMVd specific primers (forward: 5′-AGGTCGTA(T)AAACTTCCCCTCTAAA(G)CG-3′, homologous to nucleotides 134 to 159; and reverse: 5′-TCCAGTCGAGACCTGAAGTGGGTTTC-3′, complementary to nucleotides 133 to 108) (1). Two amplified products of approximately 400 bp were cloned into the pGEM-T vector (Promega, Madison, WI) and transformed into E. coli DH5α competent cells. Two positive clones were obtained from each isolate and sequenced. Four sequences obtained have been submitted to GenBank (Accession Nos. HQ891014 to HQ891017). Sequence analysis revealed that the obtained sequences shared 96.49 to 96.99% similarity with the reference sequence CChMVd (GenBank Accession No. NC003540). All the clones are 399 nucleotides long and are thought to be the symptomatic type based on their UUUC sequence at positions 82 to 85 in the CChMVd tetraloop (1). In addition, both isolates were mechanically inoculated to three healthy chrysanthemum plants of the unknown cultivar from Beijing. All inoculated plants developed chlorosis after 5 weeks and CChMVd infections were confirmed by northern blot hybridization and RT-PCR. CChMVd is an important pathogen that may potentially cause losses to the chrysanthemum industry. It is necessary to survey for CChMVd infection in various chrysanthemums cultivated in China. To our knowledge, this is the first report of CChMVd in chrysanthemum in China. References: (1) P. M. De la Pena et al. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 96:9960, 1999. (2) S. F. Li et al. Ann. Phytopathol. Soc. Jpn. 61:381, 1995.
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Books on the topic "Haining Shi (China)"

1

"Haining Shi ren min dai biao da hui zhi" bian zuan wei yuan hui. 海宁市人民代表大会志. Shanghai: Shanghai she hui ke xue yuan chu ban she, 2008.

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2

Hainan Sheng zheng xie. Wen shi zi liao wei yuan hui, ed. Zhi qing zai Hainan shi liao xuan ji. Haikou Shi: Nan fang chu ban she, 2017.

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Hainan she hui feng mao. S'pore [i.e. Singapore]: Wujizhima Qiong ya lian yi hui, Hainan zuo jia zuo pin yan jiu shi, 2005.

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