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Arachnides 98.2020
(2020)
Die Fundmeldungen in Band 30 von Botanik und Naturschutz in Hessen stammen von: Rolf Angersbach, Dirk Bönsel, Wolfgang Ehmke, Christian Feuring, Thomas Gregor, Arthur Händler, Matthias Harnisch, Sylvain Hodvina, Gerwin Kasperek, Andreas König, Heiko Kramer, Hasko Friedrich Nesemann, Uwe Raabe, Petra Schmidt, Koloman Stich und Hjalmar Thiel.
Die Fundmeldungen in Band 29 von Botanik und Naturschutz in Hessen stammen von: Günther Blaich, Dirk Bönsel, Wolfgang Ehmke, Uta Engel, Christian Feuring, Hans-Joachim Flügel, Thomas Gregor, Arthur Händler, Sylvain Hodvina, Bernhard Kniep, Horst Kretzschmar, Detlef Mahn, Lenz Meierott, Annette Modl-Chalwatzis, Holger Uhlich, Kai-Uwe Nierbauer, Uwe Raabe, Michael Uebeler, Heinrich & Felix Wacker und Georg Zizka.
The Göttingen conference Systematics 2008 is the first joint meeting of the Gesellschaft für Biologische Systematik (GfBS) and the German Botanical Society, section Biodiversity and Evolutionary Biology (DBG), being the 10th Annual Meeting of the GfBS and the 18th International Symposium Biodiversity and Evolutionary Biology of the DBG. The conference programme covers biological systematics in the widest sense and provides ample opportunities for oral and poster presentations on new advances in plant, animal and microbial systematics. This volume brings together the abstracts of invited speaches from the plenary sessions on Progress in Deep Phylogeny, Speciation and Phylogeography, and New Trends in Biological Systematics as well as those of submitted talks and poster sessions.The Göttingen conference Systematics 2008 is the first joint meeting of the Gesellschaft für Biologische Systematik (GfBp. and the German Botanical Society, section Biodiversity and Evolutionary Biology (DBG), being the 10th Annual Meeting of the GfBS and the 18th International Symposium Biodiversity and Evolutionary Biology of the DBG. The conference programme covers biological systematics in the widest sense and provides ample opportunities for oral and poster presentations on new advances in plant, animal and microbial systematics. This volume brings together the abstracts of invited speaches from the plenary sessions on Progress in Deep Phylogeny, Speciation and Phylogeography, and New Trends in Biological Systematics as well as those of submitted talks and poster sessions.
Again, this issue is a bit late
(September instead of August) but I hope
the diverse and exciting contents will
make up for the delay. As per usual, the
Australian Arachnological Society is
grateful to all who contributed to this
issue! More excitingly, I already have
articles for the December issue. Stay
tuned for an update on the taxonomy of
Australian jumping spiders by Marek
Zabka.
Nearly 20 years after the first
meeting of the Society in Tunanda in
1986 and more than 10 years after the
Internationonal Arachnological Congress
in Brisbane, in 1993, there will be another
‘reunion’ of the Australasian
Arachnological Society. As part of the
Combined Australian Entomological
Society, Society of Australian
Systematic Biologists and Invertebrate
Biodiversity and Conservation
Conference (Australian National
University, Canberra) from 4-9 December
2005, we are organizing a symposium
‘Australasian Arachnology – Evolution,
Ecology and Conservation’ Currently,
there are two sessions earmarked for this
symposium, however, the final format will
be determined by the number of
participants. Please register your interest
with the conference organisers. A call of
abstracts will be sent out in June (for
details please check:
http://www.invertebrates2005.com).
Australasian Arachnology 76 features a comprehensive update on the taxonomy and systematics of jumping spiders of Australia by Marek Zabka. Thanks a lot for this interesting contribution! It is great to see some arachnological student activities in Australasia. This issue contains two theses abstracts: one by Sara Ceccarelli (on ants and jumping spiders) and one by Adam Peck (on tree trunk spider assemblages). Congratulations for your great achievements and I hope you will stick to arachnids in your future professional careers.
This is it, my first issue! As
Tracey announced in the editorial of the
last Australasian Arachnology, it’s now my
turn ‘at the helm’ of our newsletter.
Everybody will agree that Tracey did a
tremendous job over the last five years,
editing 15 wonderful issues (numbers 55
– 69). Parallels of the current change to
her take-over from Mark Harvey as
previous editor are evident. As then Mark,
Tracey embraces a new role as parent
and her increasing family duties do not
allow as many arachnological activities at
this stage.
Just days
before this newsletter went to the printer,
the Australasian Arachnological
Society launched its own website:
www.australasian-arachnology.org
It was a great effort from all involved, but
two people in particular (who are not even
directly involved with our society) deserve
a special mention: Randolf Manderbach
(web programming) and Thomas García
Godines (graphic design) professionally
developed and programmed the lay-out of
our website, for free! Thanks to both of
them! You will find further
acknowledgements and some information
in regard to the ‘philosophy’ of our site in
an introductory article on page 4.
Similar to this newsletter, the
website will prosper only through
contributions and feedback from all of
you!
Tropical Bryology was introduced in 1989 by Jan-Peter Frahm and Robbert Gradstein (who later became the first scientific editor) to provide scientists a platform to present bryological research concerning the tropics. Besides encouraging tropical bryology the journal wants to promote researchers from the tropics. Being the first fully computer-produced cryptogamic journal it was also the first to provide electronic versions of the published volumes.
The subtitle "An International Journal on the Biology of Tropical Bryophytes and Lichens" was added with publication of volume 5 (1992).
NeoBiota
()
Insecta Mundi
(2007)
Insecta Mundi is a journal primarily devoted to insect systematics, but articles can be published on any non-marine arthropod. Manuscripts considered for publication include, but are not limited to, descriptions of new taxa, revisions, taxonomic or nomenclatural notes, bibliographies, checklists, catalogs, reviews, and life histories. For papers describing new taxa, Insecta Mundi provides authors rapid publication so the names may be included in other publications. As of 2007, Insecta Mundi (paper ISSN 0749-6737, cd-rom ISSN 1942-1362, on-line ISSN 1942-1354) is published irregularly throughout the year. As manuscripts are completed and published, they are individually, sequentially numbered from now into the future. There is no longer year-based volume or issue numbers. Further details about our policies and procedures can be found in 2007 Insecta Mundi 0001. http://centerforsystematicentomology.org/insectamundi/0001ProceduresComplete.pdf
Cunninghamia publishes original research papers on all aspects of plant ecology with particular emphasis on the vegetation and flora of eastern Australia. Descriptive, experimental and historical studies of plant communities, populations, individuals, their interactions with other organisms and their management are acceptable. Cunninghamia is a fully open-access online scientific journal published on the Web by the National Herbarium of New South Wales, Royal Botanic Gardens & Domain Trust, Sydney.
Australasian Arachnology
(1979)
Die folgende Artenliste wurde von Mitgliedern der Botanischen Arbeitsgemeinschaft des Naturwissenschaftlichen Vereins Osnabrück zusammengestellt. Sie enthält eine Auswahl von Gefäßpflanzen-Arten, auf die bei gemeinsamen Exkursionen in den Jahren 1989 und 1990 besonders hingewiesen wurde. Die Daten zum Wuchsort sind teilweise durch kurze Standortsangaben ergänzt.
Kochia, Band 4 (2009)
(2009)