Zobrazeno 1 - 6
of 6
pro vyhledávání: '"Gerry Bunker"'
Autor:
John R. Cooley, Nidia Arguedas, Elias Bonaros, Gerry Bunker, Stephen M. Chiswell, Annette DeGiovine, Marten Edwards, Diane Hassanieh, Diler Haji, John Knox, Gene Kritsky, Carolyn Mills, Dan Mozgai, Roy Troutman, John Zyla, Hiroki Hasegawa, Teiji Sota, Jin Yoshimura, Chris Simon
Publikováno v:
PeerJ, Vol 6, p e5282 (2018)
The periodical cicadas of North America (Magicicada spp.) are well-known for their long life cycles of 13 and 17 years and their mass synchronized emergences. Although periodical cicada life cycles are relatively strict, the biogeographic patterns of
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/e923b82aa5964414b30206186c00ee9f
Autor:
Jin Yoshimura, Michael L. Neckermann, David C. Marshall, Kathy B. R. Hill, James E. Cooley, Gerry Bunker, John R. Cooley, Chris Simon, Gene Kritsky
Publikováno v:
American Entomologist. 62:241-246
Autor:
Jin Yoshimura, Stephen M. Chiswell, Chuck Holliday, Richard Grantham, Michael L. Neckermann, Marten J. Edwards, David C. Marshall, Robert L. Sanders, Chris T. Maier, Gerry Bunker, Chris Simon, John R. Cooley, John D. Zyla
Publikováno v:
American Entomologist. 61:245-251
The periodical cicadas ( Magicicada spp.) of eastern North America are subdivided into “broods” or locally synchronized populations that share a common emergence schedule. Twelve extant broods have 17-year life cycles and three have 13-year cycle
Publikováno v:
Global Ecology and Biogeography. 22:410-421
Aim Adult periodical cicadas emerge as temporally isolated, synchronized multispecies communities (‘broods’) that are for the most part geographically contiguous and that fit together in jigsaw-puzzle-like fashion. Some year-classes of 17-year ci
Autor:
Marten J. Edwards, John D. Zyla, John R. Cooley, Jin Yoshimura, Roy Troutman, Kathy B. R. Hill, David C. Marshall, Gerry Bunker, Chris Simon, Mike Neckermann, Gene Kritsky
Publikováno v:
American Entomologist. 57:144-151
GIS-based and consist largely of county-level records derived from 19th-century USDA maps (Fig. 1; Marlatt 1923) whose low resolution limits their utility for testing hypotheses about brood formation and ecology (Marshall 2001). In addition, existing
Publikováno v:
Transactions of the American Entomological Society. 133:357-361
We present new records of Tibicen chloromera (Walker) in Connecticut. Monitoring population size differences by song suggests that several population densities are common in Tibicen chloromera: (1) sizable calling populations (2) small populations nu