997 resultados para Schaeffer, Charles Frederick, 1807-1879,
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Text continuous (despite pagination).
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"Biographical notices of Dr. Charles Pickering": p. [vii]-xvi.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Vol. 7-10: Siebenter [-zehnter] Theil oder [erster]- vierter Supplementband; v. 8-10 have added t.p.: Beschreibungen europaischer Dipteren, von H. Loew.
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Preface dated 1856.
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A cultura da mangueira esta em expansão no território nacional e o país já e o segundo maior produtor de frutos dessa planta no mundo. A produção de manga em seus aspectos quantitativos e qualitativos acha-se prejudicada pela infestação de pragas em todos os estágios fonológicos da cultura. Este trabalho relata o resultado de levantamentos de principais pragas e seus inimigos naturais em quatro épocas do ano, em Campinas - SP (variedade Haden), Cafelândia - SP (variedade Tommy Atkins) e Lins - SP (variedade Keitt). As cochonilhas Aulacaspis tubercularis e Lecanium sp. ocorrem em baixas infestações nas tres variedades. O himenóptero parasitóide da familia Braconidae ataca 12 a 60% das cochonilhas, mantendo-as em baixos níveis populacionais. A mal-formação de ponteiros atribuída a ácaros eriofiideos ocorreu em 0,3 a 17% dos ramos. Na época de frutificação 5 a 12% dos frutos estavam infestados pelas moscas-das-frutas Ceratitis capitata e Anastrepha sp.
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Correspondence regarding the donation of several collections to the Boston Medical Library, including the John Winthrop papers
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The Davoser Hochschulkurse took place for the first time in 1928. Mainly university teachers from Germany, France, Switzerland (perhaps elsewhere) offered lectures to students recovering from tuberculosis at the health resort in the Swiss mountains. The lecturers were accommodated at the Grand Hotel Curhaus, where the lectures also took place.
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Correspondence, diaries, acount books, pamphlets, and other personal and professional materials pertaining to Jacob da Silva Solis and his descendents.
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Charles Henry Gilbert (Fig. 1) was a pioneer ichthyologist and, later, fishery biologist of particular significance to natural history of the western United States. Born in Rockford, Illinois on 5 December 1859, he spent his early years in Indianapolis, Indiana, where, in 1874, he came under the influence of his high school teacher, David Starr Jordan (1851-1931). Gilbert graduated from high school in 1875, and when Jordan became a professor of natural history at Butler University in Irvington, Indiana, Gilbert followed, and received his B.A. degree in 1879. Jordan moved to Indiana University, in Bloomington, in the fall of 1879, and Gilbert again followed, earning his M.S. degree in 1882 and his Ph.D. in 1883 in zoology. His doctorate was the first ever awarded by Indiana University.