Posts Tagged: ZooKeys
Charlotte Alberts: UC Davis Doctoral Candidate Juggling Multiple Roles of Responsibility
UC Davis doctoral candidate Charlotte Herbert Alberts, who recently published the first chapter of...
Entomologist-artist Charlotte Alberts drew this image of an assassin fly, also known as a robber fly. (Used with permission)
Praying Mantis Scientist's Trip to Belize: Memories, Mantids and The Makings of a Publication
When praying mantis scientist Lohitashwa “Lohit” Garikipati, a 2019 entomology graduate...
Praying mantis scientists Lohit Garikipati (right) traveling with friend and colleague Brian Fridie, an undergraduate student at the University of Florida, Gainesville. (Photo by Fran Keller, Bioblitz leader)
Participants in the Bohart Museum Bioblitz to Belize pose for a photo at the Xunantunich Mayan Ruins, El Castillo, in San Ignacio, in 2019. Praying mantis scientist Lohit Garikipati is second from right, middle row. Tour leader Fran Keller, professor at Folsom Lake College, is in the front row, second from right. UC Davis professor Jason Bond is in middle row, third from left. (Photo courtesy of Fran Keller)
This is one of the illustrations in the publication, “A Checklist of Mantodea of Belize, with a Regional Key to Species” in ZooKeys, co-authored by Lohit Garikipati and UC Davis professor Jason Bond. (Screen shot)
UC Davis professor Jason Bond and Folsom Lake College professor Fran Keller, Bohart Museum bioblitz leader, at Toucan Ridge Ecology and Education Society (T.R.E.E.S) Field Station and Research Center. (Photo courtesy of Fran Keller)
A Moth Like No Other: Neopalpa donaldtrumpi
It's a moth like no other. Did you read the abstract published Jan. 17 in the journal ZooKeys...
Photo of the head of a male moth, Neopalpa donaldtrumpi, courtesy of Vazrick Nazari, ZooKeys journal.
Bohart Museum researcher Danielle Wishon, graduate of UC Davis, in the clay pan of Algodones Dunes. (Photo by Lynn Kimsey)
Site of where the Neopalpa donaldtrumpi was discovered by Bohart Museum of Entomology researchers. (Photo by Lynn Kimsey)