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From USDA-ARS, Beltsville, MD USA, 29 August 2008Database Documents Names for More Than 150,000 Diptera SpeciesFLYTREE major collaborator and United States Department of Agriculture's (USDA) "Agricultural Research Service (ARS) entomologist F. Chris Thompson headed up efforts to accurately identify and name almost 157,000 flies, gnats, maggots, midges, mosquitoes and related species in the order Diptera." more...
From USDA-ARS, Beltsville, MD USA, 16 May 2008Fruit Fly Diversity is in the DetailsUSDA-ARS molecular biologist and FLYTREE collaborator, Sonja Scheffer, and her colleagues show that using plant niche diversity alone to estimate species diversity of the related insect fauna, using tropical fruit flies in the genus Blepharoneura as an example, can result in an underestimate of real diversity of the system. more...
From CSIRO, Canberra, Australia, 17 Sept. 2007On the Fly: The Interactive Atlas and Key to Australian Fly Families wins Whitley Book AwardDr. David Yeates (Australian Biological Resources Study Center for Biological Information Technology) proudly accepted the 2007 Whitley Book Awards Certificate of Commendation from the Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales for On The Fly, judged by the Society to be the best book in the category, "Interactive Atlas and Key." more...
From the Antarctic Sun, 22 Jan. 2006Mighty MidgesIs it any wonder that the only free-living insect on Antarctica is a fly? Richard Lee and David Denlinger and their graduate students are studying Belgica antarctica, a flightless chironomid fly endemic to this continent, and the only species in the genus Belgica. Hear more about their studies from their website.
From North Carolina State University, 11 Dec. 2003:Scientist Heads $2.4 Million Project to Map Flies’ Family TreeAn international research team headed by a North Carolina State University entomologist has won a $2.4 million grant to fill a tall order – the order Diptera, that is. As part of a massive National Science Foundation-funded effort called Assembling the Tree of Life, the team is creating a better picture of the evolutionary and genetic ties that link some 125,000 fly species that make up the order. The Tree of Life project – rooted in Charles Darwin’s concept that all of life, from the smallest microorganism to the largest vertebrate, is genetically connected – aims to pull together a family tree for all 1.7 million known living species. more... |
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