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Dr. Zamora-Manzur, Carlos
Nombre de publicación
Dr. Zamora-Manzur, Carlos
Nombre completo
Zamora Manzur, Carlos Ignacio
Facultad
Email
czamora@ucsc.cl
ORCID
2 results
Research Outputs
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
- PublicationLa “mariposa papagayo” de Molina (Insecta: Lepidoptera): Refutando la combinación Castnia psittacus (Molina, 1782)(Universidad de Concepción, 2018)
; ;Ramos-González, Mario I.Parra, Luis E.La combinación Castnia psittacus (Molina) designada por Philippi (1867) y argumentada posteriormente por Ureta (1955) es invalidada por defi ciencias, incoherencias, tergiversaciones y malas interpretaciones de la descripción realizada por Molina. Castnia eudesmia Gray stat. rev., es propuesta como la combinación válida, mientras el epíteto “psittacus” es asignado al único Papilionidae de Chile Battus polydamas. - PublicationAn updated catalogue of the Geometridae (Lepidoptera: Geometroidea) from Chile. Part I: Archiearinae, Geometrinae and Sterrhinae(Universidad de Concepción, 2018)
;Ramos-González, Mario I.; ;Rose-Garrido, Carolina A.Parra, Luis E.The Geometridae are the second most diverse family of Lepidoptera. Seven subfamilies of geometrid moths have been recognized worldwide, and five of those have been recorded in Chile. The highest species richness of Chilean Geometrids is concentrated in Ennominae and Larentiinae, subfamilies that will be treated in subsequent volumes of this catalogue. The earlier catalogue of the Chilean geometrid moths was published by Angulo & Casanueva (1981), who listed species with no more records that type locality and some flight periods. Since then, much of the taxonomic knowledge has changed, resulting in new combinations and descriptions of numerous new species, as well as establishing new species records for Chile. For each species, we include BIN number (if available), synonymy, biological data, host, references, known geographical distribution, flight period and reference photographs of species. In order to obtain both old and new data, we used specimens from different national and international scientific collections. The result was a review of 13 geometrid moths, which represent the three less known subfamilies of this group in Chile: Archiearinae, Geometrinae and Sterrhinae.