Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta United States of America. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta United States of America. Mostrar todas las entradas

miércoles, 13 de enero de 2016

ANIMALS – BIRDS – SONGBIRDS – RED-CRESTED CARDINAL (PAROARIA CORONATA)


Animals - Birds - Songbirds

Red-crested cardinal (Paroaria coronata)


Scientific Classification:

Kingdom : Animalia
Phylum : Chordata
Class : Aves
Order : Passeriformes
Family :Thraupidae
Genus : Paroaria
Species :
P. Coronata


Description:

The Red-crested cardinal (Paroaria coronata) is a songbirdwith a prominent red head and crest. Some disagreement exists as to whether this species belongs in the family of the tanagers (Thraupidae) or the buntings (Emberizidae, known in North America as sparrows). Notwithstanding its similar name, this bird is not closely related to the true cardinal family (Cardinalidae). It is called the Red Kramer, named after the character on Seinfeld, due to its similar "hairdo".

It is found in northern Argentina, Bolivia, southern Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay. Its natural habitats are subtropical or tropical dry shrubland and heavily degraded former forest. Among other regions, it is found in southern part of the Pantanal.

It has also been introduced to Hawaii and Puerto Rico. In Brazil, it has been introduced to various places outside its historical range, as in the Tietê Ecological Park in São Paulo, alongside its very similar-looking close relative, the red-cowled cardinal (P. dominicana).

The yellow-billed cardinal (P. capitata) could be easily confused with the red-crested cardinal; both the red-cowled and yellow-billed have a very short crest that is not visible except in excited birds, and in the case of the latter, a black throat, darker upper parts and a bright yellow bill.


Binomial Name:

Name : Amblyramphus holosericeus
Taxonomist : Gerrit Smith Miller, Jr (Peterboro - United States)
Year :
1776
Subspecies :
None or not data available
Synonyms :
None or not data available


Conservation Status by IUCN:

Status :Least Concern

Has been categorized by the International Union for Conservation of Nature as evaluated but not qualified for any other category. As such they do not qualify as threatened, near threatened, or (prior to 2001) conservation dependent.


Philatelic Issues


2015 - Uruguay - Stamp 1 of 4, from Spring Series


Issue information:

Country: Uruguay
Date: August 31st, 2012
Printed: 15.000 Copies
Type: Stamp from Series of 4 Stamps
Value: UYP 15

Stamp: Rectangular
Size: 39 mm. x 27 mm.
Perforation: Circular
Gum: Water Activated

martes, 29 de diciembre de 2015

ANIMALS - CRUSTACEANS - CRABS - BURROWING CRAB (NEOHELICE GRANULATA)


Animals - Crustaceans - Crabs

Burrowing crab (Neohelice granulata)


Scientific Classification:

Kingdom : Animalia
Phylum : Arthropoda
Subphylum : Crustacea
Class : Malacostraca
Order : Decapoda
Infraorder : Brachyura
Family : Varunidae
Genus : Neohelice
Species :
N. Granulata


Description:

The Burrowing crab(Neohelice granulata) is a species of crabin the family Varunidae, and the only species in the genus Neohelice. In 2009, it was estimated that N. granulata was the sixth most studied species of crab.

Neohelice is found in the south-western Atlantic Ocean, from the Golfo San José (on the north side of the Valdes Peninsula in Patagonia, Argentina) to the Laguna Araruama in Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil. The diet of Neohelice in the wild most consists of sediment, Spartina and plant-derived detritus.

The first report of Neohelice was probably that made by Alcide d’Orbignyduring an expedition to South America between 1826 and 1834. He included details of the crab's ecology, including their burrows, but did not name the species. The first person to described the species taxonomically was James Dwight Dana, who named it Chasmagnathus granulatus in his 1851 work reporting the results of the United States Exploring Expedition (also known as the "Wilkes expedition"). In 1918, Mary J. Rathbun redescribed the species under the modified name "Chasmagnathus granulata", which remained in occasional use along Dana's name until 2006, when Katushi Sakai, Michael Türkay and Si-Liang Yang revised the genera Helice and Chasmagnathus. They restricted both genera to those species occurring in East Asia, and erected a new genus for C. granulatus, which thus became Neohelice granulata, as well as the genera Austrohelice and Pseudohelice.

Neohelice granulata has emerged since the 1980s as a model species in a variety of biological fields. Much of the scientific research has focused on the species' tolerance of both fresh water and brine (euryhalinity) and its semiterrestrial habit. It has also been investigated for research into neurophysiology, toxicology and ecosystem dynamics. Such breadth of study is unusual for a model organism.


Binomial Name:

Name : Neohelice granulata
Taxonomist : James Dwight Dana (Utica - United States of America)
Year :
1851
Subspecies :
None or not data available
Synonyms : Chasmagnathus granulata, Helice gaudichaudi


Conservation Status by IUCN:

Status : Not Evaluated, or not data available


Philatelic Issues


2015 - Uruguay - Stamp 9 of 10, from Wetland Animals Series


Issue information:

Country: Uruguay
Date: June 5th, 2015
Printed: 10.000 Copies
Type: Stamp from Series of 10 Stamps
Value: UYP 15

Stamp: Rectangular
Size: 39 mm. x 27 mm.
Perforation: Circular
Gum: Water Activated