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National Moth Week was July 19-27, and the Summer 2025 gathering in Louisiana, July 19-27

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Class Protura - Coneheads

 
 
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Genera of the Protura of the World: diagnosis, distribution, and key
By Loris Galli, Julia Shrubovych, Yun Bu, Matteo Zinni
ZooKeys 772: 1-45, 2018
Full text (PDF)

The Protura. A revision of the species of the world, with keys for determination
By S. L. Tuxen
Hermann, Paris, 1964

The Protura of North America
By H. E. Ewing
Annals of the Entomological Society of America, Vol. 33, No. 3: 495-551 , 1940
Read Online free.

Full text with subscription.

Studies on the North American Protura 1
By Robert T. Allen
Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, Vol. 156, pp. 97-116, 2007
Robert T. Allen , Studies on the North American Protura 1: Catalogue and atlas of the Protura of North America; Description of new species; Key to the species of Eosentomon, Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 156: 97-116, 2007.

Read online free at JSTOR

Catalogue of the world Protura
By Szeptycki A.
Acta Zoologica Cracoviensia 50B: 1-210, 2007

A new genus and two new species of Eosentomoidea (Protura: Eosentomidae)
By T.P. Copeland
Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington, vol. 80, pp. 473-484, 1978

A new family of Protura from California
By Douglas W. Price
Ann. Entomol. Soc. Am., Vol. 53, No. 5, pp. 675-678, 1960

The Cave Fauna of California
By W.R. Elliott, J.R. Reddell, D.C. Rudolph, G.O. Graening, T.S. Briggs, D. Ubick, R.L. Aalbu, J. Krejca, S.J. Taylor
Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences (Series 4) Volume 64, Supplement 1, 2017
Abstract:
Hidden biodiversity is revealed in this study of California's subterranean fauna, which contains distinctive elements that differentiate it from other North American regions. Since 1975, the rate of discovery of new species has accelerated with funded projects in most of the important cave areas of the state, including our own studies. Here we compile all available biological records for subterranean sites in California dating back to 1840.
California's karst is primarily comprised of small outcrops of marble or limestone with thousands of caves. Additionally, lava and ash flows, tens of thousands of mines, hundreds of sea caves on the mainland coast and islands, and extensive groundwater systems provide habitat for subterranean life.

 
 
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