Search Results - "assassination"

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  1. Haiti and its multiple tragedies: Much more needs to be done by Díaz-Bonilla, Eugenio

    Published 2022
    “…Just in the last months there was the terrible assassination of a sitting president on July 2021; an extremely damaging earthquake of 7.2 magnitude on August 2021; the heart-wrenching images of Haitians at the US-Mexican border in September 2021; the expansion of gang activity with the kidnapping of US missionaries in October 2021; the more recent alarming episode of the shooting at the current interim Prime Minister in January 2022; and another earthquake of 5.3 magnitude in late January, to name only the more recent sequence of very bad events affecting the country.…”
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  2. Arthropod predators of Dalbulus maidis (Hemiptera: Cicadellidae) in northern Argentina, including data on the species registered in all the Americas by Casuso, Violeta Macarena, Melo, María C., Maza, Noelia, Rios-Tamayo, Duniesky, Reguilón, Carmen, Bezdjian, Laura Patricia, Virla, Eduardo Gabriel

    Published 2025
    “…This study records, for the first time, 26 predator species [14 spiders, three lacewings (Chrysopidae), two assassin bugs (Reduviidae), one big-eyed bug (Geocoridae), one hoverfly (Syrphidae), four ladybugs (Coccinellidae) and two pincer wasps (Dryinidae)] as active predators of the vector in cornfields of northern Argentina. …”
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  3. Population fluctuation of Diaphorina citri Kuwayama (Hemiptera: Liviidae) and survey of some natural enemies in Ecuador by Chavez, Y., Castro, C., González, Guillermo F., Castro, Jessenia, Peñarrieta Bravo, Soraya, Perez-Almeida, Iris, Chirinos, Dorys Terezinha, Kondo Rodríguez, Demian Takumasa

    Published 2019
    “…A total of 1660 specimens of predators belonging to five species were collected, consisting of three coccinellids, Cheilomenes sexmaculata, the most abundant species (39.9%, P <0.05), followed by Cycloneda sanguinea (15.8%), and Paraneda pallidula guticollis (4.1%) (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae), an assassin bug, Zelus sp. (Hemiptera: Reduviidae) (17.8%), and the lacewing Ceraeochrysa sp. …”
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