Robertson, Robert; Scheltema, Rudolf S; Adams, Frank W(University of Hawai'i Press, 1970-01)
In the Hawaiian Islands , Philippia (Psilaxis) radiata (Reding)
lives in sand or rubble near the hermatypic stony coral Porites lobata Dana, and
emerges to feed at night on the polyps, Other species of Philippia ...
Baldwin, Wayne J; Chang, Norman H(University of Hawai'i Press, 1970-01)
With the adition of Anchoa walkeri, the
eastern Pacific members of the family Engraulidae
are represented by over 30 recognizable
species. They are fairly common along
both coasts of the Americas in temperate and
tropical ...
St. John, Harold(University of Hawai'i Press, 1970-01)
Rotuma Island lies in the central Pacific
Ocean, at the meeting point of Polynesia, Micronesia,
and Melanesia. Its botany had not
been explored until the writer made an expedition to it in 1938. Two new species peculiar
to ...
Wear, Robert G(University of Hawai'i Press, 1970-01)
Decapod systematics have rarely attempted
to draw supporting evidence from the larval
phase (Gurney, 1942, p. 12). However, It is
generally recognized that phylogenetic conclusions
drawn from larval stages alone ...
Berger, Andrew J(University of Hawai'i Press, 1970-01)
The great expanses of open ocean that separate
the Hawaiian Islands from the major
continental land masses of North America and
Asia resulted in the evolution of a number of
unique landbirds. Unfortunately, a higher ...
Woollard, George P; Khan, Mohammad A(University of Hawai'i Press, 1970-01)
One of the major geodetic results that
has come out of the satellite tracking program,
in addition to the revision of the degree of
polar flattening for the Earth, is that the Earth
is characterized by a series of ...
Robertson, Robert(University of Hawai'i Press, 1970-01)
Predators and parasites on the living tissues of stony (scleractinian)
corals include bony and cartilaginous fishes, asteroids, crustaceans (cyclopoid copepods,
cirripedes, and brachyuran crabs) , polychaetes, and ...
Skinner, Brian J(University of Hawai'i Press, 1970-01)
The presence of sulfur crystals formed
by condensation around fumarolic vents is a
common and widely observed phenomenon in
volcanic regions. The flowage of sulfur in a
molten state is very rare, however, and is ...
Nozawa, Yuriko(University of Hawai'i Press, 1970-01)
At present five species are known in the
genus Rhodopeltis, which belongs to the red
algal order, Cryptonemiales. Of these, Rhodopeltis
australis was first found in Australia,
and the other four species, R. borealis, ...
Robertson, Robert(University of Hawai'i Press, 1970-01)
The subgenus Psilaxis Woodring is distinguished from Philippia
Gray, s.s., on the basis of differences in the shells, jaws, opercula, and doubtfully
radulae. Only two species of Psilaxis, differing mainly in three ...