Karl Holdhaus

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Karl_Holdhaus an entity of type: Thing

Karl Holdhaus (* 21. Jänner 1883 in Baden bei Wien; † 30. Juni 1975) war ein österreichischer Zoologe. rdf:langString
Karl Holdhaus (21 January 1883, in Baden bei Wien – 30 June 1975) was an Austrian entomologist who specialised in Coleoptera. He was Director of the Vienna Natural History Museum. Holdhaus worked on the Coleoptera of glacial refugia, postglacial range expansions and “Massifs de Refugium”. He recognised that the distribution of blind and troglobitic beetles was restricted to a well defined area in Europe, south of a line connecting Bordeaux, Lyon, the southern Alps, the Carpathians and the Black Sea. This is the “Holdhaus line” - the northern distribution limit of beetles with very poor powers of dispersal, especially blind cave beetles. Only two small areas with blind beetles occur north of this line the Jura and the Northeastern Alps). Also South of this line there are many endemic anima rdf:langString
rdf:langString Karl Holdhaus
rdf:langString Karl Holdhaus
xsd:integer 14571592
xsd:integer 1063392988
rdf:langString Karl Holdhaus (* 21. Jänner 1883 in Baden bei Wien; † 30. Juni 1975) war ein österreichischer Zoologe.
rdf:langString Karl Holdhaus (21 January 1883, in Baden bei Wien – 30 June 1975) was an Austrian entomologist who specialised in Coleoptera. He was Director of the Vienna Natural History Museum. Holdhaus worked on the Coleoptera of glacial refugia, postglacial range expansions and “Massifs de Refugium”. He recognised that the distribution of blind and troglobitic beetles was restricted to a well defined area in Europe, south of a line connecting Bordeaux, Lyon, the southern Alps, the Carpathians and the Black Sea. This is the “Holdhaus line” - the northern distribution limit of beetles with very poor powers of dispersal, especially blind cave beetles. Only two small areas with blind beetles occur north of this line the Jura and the Northeastern Alps). Also South of this line there are many endemic animals and these areas are the “Massifs de Refugium” of Chodat & Pampanini (1902).
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 2503

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