2008 Congress on Image and Signal Processing, 2008
Road tracking is a promising technique to increase the efficiency of road mapping. In this paper,... more Road tracking is a promising technique to increase the efficiency of road mapping. In this paper, a new road tracker, angular texture signature, is proposed based on the knowledge of the roads on high resolution imagery. The tracker uses parabola to model the road ...
The Southeast Asian species of Hypsugo are rare bats, except for H. cadornae and H. pulveratus, w... more The Southeast Asian species of Hypsugo are rare bats, except for H. cadornae and H. pulveratus, which are distributed throughout the Indomalayan region. Hypsugo macrotis is restricted to Peninsular Malaysia, Sumatra, Java and adjacent islands, and is known only from a handful of specimens. Here we report a new locality record of the species from Serem-ban, Peninsular Malaysia, which also represents the first known building-dweller colony of any Hypsugo from the region. We discuss the taxonomic status of two morphologically similar species, H. macrotis and H. vordermanni, and provide the first COI and cyt b gene sequences for H. macrotis and reconstruct the species' phylogenetic relationships.
2008 Congress on Image and Signal Processing, 2008
Road tracking is a promising technique to increase the efficiency of road mapping. In this paper,... more Road tracking is a promising technique to increase the efficiency of road mapping. In this paper, a new road tracker, angular texture signature, is proposed based on the knowledge of the roads on high resolution imagery. The tracker uses parabola to model the road ...
The Southeast Asian species of Hypsugo are rare bats, except for H. cadornae and H. pulveratus, w... more The Southeast Asian species of Hypsugo are rare bats, except for H. cadornae and H. pulveratus, which are distributed throughout the Indomalayan region. Hypsugo macrotis is restricted to Peninsular Malaysia, Sumatra, Java and adjacent islands, and is known only from a handful of specimens. Here we report a new locality record of the species from Serem-ban, Peninsular Malaysia, which also represents the first known building-dweller colony of any Hypsugo from the region. We discuss the taxonomic status of two morphologically similar species, H. macrotis and H. vordermanni, and provide the first COI and cyt b gene sequences for H. macrotis and reconstruct the species' phylogenetic relationships.
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Papers by Cheng Min Wong