The distribution of D. citri in the Caribbean Basin is documented to show that it can move on fresh, unprocessed citrus fruit and that its introduction occurred at least one year before its detection.
The evidence that there may be important problems in classifying common ovarian cancers reproducibly using WHO I is strengthened, and that WHO I may require greater clarity to enhance reproducibility is strengthened.
It is proposed that a proficiency test in anatomic pathology should not be considered scientifically valid until a professional organization primarily concerned with anatomic Pathology has endorsed its proposed classification system as having categories that are close to 100% mutually exclusive in the hands of expert pathologists not involved in developing the system.
Guts from 4 of 5 specimens from one locality contained nematodes of the genus Chitwoodiella which is not considered to be pathogenic, and the date of introduction of S. didactylus into Hispaniola is unknown, but an historical account suggests its presence in Puerto Rico in 1797.