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Ectoparasites of Wild Carnivora of Indiana

Journal of Medical Entomology, 1979
Ectoparasites and other associates were collected from 8 species of wild carnivores occurring in Indiana. Parasites occurring most often and in greatest abundance on the Gray Fox ( Urocyon cinereomgenteus ) were Suricatoecus quadraticeps, Cediopsylla simplex, Chaetopsylla lotoris, Androulelaps fahrenholzi , and Ixodes cookei ; on the Red Fox (Vulpes ...
Rebecca J. Goff, John O. Whitaker
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An Introduction to the Carnivora

1989
The carnivores are a fascinating group. Trends in their evolution and the convergent and parallel developments of life history strategies have intrigued us all (Eisenberg 1986). Carnivora literally means “eaters of flesh.” Thus, the ordinal name describes an attribute or aspect of a niche that some but not all members of the order Carnivora occupy. The
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Introduction to Carnivora

2010
© Cambridge University Press 2010. Why Carnivora? The placental mammal order Carnivora encompasses many charismatic taxa, from dogs and cats to bears, otters, hyaenas, and seals. Perhaps more than any other mammalian clade, carnivorans are a source of fascination for humans, partially due to our intimate observation of the domesticated species that ...
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Carnivora systematics: A study of hemoglobins

Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, 1969
Abstract 1. 1. Hemoglobin samples from six-hundred and ninety-six animals representing one-hundred and twelve species and seventy-three genera of fissiped and pinniped Carnivora were examined by gel electrophoresis. All members of the Canidae, Ursidae, Procyonidae, Mustelidae, Otariidae and Phocidae had a major hemoglobin component of identical ...
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The Phylogeny of the Recent Carnivora

1989
Konrad Gesner (1551), in one of the first widely distributed bestiaries, grouped animals that eat meat, a procedure that Linnaeus (1758) followed and identified as the order Ferae. The grouping of mammals that were carnivorous was further refined by Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire and Cuvier (1795), Cuvier (1800, 1817), Gray (1821), and Temminck (1835–41). They
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Molecular and Biochemical Evolution of the Carnivora

1989
The fissiped carnivores include eight distinct families that are traditionally grouped into two superfamilies: the Canoidea (or Arctoidea) and the Feloidea (or Aeluroidea). The Canoidea include the bear, dog, raccoon, and weasel families; and the Feloidea include the cat, hyena, mongoose, and civet families. Both groups are extremely heterogeneous with
Raoul E. Benveniste   +3 more
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