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The genome sequence of Risso's dolphin, <i>Grampus griseus</i> (G.Cuvier, 1812) (Artiodactyla: Delphinidae). [PDF]
Davison NJ +7 more
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Cellular Composition of the Brain of a Northern Minke Whale. [PDF]
Avelino-de-Souza K +4 more
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Ecomorphological and Age-Related Adaptations in the Tongues of Phocoena dioptrica (Spectacled Porpoise) and Phocoena spinipinnis (Burmeister's Porpoise) (Phocoenidae: Cetacea). [PDF]
Loza CM +7 more
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Nature, 1948
DR. FRASER‘S remarks in Nature of November 29, 1947, p. 759, on sounds emitted by dolphins reached me by sea transport shortly after I had made the following observations which appear pertinent to his subject.
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DR. FRASER‘S remarks in Nature of November 29, 1947, p. 759, on sounds emitted by dolphins reached me by sea transport shortly after I had made the following observations which appear pertinent to his subject.
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Cetacea are natural knockouts for IL20
Immunogenetics, 2018The Cetacea infraorder comprises a very unique group within the mammalian lineage. While sharing common ancestors with terrestrial mammals, their exclusive dependence on aquatic environments makes them attractive models to explore the landscape of molecular shifts in radical habitat transitions.
Mónica, Lopes-Marques +5 more
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Retino-hypothalamic Connexions in Cetacea
Nature, 1964THE existence of retino-hypothalamic neural connexions in mammalian forms has long been controversial. The more recent investigations of Blumcke1 in the cat and guinea pig, of Frey2 in the guinea pig and of Knoche3,4 in man, dog and rabbit strongly suggest that a bundle of fibres leaves the optic pathway at a chiasmatic level and passes dorsalward into
M S, JACOBS, P J, MORGANE
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Chapter 1 is an ethnography of listening at Cetacea Lab, a whale research station where conservation actors listen for humpback whales to produce scientific evidence to oppose development. The chapter considers how institutions shape ways of listening—including through a “late style” listening mode with a rich history up and down the coast.
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