Results 211 to 220 of about 5,798 (246)
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Galliphilopsis colinus Skoracki & Sikora 2011
2013Galliphilopsis colinus Skoracki & Sikora, 2011: 20 — Holotype female (AMU–SYR.320), from quills of body feathers of Colinus cristatus (Linnaeus) (Odontophoridae). Zanderij, Surinam.
LIU, DONG +3 more
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Inclusion Body Hepatitis in Bobwhite Quail (Colinus virginianus)
Avian Diseases, 1987Farm-reared bobwhite quails less than 3 weeks of age experienced high mortality (250 of 400). At necropsy, these birds had multiple 1-to-2-mm pale foci throughout their livers. Histologically, these foci varied from acute hepatocellular necrosis without an inflammatory response to necrosis with infiltrates of mononuclear inflammatory cells and some ...
S W, Jack, W M, Reed, T A, Bryan
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Colinus cristatus (Linnaeus, 1766) Distribution Alpujarra, Armero-Guayabal, Alvarado, Ataco, Carmen de Apicala, Casabianca, Cajamarca, Coyaima, Casabianca, Cunday, Espinal, Guamo, Falan, Flandes, Fresno, Herveo, Honda, Ibagué, Icononzo, Lerida, Mariquita, Melgar, Murillo, Natagaima, Palocabildo, Piedras, Planadas, Prado, Purificación, Rio Blanco ...
Parra-Hernández, Ronald M +1 more
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Parra-Hernández, Ronald M +1 more
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The energetics of young bobwhite (Colinus virginianus)
Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A: Physiology, 1980Abstract 1. 1. An energetic model of growth and development of bobwhites was generated from measurement of energy intake, metabolized energy and body composition of chicks from hatching through asymptotic weight at 84 days of age. 2. 2. Maximum energy requirements occur at 65 days of age and growth measured in caloric terms produces different
Charles R Blem, Jane Zara
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ACUTE EFFECTS OF AFLATOXIN ON NORTHERN BOBWHITES (COLINUS VIRGINIANUS)
Journal of Wildlife Diseases, 2013Aflatoxin is a widely occurring and harmful mycotoxin produced by strains of Aspergillus spp. growing on vegetable matter. We investigated the concentration of aflatoxin needed to impair normal physiologic responses and induce acute morbidity and mortality in Northern Bobwhites (Colinus virginianus). Ten wild-caught adult bobwhites (five males and five
Deana L, Moore +4 more
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Bobwhite, Colinus virginianus, as Host for Heterakis and Histomonas
Journal of Wildlife Diseases, 1971Bobwhites were experimentally infected with Histomonas meleagridis and Heterakis gallinarum. Chickens and turkeys were similarly infected for comparison. Although the bobwhites were nearly as susceptible to Histomonas infections as were New Hampshire chickens, and more susceptible to tissue invasion, clinical histomoniasis was much less severe than in ...
E E, Lund, A M, Chute
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Homeothermic development in the bobwhite (Colinus virginianus)
Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A: Physiology, 1985Abstract 1. 1. Evaporative heat loss (E), O2 consumption, CO2 production and internal body temperature (Tb) were measured in bobwhite (1–65 days of age) at specific ambient temperatures (Ta). 2. 2. tb at ta 25°C increased from 27.6° in 1-day-old quail to 41.1°C in the adult. 3. 3.
Donald E Spiers +2 more
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Galliphilopsis colinus Skoracki & Sikora, 2011, sp. nov.
2011Published as part of Skoracki, Maciej & Sikora, Bozena, 2011, Quill mites (Acari: Syringophilidae) associated with galliform birds (Aves: Galliformes), pp.
Skoracki, Maciej, Sikora, Bozena
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Ten microsatellite loci from Northern Bobwhite (Colinus virginianus)
Conservation Genetics, 2008Ecological studies using microsatellite data often require the selection of an optimal marker set for use in parentage and relatedness inference. Commonly, this requires a candidate pool of microsatellite markers from which several are selected to ensure data are acquired efficiently and accurately.
Brant C. Faircloth +5 more
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Synchronization of Hatching in American Bobwhite Quail (Colinus virginianus)
Nature, 1964IT is known that chicken embryos show great variation in their rate of development. This is due to three main factors: variations in the latent period, variations in the environmental factors of incubation and the inherent variations of the embryos themselves1,2.
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