Results 101 to 110 of about 627 (132)
Shorebirds Ecology and Conservation Workshop Convenes at Chaplin Lake [PDF]
Harrington, Brian +5 more
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Kentucky Warbler (Vol. 52, no. 3) [PDF]
Kentucky Library Research Collections,
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Marbled Godwit Collected at Lake Texoma, Oklahoma [PDF]
Carpenter, Charles C.
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Phenotypic Sexing of Marbled Godwits (Limosa Fedoa): A Molecular Validation
Waterbirds, 2013Abstract.—Marbled Godwits (Limosa fedoa) do not present obvious sexual dimorphism, although females are known to be slightly larger than males, on average. During the nonbreeding seasons between August 2007 and April 2009, a noninvasive technique was tested that might permit phenotypic identification of sex in a large sample of individuals from the ...
Victor Ayala-Pérez +5 more
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Late summer time budget and feeding behaviour of marbled godwits (Limosa fedoa) in southern Manitoba
Canadian Journal of Zoology, 1980Marbled godwit (Limosa fedoa) foraging, social behaviour, and habitat use were studied in late summer in southern Manitoba. The flocks spent most of their time using three small potholes on the study area. Time budget activity changed cyclically over the day; birds spent 61.3% of the day feeding.
Richard A. Wishart, Spencer G. Sealy
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The Journal of Parasitology, 1949
Young (1938) described the life history of a trematode, tentatively identified as Levinseniella cruzi, from certain shore birds of the California coast but was unable at that time to experimentally transfer the worm from the intermediate (Emerita analoga), to the final hosts (Limosa fedoa and Catoptrophorus semipalmatus inornatus).
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Young (1938) described the life history of a trematode, tentatively identified as Levinseniella cruzi, from certain shore birds of the California coast but was unable at that time to experimentally transfer the worm from the intermediate (Emerita analoga), to the final hosts (Limosa fedoa and Catoptrophorus semipalmatus inornatus).
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First observations of <em>Limosa fedoa</em> (Marbled Godwit) in Suriname, French Guiana, and Guyana
Journal of Caribbean OrnithologyAbstract Limosa fedoa, the Marbled Godwit, is a large shorebird that breeds in the grasslands of the northern United States and southern Canada, and winters along the coast of the United States, Mexico, and Central America, occasionally reaching the Pacific and Atlantic coasts of South America.
null Arne J. Lesterhuis +6 more
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Breeding of the Marbled Godwit, Limosa fedoa, in James Bay
The Canadian field-naturalist, 1976R.I.G. Morrison +2 more
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Integrative oncology: Addressing the global challenges of cancer prevention and treatment
Ca-A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, 2022Jun J Mao,, Msce +2 more
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