Results 101 to 110 of about 13,019 (257)
Marmota (Marmota) caudata Geoffroy 1844
Marmota (Marmota) caudata Geoffroy 1844 Marmota (Marmota) caudata Geoffroy 1844, in: Jacquemont, Voy. dans l'Inde, 4, Zool.: 66. Type Locality: "Hombur [Ghombur] area, upper reaches of the Indus in Kashmir [India]" (Ognev, 1963 a:284). Vernacular Names: Long-tailed Marmot. Subspecies:: Subspecies Marmota (Marmota) caudata subsp.
Wilson, Don E., Reeder, DeeAnn
openaire +2 more sources
Riparian willows in Yellowstone National Park are shaped by ungulate browsing, but species‐specific contributions remain unclear. Using bite‐DNA metabarcoding of browsed willow twigs across six northern range sites, we found that American bison were the most frequent browsers, exceeding elk and often mule deer.
Julia L. Jansson +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Viktor Arsentijovych Tokarsky, a researcher of marmots [PDF]
Viktor Tokarsky (1955–2020) was a mammalogist, teacher, and conservationist. For 45 years, he had been researcher, lecturer, head of the Department of Zoology of Kharkiv National University, author of projects of nature reserves, in particular the ...
Tetyana Atemasova
doaj
Пространственная структура поселения Marmota bobak на северо-востоке Украины [PDF]
The spatial structure of steppe marmot settlement was studied in 1992–2007 at a stationary site in North-Eastern Ukraine (village Nesterivka, Velikoburluk district, Kharkov region). General number and density of burrows, the ratio of different categories
Ronkin, V.I. +3 more
core
Marmota (Marmota) himalayana Hodgson 1841
Marmota (Marmota) himalayana Hodgson 1841 Marmota (Marmota) himalayana Hodgson 1841, J. Asiat. Soc. Bengal, 10: 777. Type Locality: "Himalaya...and sandy plains of Tibet"; "potius Tibetensis" (Hodgson, 1843). Restricted by Blanford (1875 a) to "the Kachar of Nepal.". Vernacular Names: Himalayan Marmot.
Wilson, Don E., Reeder, DeeAnn
openaire +2 more sources
Wildlife has been considered the main source of novel viruses causing emerging infectious diseases. Marmota himalayana is endemic to the Qinghai–Tibetan Plateau, China. Here, based on a high-throughput method using Illumina RNA sequencing, we studied the
Xue-lian Luo +5 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Bergmann's rule: Why does body size increase with latitude?
Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog. Abstract Bergmann's rule describes the tendency for endothermic body size to increase with latitude, a pattern often attributed to climatic factors. However, the underlying developmental and evolutionary mechanisms remain debated.
Kurt M. Ongman +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Современное состояние популяции степного сурка (Marmota bоbаk bоbаk Мull., 1776) в Белгородской обл. [PDF]
To Belgorod region steppe marmot comes from two Ukrainian populations remained – Lugansk and Kharkiv ones. By the beginning of the XXI century steppe marmot inhabits 18 of the 21 districts of the region.
Miroshnichenko, V.V. +5 more
core
The Eastern woodchuck (Marmota monax) has been extensively used in research of chronic hepatitis B and liver cancer because its infection with the woodchuck hepatitis virus closely resembles a human hepatitis B virus infection.
T. Alioto +13 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
ABSTRACT Accurate age estimation is essential for understanding life‐history variation, modelling population dynamics and informing conservation strategies, yet remains challenging for long‐lived species. Here, we developed a genome‐wide DNA methylation‐based epigenetic clock for Asian elephants (Elephas maximus), an endangered species, using reduced ...
Kana Arai, Miho Inoue‐Murayama
wiley +1 more source

