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Bear Mauling Injuries in Maxillofacial Region: A Review of 30 victims from Eastern India. [PDF]
Singh M +4 more
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Melursus ursinus, the sloth bear
Bears are large animals, easily recognised by their large head set with small eyes and rounded ears, heavy body, massive, short limbs and a hardly visible tail. Bear sculptures are hard to find. Two examples of realistic sloth bear statues are known from the region of Mathura, Uttar Pradesh, and from Bhaktapur, Nepal.
Alexandra Van Der Geer
exaly +3 more sources
Aim: Information on patterns and determinants of spatial distributions remains poorly available for many widespread species of conservation importance. The sloth bear Melursus ursinus in the Indian subcontinent exemplifies this requirement.
Mahi Puri +2 more
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Ampullary carcinoma in a sloth bear ( Melursus ursinus )
Veterinary Record Case Reports, 2022Abstract A 26‐year‐old, 126‐kg (277‐lb), entire, female sloth bear ( Melursus ursinus ) was evaluated following a 2‐week history of hyporexia and lethargy. Diagnostic work‐up revealed peritoneal effusion and elevated liver enzymes.
Kanyon McLean, Jenny P. Pope
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Sri Lankan Sloth Bear (Melursus ursinus inornatus) Attacks on Humans
Wilderness & Environmental Medicine, 2022The sloth bear ( Melursus ursinus) is an omnivore that has been reported around most parts of South Asia. Although rare, sloth bear attacks can inflict potentially life-threatening injuries. This cross-sectional study analyzed 10 patients who had been mauled by sloth bears and who presented to rural hospitals in the Anuradhapura district of Sri Lanka ...
Sujeewa P B, Thalgaspitiya +3 more
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Pulmonary tuberculosis in captive sloth bear (Melursus ursinus) due to Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Indian Journal of Veterinary Pathology, 2022Karikalan Mathesh +2 more
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Picture recognition of food by sloth bears (Melursus ursinus)
Animal Cognition, 2019Pictures are often used in cognitive research to represent objects and many species have demonstrated the ability to recognize two-dimensional pictures as representations of their three-dimensional counterparts. However, for ursids picture recognition has been reported in only one study of a single 11-year-old female American black bear (Johnson-Ulrich
S. Tabellario +3 more
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Behavioural ecology of the Sloth bear (Melursus ursinus)
Journal of Zoology, 1977The Sloth bear (Melursus ursinus), which is endemic to the Indian subcontinent and Sri Lanka, has declined in numbers in many areas in recent years probably as the result of over‐killing and habitat alteration. In the 544 km2 Royal Chitawan National Park in the Nepal terai, we estimated there were a minimum of 55 bears or a crude density of 0˙1/km2 ...
Laurie, A., Seidensticker, J.
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Indian Journal of Animal Research, 2021
Background: Epulides, tumors of periodontal origin, are commonly reported in dogs and infrequently in cats. But its documentation among wild animals is scarce. Retrospective study of the available literature did not find any report of epulis in sloth bears, though dental pathology is common in captive sloth bears.
I. Nath +4 more
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Background: Epulides, tumors of periodontal origin, are commonly reported in dogs and infrequently in cats. But its documentation among wild animals is scarce. Retrospective study of the available literature did not find any report of epulis in sloth bears, though dental pathology is common in captive sloth bears.
I. Nath +4 more
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BLASTOZYSTENNACHWEIS IM UTBRUSLUMEN DES INDISCHEN LIPPENBAREN (MELURSUS U.URSINUS)
1977W. Pusohmann +2 more
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