Results 121 to 130 of about 33,273 (261)
Published as part of Guy G. Musser & Michael D. Carleton, 1993, Order Rodentia - Family Muridae, pp. 501-755 in Mammal Species of the World (2 nd Edition), Washington and London :Smithsonian Institution Press on page 529, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo ...
Musser, Guy G., Carleton, Michael D.
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Dynamics and reproduction of small rodents in Germany
Analyses of time series of population dynamics and reproduction of small rodent species in Germany show that 1) first order effects prevail and higher order effects occur, 2) that within and across species abundance can fluctuate synchronously and 3 ...
Jacob, J.
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Centric fission in Microtus oeconomus. A new locality in south east Norway. [PDF]
Karl Fredga +3 more
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Microtus subterraneus (de Selys-Longchamps, 1836). Essai Monogr. sur les Campagnols des Env. de Liege., 10. TYPE LOCALITY: Belgium, Liege, Waremme. DISTRIBUTION: Bulk of range from N and C France through C Europe to Ukraine and the Don River, south through Yugoslavia and the Balkans into N Greece (European range mapped in Niethammer, 1982g); isolated ...
Musser, Guy G., Carleton, Michael D.
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Control of the multimammate rat, Mastomys natalensis (A. Smith) in the irrigated fields of the Republic of Burundi [PDF]
Irrigated cultivations have been developed in Burundi with the aid of the European Fund for Development. Three major rodent species are considered pests, but one of them is far more important and can survive flooding: Mastomys natalensis, the ...
Giban, Jacques
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Microtus townsendii (Bachman, 1839). J. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 8: 60. TYPE LOCALITY: U.S.A., Oregon, Multnomah Co., Wappatoo (Sauvie) Isl. in lower Columbia River, near mouth of Willamette River. DISTRIBUTION: Vancouver Isl.; extreme S.W. British Columbia (Canada) south to N. California, along Pacific coast of U.S.A.
Honacki, James H. +2 more
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Particularities of microtine dispersion during the population growth phase
In this paper, we aim to elucidate and substantiate the specific influence of ecological factors on the processes of dispersion and thermoregulation in microtine species, as well as to model this process. The dispersion of Microtus arvalis and Microtus
Veaceslav Sytnic
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Microtus kirgisorum (Ognev, 1950). [Mamm. U.S. S. R., Adjac. Count.], Acad. Sci. Moscow, vol. 7, p. 181. TYPE LOCALITY: U.S. S. R., Kazakh. S.S. R., Dzhambulsk. Obi., Kirgizsk. (=Aleksandrovsk.) Ridge, Tuyuk Valley. DISTRIBUTION: S. Kazakhstan, Kirgiziya, Tadzhikistan, and S.E. Turkmenia (U.S. S. R.); probably N. Afghanistan. COMMENT: Subgenus Microtus;
Honacki, James H. +2 more
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Microtus multiplex (Fatio, 1905). Arch. Sci. Phys. Nat. Geneve, Ser. 4, 19:193. TYPE LOCALITY: Switzerland, Ticino Canton, near Lugano. DISTRIBUTION: S Alps and N Apennines in Switzerland, Austria, Italy, and France; also NW and C Yugoslavia (see map in Krapp, 1982b). SYNONYMS: fatoi, druentius, leponticus, liechtensteini, orientalis, petrovi. COMMENTS:
Musser, Guy G., Carleton, Michael D.
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Mammals of Southwestern Arkansas Part II. Rodents [PDF]
This study investigated the composition and habitat affinities of the mammalian fauna of southwestern Arkansas. The study area was comprised of the 21 counties located south and/or west of and including Pulaski County.
England, Daniel R. +2 more
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