Results 221 to 230 of about 2,017,631 (280)
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Partial albinism in a blue crab

1965
(Uploaded by Plazi from the Biodiversity Heritage Library) No abstract provided.
Sims, Harold W, Joyce, Edwin Anthony
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Partial Albinism in Myotis sodalis

Journal of Mammalogy, 1956
According to Allen (bats., 1939: 154)“A white bat occurs once in many thousand.” I have been unable to find a record of a case of albinism in Myotis sodalis in a search of the recent literature. On January 1, 1956, while recording banded bats in Bat Cave, Carter Caves State Park, Carter County, Kentucky, Mr. Robert G. Sagar and I collected an …
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PARTIAL ALBINISM AND NYSTAGMUS IN NEGROES

Archives of Dermatology and Syphilology, 1944
The term "partial albinism" is properly used only of persons in whose skin the pigment content is universally reduced though not completely absent; "albinoidism" is the correct designation for patchy congenital leukoderma (piebald Negro). In the literature one finds references to "yellow" and "red" (xanthic) Negroes, and the connection of their ...
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Partial Albinism

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1966
D E, Comings, G F, Odland
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Partial Albinism in the Syrian Hamster

Nature, 1957
DURING 1954, and also in 1955, a new mutant white hamster was imported from the United States. The adult mutant possesses pink (pigmentless) eyes and a white pelage but with dark (pigmented) ear pinna. The pigment is dark (melanin) and resides in the skin, the hair on the ears being white.
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Partial albinism in black ibis Pseudibis papillosa

2010
(Uploaded by Plazi from the Biodiversity Heritage Library) No abstract provided.
Senma, Rajesh C, Acharya, Chirag A
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[Heterochromia iridum in a case of partial type 2 oculocutaneous albinism: Case report].

Journal Francais d'Ophtalmologie, 2022
S. Moutamani   +4 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Partial Albinism

Archives of Dermatology, 1955
N G, SMITH, J, SCHULZ
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PIEBALDNESS, OF FAMILIAL WHITE SKIN SPOTTING (PARTIAL ALBINISM)

Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1954
PIEBALDNESS, or familial white skin spotting, is a congenital defect of skin pigmentation which is of rare occurrence, inherited as a dominant characteristic. It is characterized by a defect in skin pigment which may involve the central portion of the brow, including a small portion of the scalp, with a resulting white forelock, areas on the anterior ...
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