Results 211 to 220 of about 13,961 (266)
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The Accession of Archelaus Philopatris

1995
Abstract Archelaus, on whom Pompeius Magnus bestowed the principality of Comana in Pontus, met his end on an ambitious venture, fighting for a bride and a throne in Egypt (s 5 B.C.). His son inherited Comana, but did not hold it for long. Caesar installed an adherent of his own, Lycomedes the Bithynian, of royal ancestry.
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Dispersal and female philopatry in a long‐term, stable, polygynous gibbon population: Evidence from 16 years field observation and genetics

American Journal of Primatology, 2018
Gibbons are generally reported to live in small socially monogamous family groups in which both sexes disperse when they reach maturity. For the first time, we documented the dispersal pattern in a population of gibbons living in stable polygynous groups
Naiqing Hu   +6 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Dispersal and philopatry in Central European Red Kites Milvus milvus

Journal of Ornithology, 2022
I. Literák   +8 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Recruitment and Natal Philopatry of Wood Ducks

Ecology, 1989
We tested whether hatch date and body mass at hatching affected recruitment of female Wood Ducks (Aix sponsa) to a breeding population in South Carolina. During six breeding seasons, day—old ducklings (n = 2945) were individually marked before leaving the nest.
Gary R. Hepp   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Regional philopatry of scalloped hammerhead sharks (Sphyrna lewini) to nursery areas in the Mexican Pacific

Hydrobiologia, 2022
José Miguel Rangel-Morales   +6 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Natal philopatry in bannertailed kangaroo rats

Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 1984
I describe prolonged retention of offspring in natal home ranges, or natal philopatry, in the bannertailed kangaroo rat Dipodomys spectabilis. Though weaning occurs at about one month of age, offspring shared natal burrows with their mothers for three to seven months, and 39% of surviving offspring remained within natal home ranges through reproductive
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A Test of Philopatry by Common Musk Turtles

The American Midland Naturalist, 2006
We tested philopatry by common musk turtles Sternotherus odoratus in a Virginia lake for 9 wk during summer 2003. Using unbaited crab pots, 10 trapping sites were established in the littoral zone around the lake perimeter and pots were sampled daily, yielding 560 turtle captures. Musk turtles trapped at the two sites separated by the greatest distance (
Katharine M. Andres   +1 more
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Adult philopatry and dispersal in the field vol Microtus agrestis

Oecologia, 1991
Using mark-recapture data, we related the movements of adult field voles to population density, sex ratio and population growth. Dispersal movements (defined as distances larger than 1 home range diameter) were few in both sexes; 4 out of 197 (2.0%) in males and 8 of 316 (2.5%) in females.
M, Sandell   +3 more
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Philopatry and Affiliation Among Red Colobus

Behaviour, 1994
AbstractTemminck's red colobus (Procolobus badius temminckii) living in the Abuko Nature Reserve, The Gambia, have more prominent female-female bonds and less prominent male-male bonds than has been described in most other female-transfer, male-resident groups.
openaire   +1 more source

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