Results 181 to 190 of about 3,983 (210)
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Monograph of the Spheniscidae [PDF]
A. JoshuaAkong'
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Polar Biology, 2010
Penguins (Aves: Spheniscidae) are pelagic, flightless seabirds, restricted to the southern hemisphere (Antarctic and sub-Antarctic areas, New Zealand, Australia, and nearby islands, as well as parts of South America and South Africa). They spend much of their life at sea, but return to islands and coasts to breed.
G. Guinard +4 more
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Penguins (Aves: Spheniscidae) are pelagic, flightless seabirds, restricted to the southern hemisphere (Antarctic and sub-Antarctic areas, New Zealand, Australia, and nearby islands, as well as parts of South America and South Africa). They spend much of their life at sea, but return to islands and coasts to breed.
G. Guinard +4 more
semanticscholar +4 more sources
2007
Family Spheniscidae Spheniscus magellanicus (Forster) Ascocotyle (Ascocotyle) felippei Travassos, 1928 Cardiocephaloides physalis (Lutz, 1927) Dubois, 1937 Cardiocephaloides sp. Ribeiroia ondatrae (Price, 1931)
Cremonte, Florencia, Drago, Fabiana B.
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Family Spheniscidae Spheniscus magellanicus (Forster) Ascocotyle (Ascocotyle) felippei Travassos, 1928 Cardiocephaloides physalis (Lutz, 1927) Dubois, 1937 Cardiocephaloides sp. Ribeiroia ondatrae (Price, 1931)
Cremonte, Florencia, Drago, Fabiana B.
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2018
Spheniscidae Spheniscus magellanicus (MGT): occurs in Chile, Argentina, Uruguay and Brazil. It departs from its breeding site in Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego in April and migrates at each austral winter to the mouth of the Plata River, Uruguayan coast and southern and southeastern Brazil north to the state of RJ (Sick, 1997; ICMBio, 2010).
Somenzari, Marina +20 more
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Spheniscidae Spheniscus magellanicus (MGT): occurs in Chile, Argentina, Uruguay and Brazil. It departs from its breeding site in Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego in April and migrates at each austral winter to the mouth of the Plata River, Uruguayan coast and southern and southeastern Brazil north to the state of RJ (Sick, 1997; ICMBio, 2010).
Somenzari, Marina +20 more
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178th Meeting of the Acoustical Society of America, 2019
The ear morphology of three penguin species (Aptenodytes forsteri, Pygoscelis papua and Spheniscus demersus) was analyzed using diffusible iodine-based contrast-enhanced computed tomography (diceCT).
S. Frahnert +5 more
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The ear morphology of three penguin species (Aptenodytes forsteri, Pygoscelis papua and Spheniscus demersus) was analyzed using diffusible iodine-based contrast-enhanced computed tomography (diceCT).
S. Frahnert +5 more
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The Energetics of Free-Living Little Penguins Eudyptula-Minor (Spheniscidae), During Molt
Australian Journal of Zoology, 1988Levels of circulating triglycerides and cholesterol in moulting little penguins in Tasmania were measured before, and throughout the moult. Levels at the initiation of moult were similar to those in breeding birds but increased by 2.5 times (triglycerides) and 1.8 times (cholesterol) during the moult.
R Gales, B Green, C Stahel
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?????????????? ???????????????????????? ?????????????????? (Spheniscidae, Natantes)
2022Penguins is an isolated group of specifically organized birds inhabiting the soutl hemisphere from tropical latitudes to the Antarctica. They live an aguatic life as a result of which the structure of their body changed and the ability to fly disappeared. They feed on fish, crustaceans, cephalopods. 17 species of penguins are known.
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Geobios, 2005
Abstract Modern penguins are typically small to medium-sized birds, and nearly all known modern specimens are smaller than the most archaic Paleogene relatives. Here we report an incomplete humerus, associated femur and tibiatarsus of a new spheniscid, Crossvallia unienwillia nov. gen.
Claudia P. Tambussi +3 more
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Abstract Modern penguins are typically small to medium-sized birds, and nearly all known modern specimens are smaller than the most archaic Paleogene relatives. Here we report an incomplete humerus, associated femur and tibiatarsus of a new spheniscid, Crossvallia unienwillia nov. gen.
Claudia P. Tambussi +3 more
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Se examinó el contenido estomacal de cuatro individuos de “Pingüino de Humboldt” Spheniscus humboldti, procedentes de Pampa Melchorita, los cuales se encontraron varados y muertos.
Brisaida María Alejandra Castañeda Farro
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