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Stomach content analysis in cephalopods: past research, current challenges, and future directions
Dietary descriptions based on stomach content are pervasive regardless of the biases concerning its methodology, statistics and descriptors. We here review different biases on the stomach content analysis, sample size, and indices used for cephalopods ...
Christian M Ibanez +2 more
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Respiratory Aspiration of Stomach Contents
Annals of Internal Medicine, 1977The aspiration of stomach contents is a common clinical problem of concern to all physicians. Its consequences are varied, depending on the amount and distribution of the aspirate, its pH, and the presence or absence of food, particulate matter, and bacteria.
J W, Wynne, J H, Modell
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Standardising fish stomach content analysis: The importance of prey condition
Comparisons of fish trophic data are limited by the range of methods used to quantify dietary composition, with scientists yet to agree on a standard approach to stomach content analysis.
Ronald Baker +2 more
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The Contents of an Ostrich’s Stomach
Visual Communication, 2004Giraffes have no vocal chords. The last animal in the dictionary is the Zyzzyva, a tropical weevil. A cow gives nearly 200,000 glasses of milk in her lifetime. Camels chew in a figure-of-eight pattern. Butterflies taste with their feet. All polar bears are left-handed. A group of herons is called a siege. A group of jellyfish is called a smack. A group
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Stomach Contents and the Time of Death
The American Journal of Forensic Medicine and Pathology, 1989The inspection of the contents of the stomach must be part of every postmortem examination because it may provide qualitative information concerning the nature of the last meal and the presence of abnormal constituents. Using it as a guide to the time of death, however, is theoretically unsound and presents many practical difficulties, although it may ...
Stanton Berg, Frederick A. Jaffe
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Fossilized Stomach Contents of a Sauropod Dinosaur
Science, 1964A mass of petrified plant and bone fragments found in the late Jurassic Morrison formation of southwestern Emery County, Utah, appears to be the stomach contents of a sauropod dinosaur, skeletal remains of which were associated with it. The sauropods may have been more or less omnivorous.
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THE FRACTIONAL EXAMINATION OF THE STOMACH CONTENTS
Journal of the American Medical Association, 1916Today the accepted method of obtaining the contents of the stomach is by means of the stomach tube, a rubber tube usually of 34 F. caliber and 80 cm. long, with bulb and funnel attached. It is a rather unpleasant event to the patient to have the tube in the throat, and, because of the unpleasantness, it cannot remain there any length of time.
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