A quantitative comparative analysis of the <i>Four Medical Tantras</i> of Tibetan medicine and the <i>As⋅ṭā</i> n ˙ <i>ga Hṛdaya Saṃhitā</i> of Ayurveda: a focus on diet, medicinal materials, and preparations. [PDF]
Garang Z +12 more
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Multi-omics reveal the gut microbiota-mediated severe foraging environment adaption of small wild ruminants in the Three-River-Source National Park, China. [PDF]
Liu H +11 more
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Physiological and Genetic Basis of High-Altitude Indigenous Animals' Adaptation to Hypoxic Environments. [PDF]
Zhao P, Li S, He Z, Ma X.
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Editorial: Parasites at the one health interface. [PDF]
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Subtypes of Blastocystis in Tibetan Antelope (Pantholops hodgsonii)
Research in Veterinary ScienceBlastocystis is a protist that is distributed in the gut tract of humans and animals. However, the reports about Blastocystis infection in Tibetan antelope are scarce. We collected 173 Tibetan antelope feces samples from Xinjiang, Qinghai and Xizang, and amplified the SSU rRNA gene of 600 bp region of Blastocystis in our research.
Si-Yuan Qin, Nian-Yu Xue, Yang Zou
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Group size effects on foraging and vigilance in migratory Tibetan antelope
Behavioural Processes, 2007Large group sizes have been hypothesized to decrease predation risk and increase food competition. We investigated group size effects on vigilance and foraging behaviour during the migratory period in female Tibetan antelope Pantholops hodgsoni, in the Kekexili Nature Reserve of Qinghai Province, China.
Xinming Lian, Tongzuo Zhang
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Overcoming extinction: understanding processes of recovery of the Tibetan antelope
Since the middle of the 20th century, the Tibetan antelope (Pantholops hodgsonii) has been poached for its wool to make luxury shawls, shahtoosh. This direct overexploitation caused a drastic decline in their population, with a loss of more than 90% compared to the baseline population a few decades ago.
Camille Leclerc +2 more
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Observations on the Tibetan antelope (Pantholops hodgsoni)
Applied Animal Behaviour Science, 1991Abstract Tibetan antelope or chiru (Pantholops hodgsoni) favor flat to rolling terrain at 4000–5000 m, an elevation where vegetation is scant and patchy. The species still ranges over ∼800 000 km2 of the Tibetan Plateau, and about half of this area remains devoid of people.
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Responses of Tibetan antelope population to environment changes during the Holocene
Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, PalaeoecologyTibetan antelope (Chiru, Pantholops hodgsonii), an endemic species of the Tibet Plateau, inhabits the open alpine and desert steppe areas ranging 3250 to 5500 m altitude. In the past decades, the antelope population has been significantly affected by human activities, including massive illegal hunting, followed by strict protection policies and ...
Qiang Qu, Xiaohuan Hou, Kejia Ji
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