Pages that link to "Item:Q50322"
From geokb
The following pages link to Neal Woodman, Ph.D. (Q50322):
Displayed 50 items.
- Rediscovery of Enders's small-eared shrew, Cryptotis endersi (Insectivora: Soricidae), with a redescription of the species (Q143740) (← links)
- Designation of the type species of Musaraneus Pomel, 1848 (Mammalia: Soricomorpha: Soricidae) (Q144387) (← links)
- Cryptotis meridensis (Q144439) (← links)
- Rediscovery of the type series of the Acadian Masked Shrew, Sorex acadicus Gilpin, 1865 (Mammalia: Soricidae), with the designation of a neotype and a reevaluation of its taxonomic status (Q144909) (← links)
- Skeletal injuries in small mammals: a multispecies assessment of prevalence and location (Q144989) (← links)
- Molecular systematics and biodiversity of the Cryptotis mexicanus group (Eulipotyphla: Soricidae): two new species from Honduras supported (Q145195) (← links)
- Rule reversal: Ecogeographical patterns of body size variation in the common treeshrew (Mammalia, Scandentia) (Q145489) (← links)
- A new addition to the embalmed fauna of ancient Egypt: Güldenstaedt’s White-toothed Shrew, Crocidura gueldenstaedtii (Pallas, 1811) (Mammalia: Eulipotyphla: Soricidae) (Q146014) (← links)
- Distributional records of shrews (Mammalia, Soricomorpha, Soricidae) from Northern Central America with the first record of Sorex from Honduras (Q147403) (← links)
- A new species of <i>Cryptotis</i> (Mammalia, Eulipotyphla, Soricidae) from the Sierra de Perijá, Venezuelan-Colombian Andes (Q147830) (← links)
- Functional skeletal morphology and its implications for locomotory behavior among three genera of myosoricine shrews (Mammalia: Eulipotyphla: Soricidae) (Q147858) (← links)
- Who invented the mule deer (<i>Odocoileus hemionus</i>)? On the authorship of the fraudulent 1812 journal of Charles Le Raye (Q148080) (← links)
- Variation in the myosoricine hand skeleton and its implications for locomotory behavior (Eulipotyphla: Soricidae) (Q148130) (← links)
- The Stephen H. Long Expedition (1819?1820), Titian R. Peale?s field illustrations, and the lost holotypes of the North American shrews Sorex brevicaudus Say and Sorex parvus Say (Mammalia: Soricidae) from the Philadelphia Museum (Q149011) (← links)
- See how they ran: Morphological and functional aspects of skeletons from ancient Egyptian shrew mummies (Eulipotyphla: Soricidae: Crocidurinae) (Q149363) (← links)
- Shrews (Eulipotyphla, Soricidae) of Guatemala /Musarañas (Eulipotyphla, Soricidae) de Guatemala (Q149879) (← links)
- Skeletal indicators of locomotor adaptations in shrews (Q150080) (← links)
- Environmental implications of Ptolemaic Period rodents and shrews from the Sacred Falcon Necropolis at Quesna, Egypt (Mammalia: Muridae and Soricidae) (Q150321) (← links)
- Taxonomic boundaries in Lesser Treeshrews (Scandentia, Tupaiidae: Tupaia minor) (Q150530) (← links)
- Latin American research libraries in natural history: a survey (Q152548) (← links)
- Skeletal variation and taxonomic boundaries among mainland and island populations of the common treeshrew (Mammalia: Scandentia: Tupaiidae) (Q152593) (← links)
- Island history affects faunal composition: the treeshrews (Mammalia: Scandentia: Tupaiidae) from the Mentawai and Batu Islands, Indonesia (Q154802) (← links)
- The Overmyer mastodon (Mammut americanum) from Fulton County, Indiana (Q155495) (← links)
- Rafinesque’s Mammals (Q227877) (← links)
- Survival of the Least Fit: Incidence of Physical Trauma in a Wild Mammal Community (Q227878) (← links)
- Diversity and Biogeography of Treeshrews (Q227879) (← links)
- Biodiversity of North American Mammals (Q227880) (← links)
- How Mammals Move: Locomotory Function in the Soricidae (Q227881) (← links)
- What Ancient Egyptian Shrew Mummies Reveal About Small Mammal Responses to Climate Change (Q227883) (← links)
- New records of Merriam’s Shrew (Sorex merriami) from western North Dakota (Q233842) (← links)
- Can they dig it? Functional morphology and semifossoriality among small-eared shrews, genus Cryptotis (Mammalia, Soricidae) (Q236408) (← links)
- Pranked by Audubon: Constantine S. Rafinesque's description of John James Audubon's imaginary Kentucky mammals (Q238216) (← links)
- A new species of small-eared shrew in the Cryptotis thomasi species group from Costa Rica (Mammalia: Eulipotyphla: Soricidae) (Q238950) (← links)
- Rafinesque's Sicilian whale, Balena gastrytis (Q239755) (← links)
- This shrew is a jumping mouse (Mammalia, Dipodidae): Sorex dichrurus Rafinesque 1833 is a synonym of Zapus hudsonius (Zimmermann 1780) (Q245616) (← links)
- At the foot of the shrew: Manus morphology distinguishes closely-related Cryptotis goodwini and Cryptotis griseoventris (Mammalia: Soricidae) in Central America (Q247244) (← links)
- Skeletal morphology of the forefoot in shrews (Mammalia: Soricidae) of the genus Cryptotis, as revealed by digital x-rays (Q249275) (← links)
- Patterns of morphological variation amongst semifossorial shrews in the highlands of Guatemala, with the description of a new species (Mammalia, Soricomorpha, Soricidae) (Q250299) (← links)
- Nomenclatural notes and identification of small-eared shrews (Mammalia: genus Cryptotis) from Cobán, Guatemala, in The Natural History Museum, London (Q251832) (← links)
- Coming of age: Morphometric variation in the hand skeletons of juvenile and adult Lesser Treeshrews (Scandentia: Tupaiidae: Tupaia minor Günther, 1876) (Q253563) (← links)
- A new species of tree hyrax (Procaviidae: Dendrohyrax) from West Africa and the significance of the Niger–Volta interfluvium in mammalian biogeography (Q253820) (← links)
- Shrews, rats, and a polecat in "the pardoner’s tale" (Q256145) (← links)
- The relevance of a type locality: The case of Mephitis interrupta Rafinesque, 1820 (Carnivora: Mephitidae) (Q257365) (← links)
- The green mole, Astromycter prasinatus T. M. Harris, 1825 (Mammalia: Eulipotyphla: Talpidae): An origin story (Q258892) (← links)
- Two new species of shrews (Soricidae) from the western highlands of Guatemala (Q259107) (← links)
- Taxonomic evaluation of the three “type” specimens of the fringe-footed shrew, Sorex fimbripes Bachman, 1837 (Mammalia: Soricidae) and recommended nomenclatural status of the name (Q261378) (← links)
- The type localities of the mule deer, Odocoileus hemionus (Rafinesque, 1817), and the Kansas white-tailed deer, Odocoileus virginianus macrourus (Rafinesque, 1817), are not where we thought they were (Q262129) (← links)
- History and dating of the publication of the Philadelphia (1822) and London (1823) editions of Edwin James's Account of an expedition from Pittsburgh to the Rocky Mountains (Q263075) (← links)
- Shippingport, Kentucky, is the type locality for the white-footed mouse, Peromyscus leucopus (Rafinesque, 1818) (Mammalia: Rodentia: Cricetidae) (Q264158) (← links)
- “Mostri Marini”: Constantine S. Rafinesque's names for three of Antonino Mongitore's Sicilian whales (Q268882) (← links)