DOCSLIB.ORG
Explore
Sign Up
Log In
Upload
Search
Home
» Tags
» Nesophontes
Nesophontes
Solenodon Genome Reveals Convergent Evolution of Venom in Eulipotyphlan Mammals
North American Animals Extinct in the Holocene
I1/Erwnjimllseltm PUBLISHED by the AMERICAN MUSEUM of NATURAL HISTORY CENTRAL PARK WEST at 79TH STREET, NEW YORK 24, N.Y
Venom Use in Eulipotyphlans: an Evolutionary and Ecological Approach
Late Quaternary Fossil Mammals and Last Occurrence Dates from Caves at Barahona, Puerto Rico Donald A
Rafting Mammals Or Drifting Islands?: Biogeography of the Greater Antillean Insectivores Nesophontes and Solenodon
Encyclopedia of Extinct Animals.Pdf
Tropicalis Dentition
Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections
Hedgehogs, Shrews, Moles, and Solenodons (Eulipotyphla)
Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections
The Taxonomy of the Extant Solenodontidae (Mammalia
Anthropogenic Extinction Dominates Holocene Declines of West Indian Mammals
“Insectivores”
Aprasiainis87 FAMILY
Roseina Woods Phd Thesis
A Note on Sexual Dimorphism in Nesophontes Edithae (Mammalia: Insectivora), an Extinct Island-Shrew from Puerto Rico Donald A
Listado Actualizado De Animales Extintos (Nivel Global)
Top View
Haiti Country Analysis of Tropical Forestry and Biodiversity
Requiem /Etemam the Last Five Hundred Years of Mammalian Species Extinctions
Evolutionary History of the Nesophontidae, the Last Unplaced Recent Mammal Family
Endocranial Morphology of the Extinct Antillean Shrew Nesophontes (Lipotyphla: Nesophontidae) from Natural and Digital Endocasts of Cuban Taxa
Biology of Extinction: Alien Species As a Driver of Recent Extinctions
A Comparative Analysis of Patterns of Recent Extinction in Birds and Mammals
New Specimens of Late Quaternary Extinct
UC Berkeley UC Berkeley Electronic Theses and Dissertations
Late Quaternary Fossil Mammals and Last Occurrence Dates from Caves at Barahona, Puerto Rico Donald A
Annual Meeting 2004
Mesozoic Origin for West Indian Insectivores
(Capromys and Geocapromys) from the Cayman Islands
Rapid Size Change Associated with Intra-Island Evolutionary Radiation in Extinct Caribbean “Island-Shrews”