Summary[edit] Description: Brush rabbit. Date: 3 November 2015, 12:41. Source: Brush rabbit. Author: Melissa McMasters from Memphis, TN, United States.
Title: Right whaling in Behering Straits & Arctic Ocean with its varieties Physical description: 1 print. Notes: This record contains unverified data from PGA shelflist card.; Associated name on shelflist card: Bufford.
Summary[edit] Description: Français : Illustration originale associée à la description de la mangouste de Dybowski (Dologale dybowskii) et publiée dans les Nouvelles archives du Muséum d'histoire naturelle, série 3, tome 6. Date: 1894. Source: Description d'une nouvelle espèce de mammifère du genre Crossarchus et considérations sur la répartition géographique des crossarques rayés », Nouvelles archives du Muséum d'histoire naturelle, 3e série, vol. 6, 1894, p. 121-134 https://biodiversitylibrary.org/page/36860657. Author: Eugène de Pousargues.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Illustration of the face of the highland mangabey (Lophocebus kipunji). The artist's reconstruction was drawn from research video taken by C. L. Ehardt in Tanzania in the Ndundulu Forest of the Udzungwa Mountains and in the Southern Highlands. Date: 16 May 2005, 03:01:09. Source: http://www.nsf.gov/news/news_images.jsp?cntn_id=104165&org=BCS. Author: Zina Deretsky, National Science Foundation.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Metaphase spread of the Viscacha rat (Tympanoctomys barrerae, 2n = 102), the species with the highest chromosome number. Date: 12 October 2011. Source: Graphodatsky, Alexander S; Trifonov, Vladimir A; Stanyon, Roscoe (2011). "The genome diversity and karyotype evolution of mammals". Molecular Cytogenetics 4 (22). Author: Graphodatsky et al. Other versions: Original file.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Platyrrhinus vittatus, described as Vampyrops vittatus in text. Date: 1904. Source: The Land and Sea Mammals of Middle America and the West Indies, Issue 2. Author: Daniel Giraud Elliot.
The video demonstrates a model of the Cetotherium riabinini skeleton - one of the smallest whales that existed on our planet. This whale occurred in the territory of modern Ukraine in the late Miocene (9.8 - 7.6 million years ago), when the continental sea (the eastern Paratethys) was poured here. The head of the Cetotherium was a third of its length, and the skeleton itself reaches 2.7 meters long. Probably, this whale was a fish eater. The skeleton was found in 1930 near Mykolaiv, and in 1948 it was defined as a new species by Hofstein, I. D. However, a detailed description of this whale was made by Pavlo Gol'din with colleagues only in 2013. Currently, a specimen is exhibited at the National Museum of Natural History at the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, where it was scanned using a surface scanner. The Sternum, a hyoid bone, and reduced pelvic bones were scanned using computed tomography, as result, they are discolored. Based on scans, a 3D skeleton model was made.
Summary[edit] Description: English:.mw-parser-output.smallcaps{font-variant:small-caps}Fig. 84.—Thick tailed Opossum. Didelphys crassicaudata. × 1⁄5. Nowadays this speices is referred to genus Lutreolina. Date: 1902. Source: The Cambridge Natural History, Volume X—Mammalia. Author: Frank E. Beddard.
Summary[edit] Description: English: Chaetodipus californicus - California Pocket Mouse. Date: 29 October 2016. Source: This file was derived from: Chaetodipus californicus.jpg: . Author: File:Chaetodipus californicus.jpg: iNaturalist user: dominic derivative work: Jacek555. : This is a retouched picture, which means that it has been digitally altered from its original version. Modifications: cropped, rotated. The original can be viewed here: Chaetodipus californicus.jpg: . Modifications made by Jacek555.