Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_M - Marsupials Wild
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 3     41-60 of 93    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Marsupials Wild:     more detail
  1. Leadbetter's Possum: Bred To Be Wild by Des Hackett, 2006-03-06
  2. Thylacine: The Tragic Tale of the Tasmanian Tiger by David Owen, 2003-01
  3. Platypus by Ann Moyal, 2001-05-01
  4. Koalas 2005 Wall Calendar by Browntrout Publishers, 2004-06-15
  5. Koalas: Moving Portraits of Serenity

41. Poster La Vista:art Prints And Posters About Animals, Wild Animals (mostly Mamma
Poster La Vista Online art print and poster store. Animals, wild animals (mostly mammals), marsupials art prints and posters.
http://www.posterlavista.com/art/animals/wild_animals/marsupials/1/browse_sim_cl
Online art print and poster store home about us contact us terms ... artists Shopping cart is empty View art prints and posters by subject, genre, technique and other categories Subject of the artwork: Animals/Wild animals (mostly mammals)/Marsupials/ Wild animals (mostly mammals) (35) Elephants (4) Bears (13) Marsupials (2) Kangaroo (2) Giraffes (4) Mice, rodents (8) Monkeys, apes (7) ... Zebras (1) Found 2 art prints and posters de Crayencour Count with Animal Friends Price Dimensions 91x61 (cm) view details... de Crayencour Animal Friends Price Dimensions 51x41 (cm) view details...

42. SLAM! Sports: 2000 Summer Games: About Australia
Koalas are a favourite with tourists, but most do not get a chance to see one in the wild. These marsupials Wombats small, bearlike marsupials.
http://www.canoe.ca/2000GamesAboutAustrialia/thelandpg4.html
[an error occurred while processing this directive] Inside CANOE.CA SLAM! Sports Jam! Showbiz CANOE Travel CNEWS CANOE Money C-Health LIFEWISE AUTONET flirt.canoe.ca Newsstand SunTV WHAM! Gaming AllPop Free E-Mail shop.canoe.ca Jobboom CareerConnection Classified Extra Obituaries Today Restaurants Hotels Weather Horoscopes Lotteries Ecards Crossword Scoreboard News Ticker Sports Ticker TV Listings Movie Listings CLIVE Concerts Mutual Funds Stocks Feedback Index
SPORT INDEX Pick a sport Archery Badminton Baseball Basketball Boxing Canoe/Kayak Cycling Diving Equestrian Fencing Field Hockey Gymnastics Handball Judo Pentathlon Rowing Sailing Shooting Soccer Softball Swimming Synchro Table Tennis Taekwondo Tennis Triathlon Volleyball B.Volleyball Water Polo Weightlifting Wrestling Team Canada
What Canada Did

News

Columnists
...
Feedback

[an error occurred while processing this directive]
SEARCH 2000 Games
THE LAND
Australian Wildlife: More than Kangaroos and Koalas

The first animals that may come to mind when thinking about Australia are kangaroos and koalas. But Australia boasts a huge number of other unique animals. Australia's position as an island separate from the rest of the world has resulted in a broad range of animal and plant species. . For example, 400 of the 800 species of birds in Australia are found nowhere else in the world.

43. Action Plan For Australian Marsupials And Monotremes - Conservation Of Marsupial
Conservation of marsupials and Monotremes in Australia Of the 56 marsupial taxa listed as Extinct in the wild, Critically Endangered, Endangered or
http://www.deh.gov.au/biodiversity/threatened/action/marsupials/9.html
Skip navigation links About us Contact us Publications ... What's new Threatened Species and Threatened Ecological Communities You are here: DEH Home Biodiversity Threatened species ... Action plans
Action Plan for Australian Marsupials and Monotremes
Edited by
Stephanie Maxwell , Andrew A. Burbidge and Keith Morris
for the
Australasian Marsupial and Monotreme Specialist Group
IUCN Species Survival Commission
Published December 1996
ISBN 642 21395 X Contents Previous Next
Conservation of Marsupials and Monotremes in Australia
This Action Plan reviews the conservation status of 209 taxa of Australian monotremes and marsupials: one species and three subspecies of monotremes and 112 species and 93 subspecies of marsupials. For taxa with extra-limital distributions (e.g. Sminthopsis archeri and Phalanger intercastellanus ) we have allocated conservation status only on the basis of their Australian distribution and abundance. (Allocation of IUCN categories to these taxa for the 1996 Red Book took account of their total range, see below.) Australia accounts for about one third of the world's mammal species that have become extinct in modern times (Groombridge 1993). Within the marsupials, ten species and six subspecies are presumed to be extinct (

44. Action Plan For Australian Marsupials And Monotremes - Foreword
marsupials and monotremes have not fared well since Captain Cook arrived in Harewallaby) became extinct in the wild in 1991 and now exists as about 150
http://www.deh.gov.au/biodiversity/threatened/action/marsupials/2.html
Skip navigation links About us Contact us Publications ... What's new Threatened Species and Threatened Ecological Communities You are here: DEH Home Biodiversity Threatened species ... Action plans
Action Plan for Australian Marsupials and Monotremes
Edited by
Stephanie Maxwell , Andrew A. Burbidge and Keith Morris
for the
Australasian Marsupial and Monotreme Specialist Group
IUCN Species Survival Commission
Published December 1996
ISBN 642 21395 X Contents Previous Next
Foreword
Marsupials and monotremes have not fared well since Captain Cook arrived in Australia a little over 200 years ago. Australia accounts for about one third of all mammal extinctions world-wide since 1600 and most extinct Australian mammals were marsupials. Currently, at least ten species and six subspecies of Australian marsupials are extinct and many more are threatened with extinction. Fortunately, neither species of monotreme is threatened. These figures, startling as they are, do not reflect the degree to which increasing numbers of species are under pressure regionally. In the central deserts about one third of all mammal species have disappeared, while in some heavily cleared agricultural areas over one quarter of marsupial species are locally extinct. Some marsupials are extremely rare. The Northern Hairy-nosed Wombat, for example, has been reduced to about 67 individuals, of which possibly only 15 are breeding females, while the Mala (the central Australian subspecies of the Rufous Hare-wallaby) became extinct in the wild in 1991 and now exists as about 150 animals in captivity and as one experimental re-introduction, which consists of only about 10 wild animals. And the recently rediscovered Gilbert's Potoroo is known from less than 50 individuals.

45. Marsupials
Marvellous marsupials and Other Mammals Living in Australia. Koalas. By Dillon A dingo is a wild dog. It used to be tame. It is a mammal.
http://www.sturgeon.ab.ca/op/2SWP/marsupials.html
Marvellous Marsupials and Other Mammals Living in Australia By Dillon Koalas are marsupials, a special type of mammal. They are not bears. A koala has a life span of about 20 years. Koalas have big heads with large ears. A koala can get as big as 60 to 85 cm. The koala resembles a toy teddy bear. Most koalas live in forests. Koalas mostly live in Eastern Australia Koalas’ favorite food is eucalyptus. Koalas are fussy about what kind of eucalyptus they eat. When a baby koala is born, it can’t see or hear. When a baby koala is born, it crawls into its mother’s pouch. Its legs are just
taking shape. Most koalas climb and eat. Koalas sleep curled up on limbs of a tree firmly grasping the limbs with their feet. Fires are the biggest danger to koalas. Dingoes are a big danger to koalas. Koalas are interesting because they don’t drink. By Amy The kangaroo is a marsupial which means a pouched animal. The kangaroo has large ears, large powerful legs, short arms, clawed
hands and a small head with a long snout. It lives in New Zealand , and New Guinea , and in the grasslands of
Australia . It also lives in wooded areas and deserts. They graze in
grasslands. A group of kangaroos is called a mob.

46. Zazzle.com - Marsupials Posters, T-Shirts, And Cards
Products All Products Animals, Pets wild marsupials. marsupials. sort by, Most Popular Most Recent, show. title Red Kangaroo
http://www.zazzle.com/products/gallery/browse_results.asp?general_category_id=10

47. Zazzle.com - Marsupials T-Shirts
Products TShirts Apparel Animals, Pets wild marsupials. marsupials. sort by, Most Popular Most Recent, show. title MLC Doc. by monaco2275
http://www.zazzle.com/products/gallery/browse_results.asp?general_product_type=2

48. Arbovirus Infections - Blue Book: IDEAS - Victorian Government Health Informatio
Probably macropods (for example, kangaroos); possibly other marsupials and wild rodents. Transovarian transmission in the mosquito Aedes vigilax has been
http://www.health.vic.gov.au/ideas/bluebook/arbovirus.htm
Search Health home IDEAS home Blue book ... Contacts
Arbovirus infections
Page content: Victorian statutory requirements Infectious agents Ross river virus disease (Epidemic polyarthritis) Infectious agent ... Epidemic measures
Victorian statutory requirements
Group A for Australian arboencephalitis. Group B for other arbovirus infections. Prevention of mosquito breeding (section 29 of the Health (Infectious Diseases) Regulations 1990).
Infectious agents
Flaviviruses: Murray Valley Encephalitis (the cause of Australian arboencephalitis), Kunjin, Dengue. Alphaviruses: Ross River virus, Barmah Forest virus, Sindbis.
Ross river virus disease ( Epidemic polyarthritis
Infectious agent
Ross River virus (alphavirus). Sindbis and particularly Barmah Forest viruses (both alphaviruses) can cause similar illnesses.
Clinical features
A self-limited disease characterised by arthritis or arthralgia lasting from days to months and primarily affecting the wrist, knee, ankle and small joints of the extremities. Prolonged symptoms are common. In some cases, there may be remissions and exacerbations of decreasing intensity for years.

49. Ross River Virus Disease - Blue Book: IDEAS - Victorian Government Health Inform
in a primary mosquito–mammal cycle involving macropods (particularly the Western Grey kangaroo) and possibly other marsupials and wild rodents.
http://www.health.vic.gov.au/ideas/bluebook/rossriver.htm
Search Health home IDEAS home Blue book ... Contacts
Ross River virus disease
Page content: Overview Victorian statutory requirement Infectious agent Identification ... Outbreak measures
Overview
Arboviruses are viruses which are spread by the bite of arthropods, particularly mosquitoes. They are divided into alphaviruses and flaviviruses. Three infective alphaviruses include Ross River, Barmah Forest and Sindbis viruses.
These all have the capacity to cause a similar disease in humans characterised by fever, joint involvement and a rash. Molecular studies of epidemiologically distinct isolates of Ross River and Sindbis viruses have shown changes in isolates from different areas (distinct topotypes). This may explain varying disease patterns which sometimes occur in certain geographic locations and the differing transmissibility of some strains by different vector mosquitoes.
Victorian statutory requirement
Ross River virus infection (Group B disease) requires notification within five days of diagnosis. School exclusion is not required.

50. Distance Education Programs Australian Wildlife
Housing, care and nutrition of wild birds in captivity marsupials and other mammals. Jackson S Australian mammals Biology and captive management (2003)
http://www.pgf.edu.au/disted/wildlife.cfm
Quick Find PGF Home Vetbookshop About the Foundation Join the PGF Director's Circular Major Courses TimeOuts Distance Education Discussion Forum About Research Databases Research Databases Interactive Case Studies TimeOut Notes Log in to Restricted Pages 2005 Year Planner Help Search Contact Us Site Map Links Register for PGF Members Area Ophthalmology Case of the Month Radiograph of the Month Feline Medicine Case of the Month Monthly Newsletters Frequently Asked Questions
Veterinary Care of Australian Wildlife with Dr Andrea Reiss
Key Benefits:
  • Gain an appreciation of the unique biology, taxonomy, anatomy and physiology of Reptiles, Amphibans, Australian Mammals
    and Wild Birds.
    Understand the environmental, nutritional and husbandry requirements of Australian Wildlife.
    Professional confidence in handling specific healthcare issues from diagnosis through to treatment.

Introduction Thank you for your interest in the PGF 'Veterinary Care of Australian Wildlife' Distance Education program. I look forward to the opportunity to share some of the knowledge I have gained working with Australian wildlife, so that we can all learn how to better look after our unique fauna. The aim of this course is to provide participants with broad, practical knowledge of health, disease and veterinary care of the wildlife: marsupials, other mammals, birds, reptiles and amphibians. The focus will be on

51. 654-309 Field Biology Of Marsupials & Monotremes
654309 Field Biology of marsupials Monotremes trapping and handling of wild animals and an ability to integrate their observations with existing
http://www.unimelb.edu.au/HB/subjects/654-309.html
Subject information Search Index Faculty of Science Zoology
Prev 654-308 Conservation Biology
Next 654-312 Marine Ecology
Note
  • Experiments involving the use of animals are an essential part of this subject; exemption is not possible.
Credit Points Coordinator Dr S J Ward Prerequisites 654-204 and 654-203. Corequisites Semester (view timetable) Contact Four lectures, one tutorial and 60 hours practical work including a week-long field trip during the mid-semester break Subject Description This subject provides a field course to give an overall perspective on the biology of marsupials and monotremes. Students should learn to identify the major marsupial and monotreme families, and some of the techniques for studying these animals in captivity and in the wild. This subject also covers the basic taxonomic features of modern marsupials and monotremes, the separate radiations of marsupials in Australia and South America, and the relationships between the three groups of extant mammals. This subject builds upon existing generic skills, including an ability to approach and assimilate new knowledge from observation and the literature, and an ability to use that knowledge to evaluate and communicate results. Students should gain practical experience in observation, trapping and handling of wild animals and an ability to integrate their observations with existing literature and knowledge. Students should also develop skills in analysing, interpreting and evaluating data, and gain experience in writing a scientific report.

52. This Week In California Wild
The scientists think wild elephants parrot the sounds of other herd members to maintain social The advantage for leafeating marsupials isn t so clear.
http://www.calacademy.org/thisweek/archive/2005/20050330.html
CALIFORNIA ACADEMY OF SCIENCES March 30, 2005 Quick GUIDE Dinosaur Flesh Overdrawn Earth Elephant Mimics Octopus Walk ... CALIFORNIA WILD Stony Fossils Hide Soft T. rex Tissues Tyrannosaurus rex bones dug up in Montana have wowed scientists not for their size but for tiny blood vessels that still remain soft after 70 million years. The discovery marks the first time that actual tissues, not fossil impressions, have been recovered from a dinosaur, the scientists report in the journal Science. The cells would normally have stayed hidden inside the dinosaur's massive thigh bone. But workers had to break the femur in two places to cram it onto a helicopter sling to transport it from the field. A sharp-eyed scientist noticed that bits of soft tissue still clung to the bone's interior. When paleontologist Mary Schweitzer of North Carolina State University analyzed the tissue, she found bone marrow cells and rubbery veins. Analyses of large bones in other museum collections turned up similar traces of once-living cells. The find came as a shock because organic molecules weren't thought to last longer than about 100,000 years. The T. rex

53. This Week
This Week in California wild is a joint project of California wild,the science and Tammars, Australian marsupials that look like little kangaroos,
http://www.calacademy.org/thisweek/archive/2002/20020130.html
NATURAL SCIENCE HIGHLIGHTS January 30, 2002 SUBSCRIBE ARCHIVE This Week Quick Guide: Nitrogen Rethink Dinosaurs and Dust Scaring Wallabies Jellyfish Jamboree ... Life Light This Week in California Wild is a joint project of California Wild, the science and natural history magazine published by the California Academy of Sciences, and the Biodiversity Resource Center, a branch of the Academy's Library. Each week library and magazine staffs cull a wide variety of news sources to compile the most important and interesting natural science stories. To contact This Week in California Wild e-mail kwong@calacademy.org or write to Kathleen Wong, This Week in California Wild, California Academy of Sciences, Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, CA 94118 Stories adapted by
KATHLEEN WONG and JESSIE LANDAU
Pollution Alters Forest Diets
Scientists have long believed that forests grow in proportion to the amount of nitrogen present in the soil. Turns out they may have been deluding themselves. Scientists from North and South America, scientists at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York now say that massive additions of nitrogen to Northern Hemisphere forests in the form of fertilizer runoff may have radically altered the nitrogen cycle, or the way forests use the element. When they studied streams running through more than 100 pristine temperate forests in South America, they found that 30 percent of the nitrogen in the clean streams was the type derived from pollution, compared to an astronomical 70 percent in North American streams. The finding, published in the journal

54. Natural History: PLAY'S The THING - Marsupials At Play
Full text of the article, PLAY S the THING marsupials at play from Natural Observing them at various locations in the wild and visiting zoos and
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1134/is_6_108/ai_55127881
@import url(/css/us/style1.css); @import url(/css/us/searchResult1.css); @import url(/css/us/articles.css); @import url(/css/us/artHome1.css); Home
Advanced Search

IN free articles only all articles this publication Automotive Sports FindArticles Natural History July 1999
Content provided in partnership with
10,000,000 articles Not found on any other search engine. Related Searches
Marsupialia / Behavior
Play behavior in animals / Research Featured Titles for
ASA News
ASEE Prism Academe African American Review ... View all titles in this topic Hot New Articles by Topic Automotive Sports Top Articles Ever by Topic Automotive Sports PLAY'S the THING - marsupials at play Natural History July, 1999 by John A. Byers
Save a personal copy of this article and quickly find it again with Furl.net. It's free! Save it. Some young animals spend hours running, leaping, boxing, and wrestling, while others seem to have mush less fun. Could it be a case of mind over metabolism? I'll never forget my first look at a koala brain. I was spending a sabbatical year in Australia and at the time was visiting a study site northwest of Melbourne, where colleagues Tony Lee, Kath Handasyde, and Roger Martin had radio-collared several koalas. When one of the animals died, my biologist friends invited me to attend the necropsy. As the veterinarian lifted off the top of the koala's skull, I was amazed to see that the brain did not fill the space inside. The smooth cerebral hemisphereseach about as large and thick as the peel from a quarter of an orangewere so small that they did not meet at the midline, and when the veterinarian removed the brain and placed it on the table, the feeble hemispheres flopped apart, revealing the midbrain.

55. Ask: What Some Animals Will Do To Survive On An Island
Some marsupials are so unusual they are found in the wild on only one small island. The Tasmanian devil, for example, gets the first half of its name from
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa4128/is_200507/ai_n14686273
@import url(/css/us/style1.css); @import url(/css/us/searchResult1.css); @import url(/css/us/articles.css); @import url(/css/us/artHome1.css); Home
Advanced Search

IN free articles only all articles this publication Automotive Sports FindArticles Ask Jul/Aug 2005
Content provided in partnership with
10,000,000 articles Not found on any other search engine. Featured Titles for
Air Classics
Art Culinaire Ask CPSC Monitor ... View all titles in this topic Hot New Articles by Topic Automotive Sports Top Articles Ever by Topic Automotive Sports What Some Animals Will Do to Survive on an Island Ask Jul/Aug 2005 by Anderson, Margaret J
Save a personal copy of this article and quickly find it again with Furl.net. It's free! Save it. An island can be an especially safe place for some animals to live. It's like a castle with a moat around it to keep strangers and enemies out. But unless they fly or swim, animals cant leave, either. If things go wrong, they can be stuck, not safe, on their island. Maybe that's why some island animals can get, well, kind of weird. Babies in Their Pockets The bettong, the devil, and the eastern quoll. The bandicoot, the pademelon, and the potoroo. The names sound as if they belong in a video game or a fairy tale, but they are all the names of real animals that are found on Tasmania, an island that lies about 150 miles south of Australia.

56. The Dingo And The Tiger
Carrion, lizards, small mammals, Kangaroos, Devils, small marsupials, perhaps Dingos Semidomesticated; Symbiotic; Hunting partner; Companion; wild
http://www.convictcreations.com/animals/dingo.htm
Animals Wombat Echidna Yowie Koala Platypus Crocodile Devils Thylacine Dingo Blue-Tongue Birds Kangaroos Emu Snakes Funnelweb Feral cat Megalania Humans Flies Sharks Email
C C c
The Dingo

Unfairly judged? "On the evidence, juries have always convicted the dingo, but it is a largely circumstantial case," Dr Stephen Wroe It is hard to define whether the Dingo is a native or introduced species. Unlike the marsupials, it didn't evolve on the Australian continent - being introduced between 3,000 and 10,000 years ago. But since its introduction, the Australian continent has shaped the Dingo so that it it unlike any other canine around the world. Curiously, its behaviour has evolved to more closely resemble that of the Tasmanian Tiger , the marsupial wolf that it is said to have eliminated from mainland Australia. Although the Dingo sometimes hunts in pairs or small family groups, like the Tiger, Dingos are not by nature a pack dog. Perhaps the solitary life has reduced its need to communicate for like the Tiger, it can't bark. Like the Tiger, when hunting alone, it relies on endurance to wear down its prey. Considering its evolutions have taken it closer to the Tiger, and the Tiger had 4 million years to adapt to the Australian environment, it is somewhat of a mystery as to how it managed to eliminate the Tiger in such a short period of time. As a reproducer, because the Tiger was a marsupial, it was better adapted to the cyclic nature of Australian droughts. If there was a fight over food, the Tiger would win. Early colonist had noted the Tiger's ferocity to dogs and its ability to quickly kill them.

57. The Problems
Because marsupials are so abundant and diverse in Australia, The dingo, a wild doglike animal, is thought to have been introduced 3000 to 8000 years
http://www.biology.iastate.edu/intop/1Australia/Australia papers/Australia-Dilge
The Threatening of Australia's Marsupials By Amber Dilger, 1998 Extinctions and declines have not uniformly affected marsupial species. Terrestrial, medium-sized marsupials in the weight range of 35.0 g to 5.5 kg have proven to be more vulnerable, and omnivores and herbivores have declined to a greater extent than carnivores. Arboreal species such as possums and gliders and species that use rock piles for shelter have been less affected. Most problems with extinction and endangerment occur in the southern arid zone and the wheat belt of Western Australia; while the tropical north of Australia, the mesic northeast and coast of New South Wales, Tasmania, and numerous offshore islands have remained relatively unaffected by local extinctions (Short 1994).
The problems
Seven main hypotheses have been put forward to explain why species have declined and/or disappeared from various parts of Australia, and they include: 1) clearing for agriculture, 2) draining and salination of wetlands, 3) grazing and browsing by introduce animals, 4) changed fire regimes, 5) introduced predators, 6) disease, and 7) overkill by hunters (Kennedy 1992). By studying the history of threatened fauna and patterns of decline, experts have come to the conclusion that some of these hypotheses can be dismissed as not being a primary cause of declining populations. For instance, there is no direct evidence that disease has led to any mammal extinctions, though epidemics have been blamed for the decline of carnivorous marsupials in southeastern Australia and Tasmania at the turn of the century. Though Aborigines and early European settlers hunted many species for food, there is also no evidence that overkill by hunters caused any excessive declines or extinctions. Kangaroos once were one of the most widely hunted marsupials, but remain so abundant today to be considered a pest. The case of the thylacine (Tasmanian tiger) possibly presents a debatable exception because this carnivorous marsupial was treated as wolves once were in North America-with zealous overkill. It is presumed extinct, but there have been supposed sightings of it in Northern Tasmania.

58. Comparison Of Digestive System Adaptations Of Placental Ruminants And Herbivorou
Australian marsupials evolved special adaptations to survive in the harsh and There are, however, many wild ruminants found on most continents,
http://www.biology.iastate.edu/intop/1Australia/04papers/keuderDigSys.htm
Comparison of Digestive System Adaptations of Placental Ruminants and the Herbivorous Marsupials of Australia By Amanda Kreuder Biomes of Australia April 14, 2004
Abstract The marsupial animal species that have evolved on the isolated continent of Australia are unique compared to the rest of the animal kingdom in many ways due to the harsh and distinctive environment found on the continent. The major area of marsupial biology that distinguishes them from all other eutherian mammals is their mode of reproduction. However, it can be said that there are many other areas in which unique differences can be seen between marsupials and eutherian mammals; one such area of adaptation is in the anatomy and physiology of digestion, which distinguishes them from many other similar animals worldwide. The foregut fermenters, such as kangaroos and wallabies, evolved in regions of poor forage quality to be able to extract the most nutrients out of the poorest feeds. Fermentation in the foregut has many advantages over hindgut fermentation, which is seen in marsupials such as the koalas and wombats. The anatomy and physiology of the digestive tracts of both types of fermenters, however, are uniquely suited to their individual modes of nutrition.

59. Altweb-ANZCAART Factsheets
It is well to remember that marsupials are wild animals and as such are very susceptible to being stressed by whatever is happening to them capture,
http://altweb.jhsph.edu/publications/anzccart/marsupial.htm

60. ScienceDaily -- Browse Topics: Science/Environment/Biodiversity/Conservation/Mam
Action Plan for Australian marsupials and Monotremes Reviews the wild Camel Protection Foundation - Conservation of the wild Bactrian camel details
http://www.sciencedaily.com/directory/Science/Environment/Biodiversity/Conservat
@import "/styles/navbar.css"; @import "/styles/tabStyles.css"; Set home page Bookmark site Add search
Latest News
... Email to friend
Text Size A A A Front Page ... Conservation : Mammals
Subtopics
See Also:
Search Google:
NOAA To Study Effects Of Hurricane Katrina; Biologists Will Look At Marine Resources And Contaminants (September 22, 2005) full story Experts Develop Global Action Plan To Save Amphibians Facing Extinction (September 21, 2005) full story New Techniques Study The Brain's Chemistry, Neuron By Neuron (September 12, 2005) full story Scientists Get First Glimpse At How Plants, Most Animals Repair UV-damaged DNA (September 12, 2005) full story Rutgers-Newark Researchers Link Individual Preferences To Neuronal Activity In Brain (September 6, 2005) full story Otter Adaptations: How Do Otters Remain Sleek And Warm (September 4, 2005) full story New Insights Into The Software Of Life (September 4, 2005) full story Mouse Genome Much More Complex Than Expected (September 3, 2005)

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 3     41-60 of 93    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20

free hit counter