Showing 241 - 260 results of 596 for search '"Mammal"', query time: 0.05s Refine Results
  1. 241

    Les restes animaux du sanctuaire gaulois et antique de Mirebeau-sur-Bèze (Côte-d’Or) (fouilles 2001-2007) by Patrice Méniel

    Published 2016-12-01
    “…The fauna, dominated by domestic mammals (beef, pork and mutton) shows enough little changes during this long sequence. …”
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  2. 242

    Digit Tip Injuries: Current Treatment and Future Regenerative Paradigms by Travis J. Miller, Peter L. Deptula, Gregory M. Buncke, Zeshaan N. Maan

    Published 2019-01-01
    “…However, it is known that humans and other mammals retain the ability to regenerate the distal phalanges of the digits after amputation. …”
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  3. 243

    Mange in Companion Animals by Emma N. I. Weeks, Phillip E. Kaufman

    Published 2012-12-01
    “…Mange is a persistent skin condition of mammals caused by infestation with parasitic mites. …”
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  4. 244

    Human Bot Fly, torsalo (Central America), moyocuil (Mexico), berne (Brasil), mucha (Colombia, mirunta (Peru), and ura (Argentina, Paraguay, and Uruguay), Dermatobia hominis (Linnae... by Stephanie K. Larrick, C. Roxanne Rutledge-Connelly

    Published 2008-10-01
    “…It describes this large, densely haired fly native to Central and South America, which, in its larval stage, infests the skin of mammals causing painful pustules, a condition known as myiasis. …”
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  5. 245

    Role of the Endocannabinoid System in the Central Regulation of Nonmammalian Vertebrate Reproduction by Erika Cottone, Valentina Pomatto, Patrizia Bovolin

    Published 2013-01-01
    “…Since studies performed in animal models other than mammals might provide further insight into the biology of these signalling molecules, in the present paper we review the comparative data pointing toward the endocannabinoid involvement in the reproductive control of non-mammalian vertebrates, focussing in particular on the central regulation of teleost and amphibian reproduction. …”
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  6. 246

    Compounds Involved in the Invasive Characteristics of <i>Lantana camara</i> by Hisashi Kato-Noguchi, Midori Kato

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…Possible evidence of the compounds involved in the defense functions of <i>L. camara</i> against natural enemies, such as herbivore mammals and insects, parasitic nematodes, pathogenic fungi and bacteria, and the allelochemicals involved in its allelopathy against neighboring competitive plant species, have accumulated in the literature over three decades. …”
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  7. 247

    Systematic review of innate immune responses against Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex infection in animal models by Luisa Maria Nieto Ramirez, Carolina Mehaffy, Karen Marie Dobos

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…BackgroundMycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) complex (MTBC) includes ten species that affect mammals and pose a significant global health concern. …”
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  8. 248

    The neuroendocrine stress-response in insects: the history of the development of the concept by M. A. Eremina, N. E. Gruntenko

    Published 2017-12-01
    “…Nevertheless, since the early 1980s, enough evidence of the development of stress reaction in insects has been gathered, which emphasizes the conservative nature of the stress reaction in mammals and insects. The similarity in the neurochemical and physiological changes in invertebrates and vertebrates in response to a stressful influence indicates that the response to a stressor is a complex of ancient mechanisms preserved in evolution. …”
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  9. 249

    Synapsis and recombination of autosomes and sex chromosomes in two terns (Sternidae, Charadriiformes, Aves) by A. P. Lisachov, L. P. Malinovskaya, A. V. Druzyaka, P. M. Borodin, A. A. Torgasheva

    Published 2017-04-01
    “…However, most original data were obtained from mammals. The mammals show high karyological variability, which strongly influences the recombination patterns. …”
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  10. 250

    Ladakh, kingdom of sustainable development? by David Goeury

    Published 2010-04-01
    “…Certain large emblematic mammals like the snow leopard have enabled the legitimisation of a policy that is based on the participation of local inhabitants rather than on their eviction to areas outside the sanctuaries. …”
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  11. 251

    Facts about Wildlife Diseases: Pseudorabies by Samantha Wisely

    Published 2014-09-01
    “… Pseudorabies primarily affects swine, but cattle, sheep and other mammals are susceptible to infection. Humans are not at risk. …”
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  12. 252

    Facts about Wildlife Diseases: Pseudorabies by Samantha Wisely

    Published 2014-09-01
    “… Pseudorabies primarily affects swine, but cattle, sheep and other mammals are susceptible to infection. Humans are not at risk. …”
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    Article
  13. 253

    Mosquito-transmitted Highlands J virus in Florida by C. Roxanne Rutledge-Connelly

    Published 2004-11-01
    “…It has a low pathogenicity in mammals and is rarely seen in humans or horses. There have been outbreaks reported in penned birds but the symptoms are mild compared to EEE. …”
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  14. 254

    THE MAMMALIAN CIRCADIAN CLOCK: GENE REGULATORY NETWORK AND THEIR COMPUTER ANALYSIS by O. A. Podkolodnaya, N. N. Podkolodnaya, N. L. Podkolodnyy

    Published 2015-01-01
    “…This paper presents the results of the reconstruction and analysis of gene regulatory network of the circadian clock in mammals. Application of graph theory methods makes it possible to analyze the structure of the gene network and identify the central component of circadian clock regulation, which includes the basic regulatory circuits passing through the key element of the circadian clock, the Clock/Bmal1 protein. …”
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  15. 255

    Mosquito-transmitted Highlands J virus in Florida by C. Roxanne Rutledge-Connelly

    Published 2004-11-01
    “…It has a low pathogenicity in mammals and is rarely seen in humans or horses. There have been outbreaks reported in penned birds but the symptoms are mild compared to EEE. …”
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    Article
  16. 256

    Effects of Spine Motion on Foot Slip in Quadruped Bounding by Dongliang Chen, Ningjie Li, Guifang Liu, Lei Chen, Yongyuan Wang, Chong Liu, Bo Zhuang

    Published 2018-01-01
    “…First, three simplified sagittal plane models of quadruped mammals were studied in symmetric bounding. The first model’s trunk allowed no relative motion, the second model allowed only trunk bend, and the third model allowed both bend and translation. …”
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  17. 257

    MEIOSIS: HOW TO HALVE THE CHROMOSOME NUMBER by A. A. Torgasheva

    Published 2014-12-01
    “…This review presents the current notion of the major meiotic events by examples of yeast and mammals. Particular attention is paid to processes underlying chromosome synapsis and recombination, as well as monoorientation of sister kinetochores in the first division, the key features distinguishing meiosis from mitosis and ensuring chromosome number reduction.…”
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  18. 258

    Global Stability and Hopf Bifurcation for Gause-Type Predator-Prey System by Shuang Guo, Weihua Jiang

    Published 2012-01-01
    “…The delay can lead to periodic solutions, which is consistent with the law of growth for birds and some mammals. Further, an explicit formula is given which determines the stability of the bifurcating periodic solutions theoretically and the existence of periodic solutions is displayed by numerical simulations.…”
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  19. 259

    Photoperiodic Programming of the SCN and Its Role in Photoperiodic Output by Michael C. Tackenberg, Douglas G. McMahon

    Published 2018-01-01
    “…Though the seasonal response of organisms to changing day lengths is a phenomenon that has been scientifically reported for nearly a century, significant questions remain about how photoperiod is encoded and effected neurobiologically. In mammals, early work identified the master circadian clock, the suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN), as a tentative encoder of photoperiodic information. …”
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  20. 260

    Brown Dog Tick, Rhipicephalus sanguineus Latreille (Arachnida: Acari: Ixodidae) by Cynthia C. Lord

    Published 2004-04-01
    “…Although R. sanguineus will feed on a wide variety of mammals, dogs are the preferred host in the US and appear to be required to develop large infestations. …”
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