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D'Anastasio, Ruggero
(detail)
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| |
|
2004 |
Idiopathic hyperostosis: epidemiology and phylogeny.
Jour. Paleopathology
16(3): 133-145. 3 tabs. 7 figs.
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D'Orbigny, Charles Dessalines
(detail)
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| |
|
1840 |
Keepsake d'histoire naturelle. Description des mammifères.
Paris, Bazouge-Pigoreau:
i-xlviii.
–Consists of the "Introduction", apparently the only part of the projected work ever published. I cannot explain the citation in Palmer (1904: 398), referring to a mention of "Monatus" on pp. 256-257 and pl. 41, fig. 2.
|
x |
|
Dahl, Knut
(detail)
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| |
|
1926 |
In savage Australia: an account of a hunting and collecting expedition to Arnhem Land and Dampier Land.
London, Philip Allan:
xii + 326. Illus.
–Later ed.: Boston, Houghton Mifflin, 1927. States that dugongs "were by no means infrequent" in Roebuck Bay (266).
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Dailey, Murray D.; Brownell, Robert L., Jr.
(detail)
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| |
|
1972 |
A checklist of marine mammal parasites. In: S. H. Ridgway (ed.), Mammals of the sea: biology and medicine.
Springfield (Illinois), Charles C Thomas (812 pp.):
528-589.
–Sir. parasites, 561-562.
|
x |
|
Dailey, Murray D.; Vogelbein, Wolfgang; Forrester, Donald J.
(detail)
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| |
|
1988 |
Moniligerum blairi n. g., n. sp. and Nudacotyle undicola n. sp. (Trematoda: Digenea) from the West Indian manatee, Trichechus manatus L.
Syst. Parasitol.
11(2): 159-163. 5 figs.
–The new taxa are described from a single manatee killed by a boat in Hobe Sound, Martin County, Florida.
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Dal Piaz, Giorgio
(detail)
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| |
|
1922 |
L'Istituto Geologico dell'Università di Padova nel 1922. Notizie sommarie.
Mem. Ist. Geol. Univ. Padova
6(2): 1-15. 8 figs.
–Skull of Halitherium, 12-13.
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Daley, B.; Griggs, P.; Marsh, Helene D.
(detail)
|
| |
|
2008 |
Exploiting marine wildlife in Queensland: the commercial dugong and marine turtle fisheries, 1847-1969.
Australian Economic History Review
48(3): 227-265.
|
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Dall, William Healey
(detail)
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| |
|
1891 |
Notes on an original manuscript chart of Bering's expedition of 1725-1730, and on an original manuscript chart of his second expedition; together with a summary of a journal of the first expedition, kept by Peter Chaplin, and now first rendered into English from Bergh's Russian version.
Rept. U.S. Coast & Geodetic Survey
1890: 759-774. Pls. 69-70.
–For discussion of the chart of the second expedition and its picture of Steller's sea cow, see L. Stejneger (1936: 516ff.).
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Dammermann, Karel Willem
(detail)
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|
1929 |
Resultats zoologiques de l'expedition scientifique neerlandaise à l'île de Buru en 1921 et 1922. In: Boeroe-Expeditie ....
Buitenzorg, Archipel Drukkerij.
–Dugong, 19-20.
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Dampier, William
(detail)
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|
1703-05 |
A new voyage round the world. Describing particularly, the Isthmus of America, several coasts and islands in the West Indies, the Isles of Cape Verde, the passage by Terra del Fuego, the South Sea coasts of Chili, Peru, and Mexico; the isle of Guam one of the Ladrones, Mindanao, and other Philippine and East India islands near Cambodia, China, Formosa, Luconia, Celebes, &c. New Holland, Sumatra, Nicobar Isles; the Cape of Good Hope, and Santa Hellena. Their soil, rivers, harbours, plants, fruits, animals, and inhabitants. Their customs, religion, government, trade, &c. Vol. I. [Ed. 5, corrected, 1703.]
Voyages and descriptions Vol. II. In three parts, viz. 1. A supplement of the Voyage round the World, describing the countries of Tonquin, Achin, Malacca, &c. their products, inhabitants, manners, trade, policy, &c. 2. Two voyages to Campeachy; with a description of the coasts, products, inhabitants, logwood-cutting, trade, &c. of Jucatan, Campeachy, New Spaine, &c. 3. A discourse of trade-winds, breezes, storms, seasons of the year, tides and currents of the torrid zone throughout the world: with an account of Natal in Africk, its products, Negro's, &c.... To which is added, a general index to both volumes. [Ed. 3, 1705.]
A voyage to New Holland, &c. in the year, 1699. Wherein are described the Canary Islands, the Isles of Mayo and St. Jago. The Bay of All Saints, with the forts and town of Bahia in Brazil. Cape Salvadore. The winds on the Brazilian coast. Abrolho-Shoals. A table of all the variations observ'd in this voyage. Occurrences near the Cape of Good Hope. The course to New Holland. Shark's Bay. The isles and coast, &c. of New Holland. Their inhabitants, manners, customs, trade, &c. Their harbours, soil, beasts, birds, fish, &c. Trees, plants, fruits, &c. Illustrated with several maps and draughts; also divers birds, fishes, and plants, not found in this part of the world, curiously ingraven on copper-plates. Vol. III. [Ed. 1, 1703.]
London, James Knapton (3 vols.):
Vol. 1: vi + 550. Several figs. 5 maps. Vol. 2: [4] + 184 + 132 + 112 + [36]. 4 maps. Vol. 3: [12] + 162 + [5]. 14 pls.
–Allen 151. Various later eds. Manatee material repr. in Durand (1983: 136-139; Spanish transl.) and in J. A. Murray (ed.), The islands and the sea ..., Oxford Univ. Press: 105-109, 1991. Allen explains his citation (repeated here) as follows: "In the set I have here collated, vols. ii and iii are bound together. Vol. i belongs to the 'fifth edition,' vol. ii to the 'third,', and vol. iii to the first.... I have references to a 1702 ed. which correspond exactly with the 1703 ed. here collated.
"As is well known, Dampier was an acute natural-history observer as well as a bold navigator and adventurer, and his observations on the Beasts, Birds, and Fishes he met with during his long voyages are among the best and most trustworthy of his time. His work is of importance in the present connection for his very full account of the Manatee, which he met with at numerous and widely distant points....
"Manatee, or Sea-cow, vol. i, pp. 33-37 - description of the animal, its habits, distribution, products, and the manner of its capture by the natives of Blewfield (or Bluefield) River [Nicaragua]; p. 41, in Darien River [Panama]; p. 321, its occurrence at Mindenao, in the East Indies; p. 381, do.; pp. 463, 469, its occurrence in New Holland [= Australia]; p. 547, the Manatee of Santa Hellena a Sea-Lyon [i. e., a Seal]. Vol. 2, pt. ii, pp. 73, 109, 128, in Campeachy, and near Vera Cruz [Mexico]....
"Dampier's references to the 'Manatee, or Sea-cow,' as occurring in the East Indies and New Holland, relate, of course, to the Dugong. His statement that the Manatees of the West Indies are smaller than those of the American Isthmus and Guiana was seized upon by Buffon as indicating a diversity of species."
|
x |
|
Dana, James Dwight
(detail)
|
| |
|
1864 |
On the classification of animals based on the principle of cephalization. III. Classification of herbivores.
Amer. Jour. Sci.
(2)37(110): 157-183. March 1864.
–Discusses various characteristics of the Sirenia and concludes they are separate from cetaceans (160-161, 163, 168-169, 175, 183).
|
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Dana, James Dwight
(detail)
|
| |
|
1874 |
Manual of geology, treating of the principles of the science with special reference to American geological history.
New York, Ivison, Blakeman, Taylor & Co.:
xvi + 828. Illus.
–Ed. 1, 1863; several later eds. Discussion of Deinotherium.
|
x |
|
Dandouau, André
(detail)
|
| |
|
1922 |
Ody et fanafody (charmes et remèdes). Pharmacopée Sakalave et Tsimihety.
Rev. d'Ethnogr. et des Trads. Pops.
(Paris, Larose)
3(10): 111-128.
–Describes (119) Madagascar natives' use of the fat of a "cochon de mer" as a cure for deafness, and opines that the animal is a Physeter or sperm whale. Petit (1923: 83) thinks it more probably a dugong.
|
x |
|
Dandouau, André
(detail)
|
| |
|
1924 |
Une tournée dans l'Île de Nossi-Bé (1917).
Bull. Économique de Madagascar
1924(1/2): 139-155. 2 maps.
–Account of dugong ("lamantin") hunting practices and rituals (151-153).
|
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Daniel, João
(detail)
|
| |
|
1820 |
Quinta parte do thesouro descoberto no Rio Maximo Amazonas....
Rio de Janeiro, Impr. Regia:
1-152.
–Urges restriction of manatee exploitation to avoid the animal's extinction (150-151).
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Daniel-Rentería, I.C.; Serrano, A.; Sánchez-Rojas, G.
(detail)
|
| |
|
2012 |
Distribution of the Antillean manatee (Trichechus manatus manatus) in the Alvarado Lagoon System (Veracruz, Mexico).
Ciencias Marinas
38(2): 459-465. 2 figs. June 2012.
–ABSTRACT: The Antillean manatee (Trichechus manatus manatus) is considered endangered in Mexico. Local extinctions have been documented in the northern Gulf of Mexico, and the only remaining population with a northern distribution is found in the Alvarado Lagoon System (ALS). The objective of this study was to determine manatee distribution in ALS. The system covers an area of 267,010 ha and includes hundreds of lagoons, floodable areas, and dozens of rivers. To detect manatees, systematic line transects were done in a boat 7.6 m in length, totaling 332.6 h of search effort with an average of 7.38 h d–1 in 45 surveys. There was a total of 13 manatee sightings: seven direct sightings, five with hydrophones, and one with a side-scan sonar. For each record the geographical coordinates were taken and integrated in a geographical information system to analyze their distribution. Manatee distribution was not uniform throughout the study area. Manatees were sighted in very specific areas of ALS considered part of their habitat, mainly in areas with inland water bodies, in some estuarine and marshy areas, and in some wetlands with vegetation generally in appropriate condition. This lagoon system is very important for manatee conservation since it is the last site with viable populations in Veracruz and the northern Gulf of Mexico.
El manatí antillano (Trichechus manatus manatus) es considerado una especie en peligro de extinción en México. En la zona norte del golfo de México se han documentado extinciones locales, y se sabe que la población remanente con distribución más norteña se encuentra en el Sistema Lagunar de Alvarado (SLA). El objetivo de este estudio fue determinar la distribución del manatí en el SLA. El sistema presenta una extensión de 267,010 ha que incluyen cientos de lagunas, áreas inundables y docenas de ríos. La localización de los manatíes se realizó mediante muestreos en transectos lineales sistemáticos en una lancha de 7.6 m de eslora. El esfuerzo de muestreo fue de 332.36 h, con un promedio de 7.38 h d–1 en 45 recorridos. En total se obtuvieron 13 avistamientos de manatíes: siete observados de manera directa, cinco detectados mediante el uso del hidrófono y uno mediante el uso de una ecosonda. En cada registro se tomaron las coordenadas geográficas y se integraron a un sistema de información geográfica para analizar su distribución. La distribución del manatí no se dio de manera uniforme en el área de estudio. Los manatíes se observaron en áreas muy específicas dentro del SLA, consideradas como parte de su hábitat, principalmente en zonas que cuentan con cuerpos de agua interiores, algunas otras áreas estuarinas y palustres, y algunos humedales generalmente con una vegetación en condiciones apropiadas. El SLA es de suma importancia para la conservación de los manatíes, ya que es el último sitio con poblaciones viables en Veracruz y en el norte del golfo de México.
|
x |
|
Darga, Robert; Böhme, Madelaine; Göhlich, Ursula B.; Rössner, Gertrud E.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1999 |
Reste höherer Wirbeltiere aus dem Alttertiär des Alpenvorlandes bei Siegsdorf/Oberbayern.
Mitt. Bayer. Staatssamml. Pal. Hist. Geol.
39: 91-114. 2 tabs. 4 figs. 2 pls. Dec. 15, 1999.
–Reports the proximal end of a sir. rib from the Upper Oligocene Molasse deposits (Thalberg-Schichten) in Upper Bavaria, Germany (104-105).
|
|
|
Darling, Kathy
(detail)
|
| |
|
1991 |
Manatee: on location.
New York, Lothrop, Lee & Shepard Books:
1-48. Illus.
–Children's book.
|
|
|
Dart, Raymond A.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1923 |
The brain of the Zeuglodontidae (Cetacea).
Proc. Zool. Soc. London
1923(3): 615-648, 652-654. 21 figs. Sept. 3, 1923.
–Sirs., 637.
|
x |
|
Dartevelle, E.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1935 |
Les premiers restes de mammifères du Tertiaire du Congo: la faune Miocène de Malembe. (Première note sur les mammifères fossiles du Congo.)
C.R. 2e Congr. Natl. Sci. Belgique
(Bruxelles):
715-720.
–Report of sir. rib fragments ("Halitherium sp.?") (717-718).
|
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|
Darwin, Charles Robert
(detail)
|
| |
|
1854 |
A monograph on the sub-class Cirripedia, with figures of all the species.
London, Ray Society (2 vols., 1851-54).
42 pls.
–Discusses Platylepas bissexlobata from Australia, Gambia, and Honduras (428, pl. 17).
|
x |
|
Das, D. P.; Basu, P. K.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1994 |
Study of Palaeogene marine mammals of Kachchh, Gujarat.
Records Geol. Surv. India
127(2): 5.
–An abstract reporting on fossil cetaceans and sirs. from Kutch. Coins the nomina nuda "Eotheroides waghapadarensis sp. nov." (Middle Eoc.) and "Kotadasiren gracillis [sic] gen. et sp. nov." (Oligo-Mioc.).
|
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|
Das, H. S.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1996 |
Status of seagrass habitats of the Andaman and Nicobar coast.
Sálim Ali Centre for Ornithology and Natural History (SACON)
(Coimbatore, India)
Technical Report No. 4: iii +32. 10 tabs. 6 figs.
–DD, 16, 18-20, 32.
|
x |
|
Das, H. S.; Dey, S. C.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1999 |
Observations on the dugong, Dugong dugon (Muller), in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, India.
Jour. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc.
96(2): 195-198. 2 tabs. 2 figs. Aug. 1999.
–Interview and boat surveys, 1994-97, suggested that an estimated 40 dugongs may survive around the islands. Harpooning is no longer regularly practiced; mortality (in fishing nets) is now often unintentional. Population decline is attributed to habitat loss; conservation measures are suggested. External measurements of a lactating female are given.
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Daubenton, Louis Jean Marie
(detail)
|
| |
|
18?? |
Oeuvres complètes de Buffon, avec les descriptions anatomiques de Daubenton.... Mammifères.
Paris, Verdière & Ladrange (40 vols., 1824-31, + 8-vol. atlas).
|
|
|
Davidenkov, S.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1947 |
Types of nervous system in man, their heredity and evolution.
Jour. Mental Sci.
93: 262-272.
–Sirs., 267.
|
|
|
Davidson, W. V.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1974 |
Historical geography of the Bay Islands, Honduras: Anglo-hispanic conflict in the western Caribbean.
Birmingham (Ala.), Southern Univ. Press:
1-199.
–Reports that manatees are absent from the Bay Islands today.
|
n |
|
Davis, Stephen
(detail)
|
| |
|
1985 |
Aboriginal knowledge and use of the coast and sea in northern Arnhem Land. In: K. N. Bardsley, J. D. S. Davie, & C. D. Woodroffe (eds.), Coasts and tidal wetlands of the Australian monsoon region: a collection of papers presented at a conference held in Darwin, 4-11 Nov. 1984.
Darwin, Austral. Natl. Univ. North Austral. Res. Unit (Mangrove Monogr. No. 1) (1-375):
297-312. 4 figs.
–Sir. material (307) identical to that in Davis (1988).
|
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Davis, Stephen
(detail)
|
| |
|
1988 |
Aboriginal tenure of the sea in northern Arnhem Land. In: F. Gray & L. Zann (eds.), Traditional knowledge of the marine environment in northern Australia. Proceedings of a workshop held in Townsville, Australia, 29 and 30 July 1985.
Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority Workshop Ser.
No. 8: 68-98. 3 figs.
–Hunting of sleeping dugongs, 79 (material identical to that in Davis, 1985).
|
x |
|
Dawson, George M.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1894 |
The extinct northern sea-cow, and early Russian explorations in the North Pacific.
Ottawa Naturalist
7: 151-161.
–History of the discovery and destruction of Steller's sea cow (154-160).
|
x |
|
Daxner-Höck, Gudrun
(detail)
|
| |
|
1971 |
Vertebrata (excl. Pisces) der Eggenburger Schichtengruppe. In: F. Steininger & J. Seneš (eds.), Chronostratigraphie und Neostratotypen: Miozän der zentralen Paratethys. Bd. II, M₁ Eggenburgien: Die Eggenburger Schichtengruppe und ihr Stratotypus.
Bratislava, Vydavatel'stvo Slovenskej Akadémie Vied:
761-777. 4 pls.
–Describes material of Metaxytherium krahuletzi from the vicinity of Eggenburg, Austria (761, 764-765, pls. 3-4).
|
x |
|
Dayton, Paul K.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1975 |
Experimental studies of algal canopy interactions in a sea otter-dominated kelp community at Amchitka Island, Alaska.
Fish. Bull.
73(2): 230-237. 2 tabs. 2 figs. Apr. 1975.
–Rev.: R. M. May, Nature (London) 260(5549): 284, Mar. 25, 1976. Notes that Hydrodamalis gigas was formerly a major kelp consumer, and suggests that sea otters helped maintain sea cow populations by suppressing invertebrate herbivores (236-237).
|
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|
De Beer, Gavin R.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1937 |
The development of the vertebrate skull.
Oxford, Clarendon Press:
xxiv + 552. 143 pls.
–Sirs., 346-348.
|
|
|
De Felice, Cynthia C.
(detail)
|
| |
|
2005 |
The missing manatee.
Farrar, Straus & Giroux (A Sunburst Book):
1-181.
–A mystery novel for children.
|
x |
|
de Foy, Karen
(detail)
|
| |
|
2011 |
The short, sad story of Steller's sea cow.
Cricket
(Chicago)
38(9): 14-18. 3 figs. July/Aug. 2011.
–Pop. acc. of the sea cow's discovery and extermination, and of Florida manatee conservation.
|
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|
De Iongh, Hendrik Huibert
(detail)
|
| |
|
1996 |
Current status of dugongs in Aru, East Indonesia.
Nederl. Comm. Internatl. Natuurbescherming, Meded.
No. 30: 75-86. 2 tabs. 1 fig.
|
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|
De Iongh, Hendrik Huibert
(detail)
|
| |
|
1999 |
Optimizing the design of marine reserves to protect dugongs in a small island ecosystem.
Tigerpaper
(Bangkok)
26(2): 6-13. Apr.-June 1999.
|
|
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De Iongh, Hendrik Huibert; Bal, D.
(detail)
|
| |
|
2007 |
As we see it: harmonization of Red Lists in Europe: some lessons learned in the Netherlands when applying the new IUCN Red List Categories and Criteria version 3.1.
Endangered Species Research
3: 53-60.
|
x |
|
De Iongh, Hendrik Huibert; Bierhuizen, Barbara; Van Orden, Belinda
(detail)
|
| |
|
1997 |
Observations on the behaviour of the dugong (Dugong dugon Müller, 1776) from waters of the Lease Islands, eastern Indonesia.
Contributions to Zoology
(Amsterdam)
67(1): 71-77. 2 tabs. 2 figs.
–French summ. Describes feeding behavior (including ?cultivation grazing of Halophila ovalis, foraging in rough water, making multiple feeding tracks per dive, and possibly eating lingulid brachiopods and Sipunculus sp.); diving times and behavior, including longer dives in deeper water (up to 10 m); and responses to boats and divers.
|
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De Iongh, Hendrik Huibert; Kiswara, W.; Bauer, H.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1996 |
Dietary preference of a captive-held dugong (Dugong dugon Müller 1776) in Surabaya Zoo, Indonesia. In: Plant-herbivore interactions between seagrasses and dugongs in a tropical small island ecosystem.
19-34.
|
x |
|
De Iongh, Hendrik Huibert; Wenno, Bob J., Meelis, E.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1995 |
Seagrass distribution and seasonal biomass changes in relation to dugong grazing in the Moluccas, East Indonesia.
Aquatic Botany
50(1): 1-19. 2 tabs. 14 figs.
–Studies of a seagrass bed at Ambon dominated by Halodule uninervis, and of biomass removal and recovery in natural and artificial dugong feeding tracks, indicated that the dugongs seemed to be maximizing their intake of rhizomes with high levels of total organic carbon, and therefore maximizing their net rate of energy intake.
|
x |
|
De Iongh, Hendrik Huibert; Wenno, Bob J.; Bierhuizen, Barbara; Van Orden, Belinda
(detail)
|
| |
|
1995 |
Aerial survey of the dugong (Dugong dugon Müller, 1776) in coastal waters of the Lease Islands, East Indonesia.
Austral. Jour. Mar. Freshwater Res.
46(4): 759-761. 2 figs.
–Surveys in 1990 and 1992, totaling 3.5 hours of observation, sighted 5-11 dugongs per survey hour and resulted in a minimum population estimate of 22-37 animals, presumably part of a larger regional population.
|
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|
De Jong, C.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1961 |
De zeekoevangst in Guyana in vroeger eeuwen. [Manatee hunts in Guiana in past centuries.]
De Surinamse Landbouw
9(3): 93-100. 1 fig.
–Engl. summ.
|
|
|
De Jong, C.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1962 |
Amsterdamse rederij op de zeekoevangst in Guyana.
Ons Amsterdam
14: 150-154. 2 figs.
–Text identical to De Jong (1961).
|
|
|
De Jong, C.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1971 |
Aantekingen over Jan Reeps in Suriname, 1693.
Nieuwe West-Indische Gids
48(2-3): 201-205.
–Discusses the export of manatee meat from the Guianas to the West Indies.
|
|
|
De Jong, Wilfried W.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1980 |
Use of eye lens a-crystallin sequences in mammalian phylogeny. [Abstr.]
Second Internatl. Congr. Syst. & Evol. Biol.
(Vancouver, Univ. Brit. Columbia):
119.
|
x |
|
De Jong, Wilfried W.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1998 |
Molecules remodel the mammalian tree.
Trends in Ecol. & Evol.
13(7): 270-275. 3 figs. July 1998.
–Reviews the present state of molecular phylogeny, noting that the grouping of Sirenia, Proboscidea, and Hyracoidea in a paenungulate clade is supported by all available DNA sequence data, but also noting that "[c]oncerns about the robustness of molecular findings remain justified."
|
x |
|
De Jong, Wilfried W.; Goodman, Morris
(detail)
|
| |
|
1982 |
Mammalian phylogeny studied by sequence analysis of the eye lens protein a-crystallin.
Zs. Säugetierk.
47(5): 257-276. 2 tabs. 5 figs. Oct. 1982.
–Sequences of a-crystallin A indicate that paenungulates (Proboscidea, Hyracoidea, and Sirenia) are monophyletic and include the Tubulidentata, and are, together with the edentates, the oldest eutherian offshoots. The sir. data are based on 6 eye lenses of T. inunguis.
|
x |
|
De Jong, Wilfried W.; Zweers, A.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1980 |
Confirmação da relação entre peixes-bois, "hyraxes" e elefantes, por meio do estudo da proteína das lentes dos olhos.
Acta Amazonica
10(4): 897-902. 1 tab. 2 figs. Dec. 1980.
–Engl. summ. Amino acid sequence analysis of ?A eye-lens crystallin confirms the monophyletic origin of the Sirenia, Hyracoidea, and Proboscidea and suggests that the former two are closest to each other; the Paenungulata are the oldest placental offshoot after the Edentata.
|
x |
|
De Pourtalès, L. F.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1877 |
Hints on the origin of the flora and fauna of the Florida Keys.
Amer. Naturalist
11: 137-144. Mar. 1877.
–Concludes that the occurrence of manatees in both Florida and the West Indies, and of "manatee" bone fragments in dredge samples off the Florida coast, indicates former migrations between Cuba and Florida (144). These may have been dugongid bones, however; see Reed et al., 2005.)
|
|
|
De Silva, G. S.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1969 |
The fauna conservation ordinance of Sabah.
Loris
11(5): 283-286.
–The law took effect in July 1964, protecting dugongs and other wildlife.
|
x |
|
De Silva, J. A.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1959 |
A plea for the protection of the dugong.
Loris
8: 173-174. 1 fig. June 1959.
–Pop. acc. of dugongs and dugong hunting in the Indian Ocean; recommends "complete prohibition on the killing of the dugong" in Ceylon.
|
x |
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De Vis, Charles W.
(detail)
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| |
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1884 |
On a fossil calvaria.
Proc. Linn. Soc. New South Wales
8(3): 392-395. Pl. 17. Read Aug. 29, 1883.
–Description of the supposed fossil sirenian Chronozoon Australe, n.gen.n.sp., based on a skull fragment from the Chinchilla (Darling Downs) drift deposits, southeastern Queensland. This specimen is now considered to represent a diprotodont marsupial, possibly the giant wombat Phascolonus gigas (see T. Edinger, 1975: 44), although it may represent a juvenile individual of some other diprotodontid.
|
x |
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De Vis, Charles W.
(detail)
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| |
|
1905 |
Fossil vertebrates from New Guinea.
Ann. Queensland Mus.
No. 6: 26-31. Pls. 10-13.
–Describes Halicore brevirostris, n.sp., based on the rostral portion of a skull from alluvial deposits of unknown [but possibly subrecent] age on Murua or Woodlark Is., Papua New Guinea (27-30, pl. 10).
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Debenham, F.
(detail)
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| |
|
1941 |
Bering's last voyage.
Polar Rec.
(Cambridge)
3(22): 421-426. 1 pl.
–Reproduces the sea cow picture from Waxell's chart.
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D |
Dechaseaux, Colette
(detail)
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| |
|
1958 |
Sirenia [and] Desmostylia. In: J. Piveteau (ed.), Traité de paléontologie. Tome VI en deux volumes. L'origine des mammifères et les aspects fondamentaux de leur évolution. Mammifères. Évolution. Deuxième volume.
Paris, Masson et Cie. (962 pp.):
333-367. 41 figs.
–Sirenia, 333-361, 35 figs.; "Encéphales de Siréniens fossiles", 361-363, 1 fig.; Desmostylia, 364-367, 5 figs.
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DeKay, James Ellsworth
(detail)
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1842 |
Zoology of New-York, or the New-York fauna; comprising detailed descriptions of all the animals hitherto observed within the state of New-York, with brief notices of those occasionally found near its borders, and accompanied by appropriate illustrations.... Part I. Mammalia. In: Natural History of New York.
Albany, printed by W. & A. White & J. Visscher (entire work: 6 parts in 5 vols., 1842-44):
Vol. 1: xv + 146. 33 pls.
–Sirs., 122-123, pl. 30.
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Dekeyser, P. L.
(detail)
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| |
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1952 |
Note sommaire sur la température rectale du lamantin (Trichechus senegalensis Link).
Bull. Mus. Natl. Hist. Nat.
(Paris)
(2)24(3): 243-246. May 1952.
–During periods out of water, the rectal temperature of a 1.5 m male manatee from Senegal varied between 25 and 28.5 degrees C, correlated only weakly with ambient air and water temperatures.
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Dekeyser, P. L.
(detail)
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| |
|
1955 |
Note sommaire sur la denture d'un jeune lamantin (Trichechus senegalensis).
Bull. Inst. Franç. Afr. Noire
17A(3): 921-925. 1 fig.
–Discussion of the dental formula and tooth succession in a 1.5 m manatee calf from Senegal, probably the same one studied in Dekeyser (1952). Illustrates the dentition prior to any tooth loss, and concludes that the anteromost lower tooth belongs to the permanent rather than the deciduous series.
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Dekeyser, P. L.
(detail)
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| |
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1956 |
Les mammifères de l'Afrique Noire Français.
Initiations Africaines
(Inst. Franç. Afr. Noire)
1: 1-426.
–Publ. 1955? Ed. 2? Sirs., 309-311.
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Dekker, Dick
(detail)
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1967a |
Zeekoe, alias lamantijn, alias manati. [Title of parts II-IV:] Zeekoeien uit Suriname II [-IV].
Artis
(Amsterdam)
12(5): 148-157, 12 figs.; 12(6): 184-191, 7 figs.; 13(1): 28-35, 8 figs.; 13(2): 58-65, 13 figs. Jan.-Feb. 1967, Mar.-Apr. 1967, May-June 1967; July-Aug. 1967.
–Account, in four installments, of the capture of manatees in Suriname for the Amsterdam zoo.
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Dekker, Dick
(detail)
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| |
|
1971 |
Op zoek naar zeekoewijfjes. [In search of seacow females.]
Artis
(Amsterdam)
17(1): 8-13; 17(2): 48-53; 17(3): 84-88. May-June 1971; July-Aug. 1971; Sept.-Oct. 1971.
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Dekker, Dick
(detail)
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| |
|
1974a |
Transport of manatees Trichechus m. manatus.
Internatl. Zoo Yearbk.
14: 68-69.
–Account of the two-week transport by ship of four manatees from Suriname to Holland in Oct. 1966; two died (of cold?), two survived with bruises. Air transport is recommended for future attempts.
|
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Dekker, Dick
(detail)
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| |
|
1974b |
On the natural history of manatees (Trichechus manatus manatus) from Suriname for the Amsterdam Zoo.
Aquat. Mamms.
2(2): 1-3. Nov. 1974.
–Brief account of distribution, status, and food habits of Suriname manatees, and of the capture of 15 animals, all but one males.
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Dekker, Dick
(detail)
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|
1977a |
Zeekoegeboorte: een unieke gebeurtenis. [Manatee birth: a unique occurrence.]
Artis
(Amsterdam)
23(4): 111-119. 17 figs. Nov./Dec. 1977.
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Dekker, Dick
(detail)
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| |
|
1977b |
Manatee (Trichechus manatus manatus) born at Artis Zoo, Amsterdam.
Internatl. Zoo News
24(8): 30-31.
|
x |
|
Dekker, Dick
(detail)
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| |
|
1980 |
Pre- and postnatal behaviour in the manatee (Trichechus manatus) in captivity.
Aquat. Mamms.
8(1): 21-26. 1 tab. 3 figs. June 1980.
–Describes attempts at copulation, genital swellings and mammary development in female, feeding, nursing, locomotor, respiratory, and protective behaviors, fright reactions, and growth of mother and male calf born at Amsterdam, Aug. 8, 1977.
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Delaney, Judith; Hale, Wendy; Stone, Renee
(detail)
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|
1986 |
Manatees: An educator's guide to the natural history, habitat, problems, and conservation of the Order Sirenia.
Tallahassee, Florida Dept. of Nat. Resources:
[1] + 1-25. Illus. Packaged with 2 leaflets and 17
–Superseded Fritz (1980-1984). Distributed free by the Florida Audubon Society and the Save the Manatee Committee. Rev.: D. P. Domning, Sirenews No. 6: 10-11, Oct. 1986. The booklet contains information on sir. natural history and conservation (emphasizing Florida manatees), aquatic ecology, and marine mammals in general; sources of further information; and puzzles and activities for students in primary and secondary schools. The leaflets comprise a "manatee fact sheet" of natural history data, a list of resource and conservation agencies and organizations in Florida, and a list of printed sources and audiovisual aids. The poster illustrates the Recent sirs. with a map of their distribution. "Also available" on request was "a 23 minute video tape program, 'Silent Sirens: Manatees in Peril'...."
In the second ed. (1989), the leaflets are incorporated into the booklet (29 pp.; revised by Marjorie Lamphear). Ed. 3, 1992 (revised by Nancy Guzik); ed. 4, 1994 (revised by Nancy Sadusky, Judith Vallee, and Patti Thompson); ed. 5, 1996 (30 pp.; revised by Nancy Sadusky and Patti Thompson); ed. 6, 2001 (38 pp.; revised by Nancy Sadusky and Valerie Gohlke). These later eds. (starting with ed. ??) were published by the Save the Manatee Club.
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Delfortrie, Eugène
(detail)
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| |
|
1870 |
Les ossements entaillés et striés du Miocène aquitanien.
Actes Soc. Linn. Bordeaux
27: 261-262. Pl. 14.
–Describes cetacean ribs scarred by fish teeth, noting that most bones from the Aquitanian deposits, including "maxillaires d'Halitherium", have similar scars.
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Delfortrie, Eugène
(detail)
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| |
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1872 |
Étude sur les restes fossiles de siréniens du genre Halitherium dans le bassin de la Garonne.
Actes Soc. Linn. Bordeaux
28(= (3)8): 281-324. Pls. 18-22.
–Rev.: Jour. Zool. (Paris) 1: 343-344? Also exists as a separate in 38 pp. + 5 pls., re-set with different page-breaks. By lumping a variety of Eocene and Miocene specimens under the name Halitherium Cuvieri, this paper contributed little but confusion.
|
x |
|
Delfortrie, Eugène
(detail)
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| |
|
1875 |
Renseignements nouveaux sur le Rythiodus [sic].
Actes Soc. Linn. Bordeaux
30, Proc.-verb.: cviii.
–Announces the receipt of additional fragments of a Rytiodus specimen from Saint-Morillon, indicating a tusk length of 28 cm.
|
x |
|
Delfortrie, Eugène
(detail)
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| |
|
1880 |
Découverte d'un squelette entier de Rytiodus dans le falun aquitanien.
Actes Soc. Linn. Bordeaux
34(= (4)4): 131-144. 1 tab. Pls. 5-8.
–Abstrs.: La Nature (Paris) 8(2)(386): 321-322, 1 fig., Oct. 23, 1880; Rev. Socs. Savs. (Paris) 1879: 80-81? Describes the skull of a skeleton which was for the most part destroyed by workmen. Considers Rytiodus closely related to Halitherium.
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Deméré, Thomas A.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1981 |
Fossil whales of San Diego. Part II.
Environ. Southwest
493: 22-25. Illus. June 1981.
|
x |
|
Deméré, Thomas A.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1993 |
Fossil mammals from the Imperial Formation (upper Miocene-lower Pliocene), Coyote Mountains, Imperial County, California. In: R. E. Reynolds & J. Reynolds (eds.), Ashes, faults and basins.
San Bernardino County Mus. Assoc., Special Publ.
93-1: 82-85. May 1993.
–Reports two indeterminate sir. rib fragments from the Latrania Sands in the Imperial Formation, Salton Trough of California (84). This deposit was formed in a Late Tertiary proto-Gulf of California.
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Dempster, R.; Shipman, W.
(detail)
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| |
|
1969 |
The use of copper sulfate as a medicament for aquarium fishes and as an algaecide in marine mammal water systems.
Occas. Paper California Acad. Sci.
71: 1-6.
–Discusses the use of sequestered copper to control algae in tanks at the Steinhart Aquarium, San Francisco.
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Denkinger, J.
(detail)
|
| |
|
2010 |
Status of the Amazonian manatee (Trichechus inunguis) in the Cuyabeno Reserve, Ecuador.
Avances
2: B29-B34.
|
x |
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Dennis, Jerry
(detail)
|
| |
|
1994 |
The call of the mermaid.
Wildl. Conserv.
97(5): 70-72. Sept./Oct. 1994.
–Pop. acc. of mermaid legends, with passing mention of sirs.
|
x |
|
Denton, G. R. W.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1981a |
The effect of diet on the heavy metal status of the dugong (Dugong dugon (Müller)). In: H. Marsh (ed.), The dugong. Proceedings of a seminar/workshop held at James Cook University of North Queensland 8-13 May 1979 (q.v.).
[Townsville (Australia)], James Cook Univ. (vii + 400):
169-174.
–Summary of Denton et al. (1980).
|
x |
|
Denton, G. R. W.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1981b |
Brief outline of procedures recommended for the collection and storage of dugong tissues for heavy metal, organochlorine pesticide and PCB analyses. In: H. Marsh (ed.), The dugong. Proceedings of a seminar/workshop held at James Cook University of North Queensland 8-13 May 1979 (q.v.).
[Townsville (Australia)], James Cook Univ. (vii + 400):
239.
–Two paragraphs on procedures for avoiding contamination of tissue samples.
|
x |
|
Denton, G. R. W.; Breck, W. G.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1981 |
Mercury in tropical marine organisms from North Queensland.
Mar. Pollution Bull.
12(4): 116-121. 3 tabs. 2 figs. Apr. 1981.
–Reports that the mercury content of tissues of two dugongs from Cleveland Bay, Australia, was "extremely low" compared with other marine mammals.
|
x |
|
Denton, G. R. W.; Marsh, Helene D.; Heinsohn, George Edwin; Burdon-Jones, C.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1980 |
The unusual metal status of the dugong Dugong dugon.
Marine Biology
57(3): 201-219. 6 tabs. 5 figs.
–Reports very high levels of iron and zinc found in dugong livers; levels of copper, cadmium, cobalt, and silver were also high in livers, and cadmium in kidneys; manganese concentrations were comparable to those in other marine mammals; nickel, lead, and chromium were not detected in any tissue. Concentrations of several metals varied with age of the dugongs. Seagrasses were probably the source of the iron, but anthropogenic pollution was not implicated.
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Dependorf, Theodor
(detail)
|
| |
|
1898 |
Zur Entwickelungsgeschichte des Zahnsystems der Marsupialier. In: R. W. Semon (ed.), Zoologische Forschungsreisen in Australien und dem Malayischen Archipel, Vol. 3.
Denkschr. Med.-natw. Ges. Jena
6(1): 243-402. 14 figs. Pls. 2-11.
–Sirs., 393, 397.
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Dependorf, Theodor
(detail)
|
| |
|
1907 |
Zur Frage der sogenannten Konkreszenztheorie.
Jena. Zs. Natw.
42: 539-566. 19 figs.
–Sirs., 560.
|
x |
|
Depéret, Charles
(detail)
|
| |
|
1895 |
Über die Fauna von miocänen Wirbelthieren aus der ersten Mediterranstufe von Eggenburg.
Sitzb. Akad. Wiss. Wien, math.-natw. Cl.
104(1): 395-416. 2 pls.
–Describes Metaxytherium Krahuletzi, n.sp., on the basis of 6 isolated molars; lists other fossil sirs. and compares M. Krahuletzi with them. The associated fauna included Brachyodus onoideus, Testudo Noviciensis, Trionyx sp., and Crocodilus Eggenburgensis.
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Depéret, Charles
(detail)
|
| |
|
1907 |
Les transformations du monde animal.
Paris, E. Flammarion (Bibl. de Philos. Sci.):
1-360.
–Repr.: Paris, 1922. Transls.: Engl., London, Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co., Ltd., 1909; German, Stuttgart, E. Schweizerbart, 1909; Spanish, Buenos Aires, Editorial Impulso, 1945.
|
x |
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Depéret, Charles
(detail)
|
| |
|
1914 |
Sur la reconstitution d'un squelette de Felsinotherium Serresi, sirénien pliocène des sables de Montpellier.
C.R. Acad. Sci. Paris
158: 1858-1862. 1 fig.
–Discusses the anatomy of F. Serresi, comparing it with other fossil sirs., and concludes that a steady increase in body size took place in a phyletic series from "Metaxytherium" [i.e., Halitherium] Christoli, M. Krahuletzi, and/or Halianassa Studeri, through F. Serresi, to F. Forestii and possibly Rhytina. M. fossile [= M. medium], however, is excluded from this lineage on account of its large size.
|
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Depéret, Charles; Roman, F.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1920 |
Le Felsinotherium serresi des sables pliocènes de Montpellier et les rameaux phylétiques des siréniens fossiles de l'Ancien Monde.
Arch. Mus. Hist. Nat. Lyon
12(4): 1-56. 14 figs. 7 pls.
–Rev.: Bol. Soc. Españ. Hist. Nat. 20: 341-342? This noteworthy monograph, in addition to describing in some detail the osteology of F. serresi, provides an extremely useful summary of the then-known sir. fossil record and a handy guide to the European literature.
|
x |
|
Depierre, Daniel; Vivien, Jacques
(detail)
|
| |
|
1992 |
Mammifères sauvages du Cameroun.
Fontainebleau, publié avec le concours du Ministère de la Coopération et du Développement:
1-250. Illus. June 1992.
–Gen. acc., partly inaccurate, of T. senegalensis in Cameroon (116-117, 1 fig.).
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Deraniyagala, Paulus Edward Pieris
(detail)
|
| |
|
1933 |
Cured marine products of Ceylon.
Bull. Ceylon Fish., Sect. C,
1933: 55.
–Notes that considerable quantities of dugong meat were exported in the past century.
|
x |
|
Deraniyagala, Paulus Edward Pieris
(detail)
|
| |
|
1948 |
Some scientific results of two visits to Africa.
Spolia Zeylanica
25(2): 1-42. 4 figs. 14 pls. Dec. 30, 1948.
–Mentions "sirenians" from the Lower Oligocene of the Fayum, Egypt (15), and lists four Eosiren specimens from the Fayum (16) collected by the author on the University of California African Expedition led by Wendell Phillips. Most if not all of the latter specimens were deposited in the University of California Museum of Paleontology, Berkeley; the scapula was described by Reinhart (1959: 53, 55).
|
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|
Deraniyagala, Paulus Edward Pieris
(detail)
|
| |
|
1969a |
Some aspects of the Tertiary Period in Ceylon.
Jour. Roy. Asiatic Soc. (Ceylon Branch)
(2)12: 86-108. 5 figs. 3 pls. May 15, 1969.
–Very briefly describes Miodugong brevicranius [n.gen.n.sp.], based on a skull fragment from the Miocene Malu Member of the Jaffna Series, Ceylon (97, pl. 2). The photograph in the plate is useless. "Hypothetical reconstructions" (99) show both the dugong and a baleen whale with manatee-like tails. This appears to be the earliest of at least four publications of this and other new names in the same year; although it does not designate the names as "new", no prior publication of them is cited.
|
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Deraniyagala, Paulus Edward Pieris
(detail)
|
| |
|
1969b |
Some of the earliest vertebrates of Ceylon.
Loris
11(5): 235-237. 8 figs. June 1969.
–Summarizes the fauna described in 1969a. Miodugong brevicranius and the cetothere are again "reconstructed" with manatee-like tails.
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Deraniyagala, Paulus Edward Pieris
(detail)
|
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|
1969c |
A Miocene vertebrate faunule from the Malu member of Ceylon.
Spolia Zeylanica
31(2): 551-570. 3 figs. 4 pls.
–"Tentatively" proposes "?Miodugong brevicranius", n.gen.n.sp. (554, 562-563, pl. 4). This was perhaps intended to be the definitive publication of this and the other new names of fossil vertebrates.
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Dermastia, Marina
(detail)
|
| |
|
1997 |
[Florida manatees and their newly discovered relatives. Morphological studies using molecular biology data.]
Proteus
60(2): 79-81. Illus. Oct. 1997.
|
x |
|
Derscheid, J. M.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1926 |
Les lamantins du Congo (Trichechus senegalensis Desm.) avec notes sur la répartition géographique et l'extermination des siréniens.
Rev. Zool. Africaine
14(2), Bull. Cercle Zool. Congolais 3(1-2): 23-31. 1 fig.
–Discusses manatees exhibited at Antwerp, sir. distribution in Africa (recognizing "T. senegalensis vogellii" in the Chad and Uele districts in contrast to "T. s. senegalensis" elsewhere), and hunting and protective legislation in the Congo.
|
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Descourtilz, Michel Étienne
(detail)
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| |
|
1809 |
Voyages d'un naturaliste, et ses observations faites sur les trois règnes de la nature, dans plusieurs ports de mer français, en Espagne, au continent de l'Amérique Septentrionale, à Saint Yago de Cuba, et à St.-Domingue, où l'auteur devenu le prisonnier de 40,000 noirs révoltés, et par suite mis en liberté par une colonne de l'armée française, donne des détailes circonstanciés sur l'expédition du général Leclerc....
Paris, Dufart, père (3 vols.):
Vol. 2: 1-470. Illus.
–Account of manatees and manatee hunting (with nets, guns, and harpoons) on Santo Domingo, where the manatees can be ambushed as they come out of the rivers at noon to graze in the fields of maize and sweet potatoes (2: 274-276)! The author notes with regret that, despite having followed these instructions several times, he never succeeded in shooting one.
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Desmarest, Anselme Gaëtan
(detail)
|
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|
1817a |
Dugong.
Nouv. Dict. Hist. Nat.
(Paris, Deterville)
9: 603-604.
–Allen 553: "Résumé of its affinities as variously maintained by previous authors, with the recognition of the single species 'Trichecus dugong, Gmel.'"
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Desmarest, Anselme Gaëtan
(detail)
|
| |
|
1817b |
Lamantin.
Nouv. Dict. Hist. Nat.
(Paris, Deterville)
17: 258-264.
–Allen 554: "Spp. 2, Manatus americanus et M. senegalensis, Desm."
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Desmarest, Anselme Gaëtan
(detail)
|
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|
1822 |
Mammalogie ou description des espèces de mammifères. Seconde partie, contenant les ordres des rongeurs, des édentés, des pachydermes, des ruminans et des cétacés.
Paris, Mme. Veuve Agasse:
viii + 277-556 (= Encyclopédie Methodique, vol. 182). 126 pls.
–Allen 611. The "Premiere Partie" (pp. viii + 1-276) appeared in 1820. Hippopotamus medius and Hippopotamus minimus, 388-389. Recent sirs., 506-511. Dugong and manatee, pl. 112.
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Desmarest, E.?
(detail)
|
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|
1839 |
Stellère, Stellurus.
Dict. Pittor. Hist. Nat. et des Phénom. de la Nature
9, livr. 657: 173.
–Allen 958.
|
x |
D |
Desmostylus Research Committee (DEREC)
(detail)
|
| |
|
1951 |
[The second skeleton of Desmostylus in Gifu Prefecture.]
Jour. Geol. Soc. Japan
57(672): 414. Sept. 1951.
–In Japanese. Engl. transl. done by Engineer Intelligence Division, Office of the Engineer, Headquarters U.S. Army Forces Far East, Tokyo, 1954; available from Military Geology Branch, U.S. Geological Survey?
Brief account of the discovery (in October 1950), collection, and plans for the study of the Izumi desmostylian skeleton, provisionally identified here as Desmostylus but later recognized as Paleoparadoxia. This was the second desmostylian skeleton to be found, the first being the Desmostylus from Keton in Sakhalin.
The Desmostylus Research Committee was established on July 3, 1950 to carry out a collaborative study of the Keton skeleton of Desmostylus and, later, the Izumi Paleoparadoxia. It consisted of H. Yabe (chairman), F. Takai, S. Ijiri, M. Minato, and T. Shikama, and was active from 1950 to 1953 (see also citations under the names of the committee members); "but afterwards it stopped its official activity owing to a cause not to be published" (Shikama, 1966b: 1, 10-14). The cause, apparently, was political dissension among the committee members. Ijiri was to describe the skulls, Shikama the limb bones and sterna, and Takai the remaining parts. This plan was only partly carried out in the publications of Ijiri & Kamei (1961) and Shikama (1966b); it remained for Inuzuka (1980-82) to complete the description of the Keton skeleton.
|
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D |
Desmostylus Research Committee (DEREC)
(detail)
|
| |
|
1952 |
[Re-excavation of desmostylids in Toki District, Gifu Prefecture, and its stratigraphical horizon.]
Jour. Geol. Soc. Japan
58(679): 144. Apr. 1952.
–In Japanese. Reports an unsuccessful attempt to relocate and recollect the locality of the Togari Desmostylus skull discovered in 1898 (see Yoshiwara & Iwasaki, 1902), and the enlargement of the excavation at the Izumi "Desmostylus" [= Paleoparadoxia] locality. Ten additional bone fragments plus associated fauna and flora were collected at the latter site. The two localities are assigned to the Togari and Yamanouchi members, respectively, of the Akeyo Formation [Miocene].
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Desmoulins, A.
(detail)
|
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|
1824 |
Dugong, Trichechus Dugong, Gmel.
Dict. Class. Hist. Nat.
5, Cra-D: 640-641. Pl. 141.
–Allen 637.
|
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Desnoyers, Jules Pierre Stanislas
(detail)
|
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|
1829 |
Observations sur un ensemble de dépôts marins plus récens que les terrains tertiaires du bassin de la Seine, et constituant une formation géologique distincte; précédées d'un aperçu de la non simultanéité des bassins tertiaires.
Ann. Sci. Nat.
16: 171-214, 402.
–Allen 722. Sirs., 446-448??
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Desse, Jean; Desse-Berset, N.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1990 |
Failaka. La faune: les mammifères et les poissons. In: Y. Calvet & J. Gachet (eds.), Failaka, fouilles françaises 1986-1988.
Lyon, GDR-Maison de l'Orient; Paris, de Boccard (Travaux de la Maison de l'Orient 8):
51-70.
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Dette, Kurt
(detail)
|
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|
1929a |
Halitherium schinzi Kaup im norddeutschen Septarienton.
Zs. Deutsch. Geol. Ges.
81(10): 539.
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Dette, Kurt
(detail)
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1929b |
Seekuhrest im Septarienton von Köthen.
Serimunt
(Blätter der Vereins Heimatmus. f. Köthen)
4(24).
|
x |
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Deutsch, Charles J.; Bonde, Robert K.; Reid, James P.
(detail)
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| |
|
1998 |
Radio-tracking manatees from land and space: tag design, implementation, and lessons learned from long-term study.
Marine Technology Society Jour.
32(1): 18-29. 5 figs.
–Traces the development of the manatee radio-tag assembly, and describes how the technology has been implemented in the U.S. and Puerto Rico, including capture and tagging methods, strengths and weaknesses of the current tag design, relative merits of VHF and satellite-monitored PTT transmitters, contributions of radio-tagging to studies of manatee biology, and promising new developments in tag technology and analytical methods.
|
x |
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Devillers, Ch.
(detail)
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| |
|
1938 |
Sur la biologie du lamantin en captivité.
Mammalia
2(2): 84-88. 3 figs. June 1938.
–Describes the external anatomy, measurements, locomotor behavior, and captive diet of two T. inunguis brought to France from Manaus, Brazil.
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Dexler, Hermann
(detail)
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| |
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1902 |
Bericht über eine Reise nach Australien zum Zwecke der Erwerbung anatomischen und entwicklungsgeschichtlichen Materiales vom Dugong.
Dt. Arbeit. Prag
1(7): 552-562. 1 pl.
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Dexler, Hermann
(detail)
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| |
|
1912a |
Das Rückenmark von Halicore dugong Erxl.
Ver. Internatl. Zool. Kongr.
(Jena)
8: 527-534.
|
x |
|
Dexler, Hermann
(detail)
|
| |
|
1912b |
Das Hirn von Halicore dugong Erxl.
Morph. Jahrb.
(Leipzig)
45(1): 97-190. 35 figs. Pls. 5-6.
–Detailed gross and microscopic description of the brains of eight Queensland dugongs.
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Dexler, Hermann; Eger, O.
(detail)
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| |
|
1911 |
Beiträge zur Anatomie des Säugerrückenmarkes. I. Halicore dugong Erxl.
Morph. Jahrb.
(Leipzig)
43: 107-207. 27 figs. Pl. 7.
|
x |
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Dexler, Hermann; Freund, Ludwig
(detail)
|
| |
|
1906b |
Contributions to the physiology and biology of the dugong.
Amer. Naturalist
40(469): 49-72. Jan. 1906.
–Excellent treatise and literature review on dugong behavior, sense perception, locomotion, etc.
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x |
|
Dexler, Hermann; Freund, Ludwig
(detail)
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| |
|
1906c |
External morphology of the dugong.
Amer. Naturalist
40(476): 567-581. 5 figs. Aug. 1906.
–Detailed anatomical description and literature review.
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Dhandapani, P.; Alfred, J. R. B.
(detail)
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| |
|
1998 |
Conservation of marine mammals in the exclusive economic zone (EEZ) of India.
Indian Jour. Mar. Scis.
27(3-4): 506-508. Sept.-Dec. 1998.
|
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Di Carlo, Giuseppe; Kenworthy, W. Judson
(detail)
|
| |
|
2008 |
Evaluation of aboveground and belowground biomass recovery in physically disturbed seagrass beds.
Oecologia
158(2): 285-298. 6 tabs. 5 figs. + online supplementary material.
–Describes, in addition to recovery from anthropogenic damage to seagrass beds in Florida and Puerto Rico, recovery from grazing by Antillean manatees in a Puerto Rican Thalassia bed.
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Di Natale, Antonio
(detail)
|
| |
|
2001? |
Il signore del fiume.
Cetacea Informa
10(18): 24-28. 8 figs.
–Gen. acc. of West African manatees in Mali.
|
x |
|
Diard Duvaucel
(detail)
|
| |
|
1820 |
Sur le dugong.
Jour. de Physique, Chimie et Hist. Nat.
91: 159-160. Aug. 1820 (Read to Roy. Soc. London, June 15, 1820).
–Rev.: Ann. Philos. 16: 55. Summary of Raffles (1820), with other remarks on the internal anatomy of the dugong. Mentions (160) the seasonal occurrence of dugongs at Singapore (mostly during the northern monsoon).
|
x |
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Dick, Thomas M.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1982 |
The Florida manatee.
Underwater Naturalist (Bull. Amer. Littoral Soc.)
13(4): 19-22. 4 figs. Spring 1982.
–Pop. acc. of manatee behavior and conservation problems.
|
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Dickey, Beth
(detail)
|
| |
|
1988 |
For manatees, KSC is paradise found.
Spaceport News
(John F. Kennedy Space Center, Florida)
27(7): 4-5. 4 figs. Mar. 25, 1988.
|
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Dieckman, L. E.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1972 |
Manatees!!!
Bull. Audubon Soc. Belize
4(7): 1.
–Short description of apparent mating in T. manatus.
|
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Diedrich, Cajus G
(detail)
|
| |
|
2011 |
Fossil Middle Triassic "Sea Cows" - Placodont Reptiles as Macroalgae Feeders Along the North-Western Tethys Coastline with Pangaea and in the Germanic Basin.
Natural Science
Natural Science 3 (1): 9-27. 11 Figures. DOI: :10.4236/ns.2011.31002. Jan 2011.
–ABSTRACT: The descriptions of fossil Triassic marine placodonts as durophagous reptiles are revised through comparisons with the sirenia and basal proboscidean mammal and palaeoenvironment analyses. The jaws of placodonts are convergent with those of Halitherium/Dugong or Moeritherium in their general function. Whereas Halitherium possessed a horny oral pad and counterpart and a special rasp-like tongue to grind seagrass, as does the modern Dugong, placodonts had large teeth that covered their jaws to form a similar grinding pad. The sirenia also lost their anterior teeth during many Millions of years and built a horny pad instead and specialized tongue to fed mainly on seagrass, whereas placodonts had only macroalgae available. Indirect evidence for Triassic macroalgae is provided by benthic palaeocommunities from different layers and extended European regions in the Germanic Basin. Studies of tooth wear stages for Placodus indicate that anterior teeth may have been used in a similar manner to the procumbent front teeth of modern Dugong. Paraplacodus and Placodus seem to have used these teeth as spatulas to dig out seaplants. Cyamodus and other placodonts such as Placochelys had smaller or reduced anterior teeth. The scarcity of highly worn palatine or maxillary and lower jaw dentary Placodus or Cyamodus teeth (less then 0.5%) suggests that they had a relatively soft diet. The seaplants would only have been squeezed in a similar feeding strategy to that of modern Dugong feeding on seagrass without jaw rotation and grinding. The phylogenetic trend in tooth reduction within the placodonts Paraplacodus, Placodus, especially in Cyamodus but also Placochelys, and Henodus within 11 My appears to have been a result of this plant-feeding adaptation and may even explain the origin or at least close relationship of the earliest Upper Triassic turtles as toothless algae and jellyfish feeders, in terms of the long-term convergent development with the sirens.
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Diedrich, Cajus G.
(detail)
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| |
|
2008 |
The food of the miosiren Anomotherium langenwieschei [sic] (Siegfried) - indirect proof of seaweed or seagrass by xenomorphic oyster fixation structures in the Upper Oligocene (Neogene [sic]) of the Doberg, Bünde (NW Germany) and comparisons to modern Dugong dugon (Müller) feeding strategies.
Senckenbergiana Maritima
38(1): 59-73. 12 figs. May 9, 2008.
|
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Diedrich, Cajus G.
(detail)
|
| |
|
2010 |
Palaeoecology of Placodus gigas (Reptilia) and other placodontids - Middle Triassic macroalgae feeders in the Germanic Basin of central Europe - and evidence for convergent evolution with Sirenia.
Palaeogeogr. Palaeoclim. Palaeoecol.
285(3-4): 287-306. 18 figs. Jan. 15, 2010 (available online Nov. 24, 2009).
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DiEdwardo, Judy Alexandra
(detail)
|
| |
|
2000 |
Follow the manatee trail.
RoadSmart
(Amoco Motor Club),
Winter 2000: 22-25. 4 figs.
–Pop. acc. of Florida manatees and places to see them.
|
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|
Dierauf, Leslie A.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1990 |
From fish to fin to flipper: the evolution of marine mammals. In: L. A. Dierauf (ed.), CRC handbook of marine mammal medicine: health, disease, rehabilitation.
Boca Raton (Florida), CRC Press, Inc. (735 pp.):
381-397. 7 figs.
–Presents a slightly garbled summary of sir. phylogeny (381-385, 391).
Other chapters in this volume listed here are by Bossart & Dierauf, Spotte, Stoskopf, White & Francis-Floyd, and Williams et al. Sirs. are also mentioned in other chapters by Dierauf (list of manatee parasites; 93), Janette Roletto & Jeff Mazzeo (identification of T. manatus; 448-449), Graham A. J. Worthy (energetics; m490), and Brian E. Joseph, Edward D. Asper, & James E. Antrim (transport techniques; 550). Rev. of volume: C. A. Harms, 1996, Mar. Mamm. Sci. 12(1): 157-160, Jan. 2, 1996.
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Diesing, Carl Moritz
(detail)
|
| |
|
1838 |
Abbildungen neuer Gattungen brasilianischer Binnenwürmer (Entozoën). [Abstr.]
Ber. XV. Versamml. Deutsch. Naturf. u. Aerzte
(Prague, Sept. 1837):
189. Read Sept. 21, 1837.
–Mentions the occurrence of the parasites Lobocephalus heterolobus and Amphistoma fabaceum in the stomach and intestine, respectively, of Manatus australis. Both names of parasites were nomina nuda.
|
x |
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Diesing, Carl Moritz
(detail)
|
| |
|
1839 |
Neue Gattungen von Binnenwürmern nebst einem Nachtrage zur Monographie der Amphistomen.
Ann. Wiener Mus. Naturgesch.
2: 219-242. Pls. 14-20. Feb. 1839.
–Describes the nematode Heterocheilus tunicatus, n.gen.n.sp., from the stomach and small intestine of "Manatus exunguis Natt." from Brazil (229-232, pls. 15, 19). The description of the host, given in a footnote on p. 280, is an account by Natterer in which he uses the name exunguis instead of the later-published spelling inunguis. M. exunguis is also contrasted with M. americanus. (See R. V. Melville [1985] for the disposition of the name exunguis.) Also describes the trematode Amphistoma fabaceum n.gen.n.sp., likewise from the intestines of the Amazonian manatee (236, pl. 20).
|
x |
|
Diesing, Carl Moritz
(detail)
|
| |
|
1850-51 |
Systema helminthum... Vol. II.
Vienna, Wilhelm Braumüller:
vi + 588.
–Vol. I (1850) lists Amphistomum fabaceum Diesing as a parasite of "Manatus exunguis" (403-404). Vol. II (1851) lists "Ascaris Rytinae Brandt" [new name], "Ascaris Dugonis Brandt" [new name], and Heterocheilus tunicatus Diesing as sir. parasites, the latter found in "Manatus exunguis" (190-191, 209, 502).
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Diesing, Carl Moritz
(detail)
|
| |
|
1861 |
Revision der Nematoden.
Sitzb. Akad. Wiss. Wien, math.-natw. Kl.
42(28): 595-736. 1 pl.
–Includes Ascaris Halicoris, 662.
|
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Dietz, Tim
(detail)
|
| |
|
1992 |
The call of the siren: manatees and dugongs.
Golden (Colorado), Fulcrum Publishing:
xii + 196. Illus.
–Pop. acc. of sirs. and sir. research.
|
|
|
Dight, I. J.; Gladstone, W.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1994 |
Torres Strait Baseline Study: pilot study final report, June 1993. Trace metal concentrations in sediments and selected marine biota as indicator organisms and food items in the diet of Torres Strait Islanders and coastal Papuans.
Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority Research Publ.
29: viii + 259. Illus.
|
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|
Dilg, Carl
(detail)
|
| |
|
1909 |
Beiträge zur Kenntnis der Morphologie und postembryonalen Entwicklung des Schädels bei Manatus inunguis Natt.
Gegenbaurs Morph. Jahrb.
39(1): 83-145. 1 fig. Pls. 8-13. Mar. 2, 1909.
–An Inaugural-Dissertation presented to the Universität Bern, Feb. 29, 1908, also published as a separate (Leipzig, Wilhelm Engelmann, 1909). The latter version includes a title-page, a dedication to Th. Studer (Dilg's professor), and two paragraphs of acknowledgements not published in Morph. Jahrb.
|
x |
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Dill, William A.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1961 |
Some notes on the use of the manatee (Trichechus) for the control of aquatic weeds.
U.N. Food & Agric. Organization Fisheries Biology Tech. Paper
No. 13: 1-6. Sept. 1961.
–Concludes that the present state of knowledge does not justify recommendation of the use of manatees for weed control. Quotes Allsopp (1960) in full (3-4).
|
x |
|
Dimock, Anthony W.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1907 |
The art of catching the manatee.
Century Mag.
73 (= n.s. 51): 848-853. 4 figs. Apr. 1907.
–Account of attempts to capture a Florida manatee for the New York Aquarium. See also C.H. Townsend (1907).
|
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Dimock, Anthony W.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1908 |
Big game hunting at sea: hunting the manatee.
Illus. London News
(5)11: 333-334. figs.
–Account of the capture of an adult and baby T. manatus for the New York Aquarium.
|
|
|
Dimock, Anthony W.; Dimock, Julian A.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1909 |
Florida enchantments.
London, Hodder & Stoughton:
1-318. Illus.
–Earlier ed.: New York, The Outing Publ. Co., 1908. Revised eds. (by A. W. Dimock; photographs by J. A. Dimock): Peekamose (New York), A. W. Dimock, 1915 (x + 338); New York, Frederick A. Stokes Co., 1926. Contains material republished from a variety of magazines.
Chap. 3, "The capture of the manatee", is on pp. 29-59 of the 1908 ed., and on pp. 39-59 of the 1915 ed., with 7 figs. and a cover photo. It tells the story of capturing 3 manatees for the New York Aquarium and photographing a fourth. The first animal, a large, pregnant female, died in the course of capture; the other two captives survived for some time at the Aquarium (see also Townsend, 1907).
A short article by Nina J. Root on the work of this father-and-son writer-photographer team appeared in Nat. Hist. 105(8): 78-81, Aug. 1996.
|
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Dinesen, Zena
(detail)
|
| |
|
1998 |
Management of the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park. In: J. G. Greenwood & N. J. Hall (eds.), Australian Coral Reef Society 75th Anniversary Conference, held at Heron Island, Great Barrier Reef, 2nd-6th October 1997: Proceedings.
Brisbane, Univ. of Queensland School of Marine Science (viii + 286 pp.):
67-76. Illus.
|
x |
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DiPerna, Paula
(detail)
|
| |
|
1984 |
Manatee management: a question of freedom.
Calypso Log
(Cousteau Society)
11(3): 16-17. 3 figs. Sept. 1984.
–Pop. acc. of a proposal (by Dr. Jesse White) to restock the Florida manatee population by large-scale captive breeding.
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Divin, V. A.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1957 |
Vtoraya Sibirsko-tikhookeanskaya ekspeditsiya i voprosy khozyaistvennavo osvoyeniya Dalnevo Vostoka. [The Second Siberia-Pacific Ocean Expedition and questions of the economic development of the Far East.]
Letopis Severa
2: 157-175.
–Sirs., 168-169.
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Dobbs, K.; Fernandes, L.; Slegers, S.; Jago, B.; Thompson, L.; Hall, L.; Day, J.; Cameron, D.; Tanzer, J.; Macdonald, F.; Marsh, Helene D.; Coles, Robert
(detail)
|
| |
|
2008 |
Incorporating dugong habitats into the marine protected area design for the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park, Queensland, Australia.
Ocean & Coastal Management
51: 368-375.
|
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Dockery, David T., III
(detail)
|
| |
|
1982 |
Lesueur's Walnut Hills fossil shells.
Mississippi Geol.
2(3): 7-13. Illus.
–Publishes, for the first time, plates of Lower Oligocene fossils collected from the future site of Vicksburg, Miss., by Charles A. Lesueur in 1828. Included are possible sir. rib fragments. These plates were also reproduced by Dockery as Appendix II of Mississippi Bur. Geol. Bull. 123: 5-261, 1982 (see pp. 240-241).
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Dodman, Tim
(detail)
|
| |
|
1999a |
West African manatee: a flagship species for wetlands.
Wetlands
8: 18.
|
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Dodman, Tim
(detail)
|
| |
|
1999b |
Meeting to discuss the status of manatees in West Africa.
Fadama
1: 7.
|
x |
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Doig, Fiona; Dyson, Steve
(detail)
|
| |
|
1988 |
Satellite tracking: a new direction for research.
Austral. Nat. Hist.
22(10): 437-441. 8 figs. Spring 1988.
–Pop. acc. of applications of the Argos tracking system, including studies of dugongs in Queensland (438-439). Includes 3 photos showing capture of a dugong by hoop-net (436-437).
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Dollfus, Robert Ph.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1950 |
Trématodes récoltés au Congo Belge par le Professeur Paul Brien (mai-août 1937).
Ann. Mus. Congo Belge
C (Zool.) (5)1(1): 1-136.
–Reports Zygocotyle sp. in the caecum of a Dugong from Djibouti (94-96).
|
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Dollfus, Robert Ph.
(detail)
|
| |
|
1955 |
Parasites. In: G. Petit, Ordre des siréniens. In: P.-P. Grassé (ed.), Traité de Zoologie.
Paris, Masson et Cie.,
17(1): 981-983.
–Sir. parasites.
|
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Dollman, Guy
(detail)
|
| |
|
1933a |
Dugongs from Mafia Island and a manatee from Nigeria.
Nat. Hist. Mag.
(London)
4(28): 117-125. 7 figs. Oct. 1933.
–Discussion of dugong teeth, natural history, and abundance in East Africa, and of distribution and hunting of T. senegalensis in Nigeria.
|
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Dollman, Guy
(detail)
|
| |
|
1933b |
On two dugongs from Mafia Island.
Proc. Linn. Soc. London
145: 16-17. Read Nov. 10, 1932.
–Comments on dugongs in general and on two skulls from Tanganyika sent by B. W. Savory.
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Dollo, Louis
(detail)
|
| |
|
1889a |
Le vol chez les vertébrés.
Rev. Quest. Sci.
26: 146-207, 410-485.
–Sirs., 188.
|
x |
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Dollo, Louis
(detail)
|
| |
|
1889b |
Première note sur les siréniens de Boom (résumé).
Bull. (Proc.-verb.) Soc. Belge Géol. Pal. Hydrol.
3: 415-421. 2 figs. Session of Oct. 30, 1889.
–Abstr.: Dollo (1890). Describes Miosiren Kocki, n.gen.n.sp., from the Miocene of Belgium, and compares it briefly with other sirs.
|
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Dollo, Louis
(detail)
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| |
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1890 |
Sur un sirénien miocène de Boom.
Ann. Soc. Sci. Bruxelles
14(1): 65-66. Session of Oct. 24, 1889.
–Abstract of Dollo (1889b). The new generic name Miosiren is mentioned, but not the specific name.
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Dollo, Louis
(detail)
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| |
|
1892 |
Sur la morphologie des côtes.
Bull. Sci. France Belgique
24: 113-129.
–Sirs., 118.
|
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Dollo, Louis
(detail)
|
| |
|
1922 |
Les céphalopodes déroulés et l'irréversibilité de l'évolution.
Bijdr. Dierk.
(Amsterdam)
22 (Feestnum. Max Weber): 215-226. Pl. 7.
|
Domning, Daryl Paul: SEE ALSO Aranda-Manteca et al., 1994; Bajpai & Domning, 1997; Barnes et al., 1985; Bradley et al., 1983; Brandt, J. F., 1974; Buffrénil et al., 1990; Bullock et al., 1977, 1980, 1981; Delaney et al., 1985; Donovan et al., 1990; Farmer et al., 1979a, 1979b; Garcia-Rodriguez et al., 1998; Gingerich et al., 1994; Goodwin et al., 1998; Haley, D., 1980; Hoffmann & Domning (eds.), 1998; Inuzuka et al., 1995; Ketten et al., 1992; Marine Mammal Commission, 1986; Muizon & Domning, 1985; Packard, Rathbun et al., 1984; Pervesler et al., 2000; Ray & Domning, 1986; Ray et al., 1994; Savage et al., 1994; Shikama & Domning, 1970; Takahashi et al., 1979, 1986; Thewissen & Domning, 1992; Toledo & Domning, 1991; Williams & Domning, 2004; Appendix 1, _Sirenews_.
( detail)
x |
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Domning, Daryl Paul
(detail)
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1971a |
Sirenians as guide fossils in West Coast Late Tertiary correlation - a prospectus. [Abstr.]
Geol. Soc. Amer. Abstrs. With Programs
(Cordilleran Section, Riverside, Calif.)
3(2): 110-111. Feb. 1971 (read Mar. 27, 1971).
–Reviews known Pacific history of hydrodamalines and suggests their possible stratigraphic utility. The new combination Metaxytherium allisoni is used (110), and the Subfamily Hydrodamalinae is expanded in usage to include Miocene forms.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
(detail)
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| |
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1971b |
Sirenian evolution in the North Pacific and the origin of Steller's sea cow.
Proc. 7th Ann. Conf. Biol. Sonar & Diving Mammals
(Menlo Park, Calif., Stanford Research Institute):
217-220. Read Oct. 24, 1970.
–Proposes a hypothetical history of hydrodamaline evolution in response to cooling of climate. Suggests that the extermination of Hydrodamalis by aborigines influenced the development of North Pacific aboriginal whaling.
|
x |
D |
Domning, Daryl Paul
(detail)
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| |
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1972a |
Sirenians and desmostylians in West Coast Miocene stratigraphy.
Proc. Pacif. Coast Mioc. Biostrat. Symp.
(47th Ann. Pacif. Sect. Convention, Soc. Econ. Paleont. Mineral., Bakersfield, Calif., Mar. 9-10, 1972):
146-149. 1 fig. Read Mar. 10, 1972.
–Abstr.: Amer. Assoc. Petrol. Geol. Bull. 57(2): 432, Feb. 1973. Summarizes geographic and stratigraphic distributions of North Pacific desmostylians and sirs., discusses their use in stratigraphy, and points out a discrepancy in southern California geological mapping.
|
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Domning, Daryl Paul
(detail)
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| |
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1972b |
Steller's sea cow and the origin of North Pacific aboriginal whaling.
Syesis
5: 187-189.
–Suggests that prehistoric human predation on Hydrodamalis not only led to the latter's extermination on the Asian and American mainlands, but also aided in the development of whaling technology by North Pacific natives.
|
x |
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Domning, Daryl Paul
(detail)
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| |
|
1974 |
Fossil seacows of the Southeast.
Rocky Echoes
(Jackson, Miss., Mississippi Gem & Mineral Soc.)
14(7): 7-9. Jan. 1974.
–Pop. acc. of the stratigraphic and geographic distribution of fossil sirs. in the southeastern USA and Caribbean.
|
x |
D |
Domning, Daryl Paul
(detail)
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| |
|
1975 |
Ecology and evolution of North Pacific sirenians. [Abstr.]
Amer. Zool.
15(3): 824. Summer 1975 (read to Soc. Syst. Zool., Aug. 21, 1975).
–Abstr. of Domning (1977b). Proposes that Metaxytherium allisoni, a bottom-feeder, died out due to a decline of North Pacific seagrasses and competition with desmostylians; a surface-feeding dugongid lineage, in contrast, gave rise to the kelp-eating Hydrodamalis.
|
x |
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Domning, Daryl Paul
(detail)
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1977a |
Observations on the myology of Dugong dugon (Müller).
Smithson. Contrib. Zool.
No. 226: iii + 57. 2 tabs. 54 figs. Jan. 5, 1977.
–The skeletal muscles of a female Palauan dugong are described, illustrated (with maps of muscle attachments), and compared with other published descriptions of manatee and dugong musculature. Body measurements and data on skin thickness are also given, and the functional anatomy of the facial region, jaws, spine, and flippers is discussed. (For corrigenda, see Domning, 1978a: 56.) In overall body form, dugongs appear to be more specialized and efficient swimmers than manatees. The chief myological differences are in the shoulder region.
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D |
Domning, Daryl Paul
(detail)
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| |
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1977b |
An ecological model for Late Tertiary sirenian evolution in the North Pacific Ocean.
Syst. Zool.
25(4): 352-362. 5 figs. "Dec. 1976" (publ. Feb. 8, 1977; read Aug. 21, 1975).
–Abstr.: Domning (1975). Outlines a set of principles and postulates for interpreting sir. paleoecology; briefly describes the phyletic history of North Pacific sirs.; and summarizes the interpretations presented in detail in Domning (1978b) regarding their diet, functional anatomy, possible competition with desmostylians, evolutionary pattern, and the role of North Pacific paleogeographic and climatic change in their evolution.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
(detail)
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| |
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1977c |
Criar filhotes de peixe-boi pode ser um mal negócio para você e para o filhote de peixe-boi.
A Crítica
(Manaus, Brasil),
Aug. 7, 1977, Vida, p. 3. 3 figs.
–Feature in the Sunday magazine supplement of a Manaus newspaper. Condemns the practice, by wealthy citizens of Manaus, of buying orphaned T. inunguis calves as "pets", and describes the intensive efforts required to keep such animals alive and the history of such efforts at the Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
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1978a |
The myology of the Amazonian manatee, Trichechus inunguis (Natterer) (Mammalia: Sirenia).
Acta Amazonica
8(2), Supl. 1: 1-81. 8 tabs. 50 figs. June 1978.
–Portuguese summ. The skeletal muscles of several young Amazonian manatees are described, illustrated (with maps of muscle attachments), and compared with those of other sirs. The functional anatomy of the bristles of the upper lip, the nostrils, jaws, neck, and forelimb is discussed (57-71); a vector analysis of jaw mechanics is presented (57-67), as are data on muscle weights (67) and corrigenda to Domning, 1977a (56). Interspecific myological differences among manatees seem to be confined to the mm. rectus capitis lateralis and biceps brachii. The jaw apparatus is dominated by a very large temporalis muscle, which produces unresolved forces that are resisted at a joint between the mandible and the strong pterygoid process. T. inunguis is more specialized for surface-feeding and swimming than T. manatus.
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1978b |
Sirenian evolution in the North Pacific Ocean.
Univ. Calif. Publ. Geol. Sci.
118: xi + 176. 27 tabs. 37 figs. 18 pls. Sept. 8, 1978.
–Summarizes all available information on sirs. from the North Pacific basin and describes all known sir. fossils from that region, listing (in an appendix) their locality data and associated faunas, and interprets their paleoecology, functional anatomy, and phylogeny. The contents of the former dugongid subfamily Halianassinae are redistributed between the Halitheriinae and the expanded and redefined Hydrodamalinae. Seven sir. species are recognized in the North Pacific, including one halitheriine (Dioplotherium allisoni, n.comb.; Middle Miocene) and six hydrodamalines: Dusisiren, n.gen., D. reinharti, n.sp. (Middle Miocene), D. Sp. B (new; Late Miocene), D. jordani, n.comb. (Late Miocene-Early Pliocene), D. Sp. D (new; Early Pliocene), Hydrodamalis cuestae, n.sp. (Middle-Late Pliocene), and H. gigas (Pleistocene-Recent). The hydrodamalines are interpreted to constitute a single, unbranching evolutionary lineage which progressively adapted to colder and more exposed habitats and a diet of kelp. Possible competitive interactions between North Pacific sirs. and desmostylians are also discussed. Reviews data on the historical distribution of H. gigas, and concludes that it was in fact exterminated ca. A.D. 1768. Includes (163-165) translations by George V. Shkurkin of two Russian eyewitness accounts of Hydrodamalis-hunting on Bering Island (by P. Yakovlev, 1754-55, and S. Cherepanov, 1759-60) which had not previously been published in English.
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1978c |
Sirenia. Chap. 28 in: V. J. Maglio & H. B. S. Cooke (eds.), Evolution of African mammals.
Cambridge & London, Harvard Univ. Press (xiii + 641 pp.):
573-581. 1 fig.
–Reviews the sir. fossil record, emphasizing occurrences in Africa and Madagascar, and presents a simplified phylogeny of sirs. For update, see Domning et al., 2010.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
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1980 |
Feeding position preference in manatees (Trichechus).
Jour. Mamm.
61(3): 544-547. 2 tabs. Aug. 20, 1980.
–Experiments comparing feeding behavior of captive T. inunguis and T. m. latirostris showed that both prefer to feed as low as possible in the water column. This is interpreted to mean that all sirs., due to their subterminal mouths and regardless of rostral deflection, find it more energetically efficient to feed lower in the water column. This in turn suggests a possible selective value for evolutionary changes in rostral deflection.
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1981a |
Distribution and status of manatees Trichechus spp. near the mouth of the Amazon River, Brazil.
Biol. Conserv.
19(2): 85-97. 3 figs. Jan. 1981.
–Concludes that the range of T. manatus in Brazil is disjunct (north and south of the Amazon), with T. inunguis occurring in the Amazon estuaries; the ranges of the two species are nearly or entirely mutually exclusive. Also provides notes on food plants, hunting and utilization, and conservation of manatees in the region.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
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1981b |
Manatees of the Amazon.
Sea Frontiers
27(1): 18-23. 3 figs. Jan.-Feb. 1981.
–Notice: Oro-Bio (Mag. of Dental Res. Inst., Univ. of California, Los Angeles) 3(1): 1-2, 1 fig., Fall 1981. Pop. acc. of research on T. inunguis at the Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amazônia (INPA), Manaus, Brazil.
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1981c |
Manati Steller, 1774 and Trichechus exunguis (Natterer in Diesing, 1839) (Mammalia, Sirenia): proposal to place these names on the Official Indexes of Rejected and Invalid Names in Zoology.
Bull. Zool. Nomencl.
38(2): 130-133. Apr. 30, 1981.
–Also proposes placing Hydrodamalis Retzius, 1794 and H. gigas (Zimmermann, 1780) on the Official Lists of valid names. These proposals were accepted; see Opinion 1320 (R.V. Melville, 1985).
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Domning, Daryl Paul
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1981d |
Sea cows and sea grasses.
Paleobiology
7(4): 417-420. Dec. 17, 1981.
–Discusses the use of the sir. fossil record in constructing hypotheses about the evolution of marine and freshwater floras in the Caribbean, North Pacific, South America, and Mediterranean.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
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1982a |
Commercial exploitation of manatees Trichechus in Brazil c. 1785-1973.
Biol. Conserv.
22(2): 101-126. 12 tabs. 1 fig. Feb. 1982.
–Compilation and analysis of published statistics on commerce in meat, lard, and hides of T. inunguis. Records of meat-hunting of T. manatus in Alagoas (in 1959) and Bahia (in 1964) are also noted.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
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1982b |
Evolution of manatees: a speculative history.
Jour. Paleont.
56(3): 599-619. 9 figs. May 1982.
–Reviews all records of fossil trichechids and possible trichechids, and proposes an evolutionary scenario for the family, based on Tertiary changes in South American drainage patterns and the evolution of floating meadows. Reports new material of: Potamosiren sp., Miocene, Colombia (601-602); Ribodon limbatus, Miocene, Argentina (602-603); Ribodon sp., ?Pliocene, North Carolina (604); Trichechus sp., Plio-Pleistocene, Brazil (603-604) and Florida (604-605) and Pleistocene, Louisiana (605). Illustrates for the first time Funderburg's (1960) Pleistocene Trichechus from North Carolina (605). Discusses the homology of cheek teeth in Trichechus (607-608), the importance of a gramineous diet in the manatees' evolution of horizontal tooth replacement (609-612), possible trichechid-dugongid competition in the Caribbean (613-614), and the present adaptive status of manatees (615-616). Suggests that root hypsodonty in Dugong is recently evolved (614). Concludes that trichechids probably evolved in South America from a protosirenid ancestor, and adapted there to a diet of freshwater grasses by the evolution of supernumerary molars.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
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1982c |
Fossil Sirenia from the Sahabi Formation.
Garyounis Scientific Bull.
(Benghazi),
_
Special Issue No. 4: 29-32. 2 figs.
–Reports Metaxytherium serresii from the Early Pliocene Sahabi Formation, Libya, and suggests that this species was dwarfed due to suboptimal conditions for seagrasses in the post-Messinian Mediterranean.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
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1983 |
Marching teeth of the manatee.
Nat. Hist.
(New York)
92(5): 8, 10-11. 1 fig. May 1983.
–Pop. acc. of tooth replacement, dental adaptation, and evolution of manatees and their possible competition with extinct Caribbean dugongids.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
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1984a |
Sea cow discovery.
Nature
(London)
308(5959): 500. Apr. 5, 1984.
–Comments on V. Rich (1983), pointing out the potential importance of a supposedly associated Hydrodamalis skeleton found on Bering Island in view of the incomplete knowledge of the species' osteology.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
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1984b |
Sea cows of the Chesapeake Bay.
Bugeye Times
(Calvert Marine Museum, Solomons, Maryland)
9(1): 5-6. 1 fig. Spring 1984.
–Pop. acc. of Metaxytherium calvertense and other fossil and Recent sirs. recorded from the Chesapeake area.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
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1984c |
Fossil sirenians from the Pamunkey River, Virginia. In: L. W. Ward & K. Krafft (eds.), Stratigraphy and paleontology of the outcropping Tertiary beds in the Pamunkey River region, central Virginia coastal plain.
Atlantic Coastal Plain Geol. Assoc. (Guidebook, 1984 Field Trip, Oct. 6-7, 1984):
224-225. 1 pl.
–Reports sir. remains resembling Metaxytherium calvertense from the Middle Miocene Calvert Formation on the Pamunkey River.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
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1985a |
Potential biochronologic utility of European sirenians. [Abstr.]
Abstrs. VIIIth Congress, Regional Committee on Mediterranean Neogene Stratigraphy, Symposium on European Late Cenozoic Mineral Resources
(Budapest, 15-22 Sept. 1985):
183.
–Points out that the European species of Halitherium and Metaxytherium appear to form an Oligocene-Pliocene sequence of chronospecies having potential use in stratigraphic correlation.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
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1985b |
Habitat protection: the only hope.
Save the Manatee Club News
(Florida Dept. Nat. Resources & Florida Audubon Soc.),
Dec. 1985: [2].
–Essay on the need to protect manatee habitat in Florida.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
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1987a |
Sea cow family reunion.
Nat. Hist.
(New York)
96(4): 64, 66-71. 2 figs. Apr. 1987.
–Pop. acc. of the history of study, paleoecology, and evolution of the Sirenia of the North Pacific Ocean.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
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1987b |
Halianassa studeri von Meyer, 1838 (Mammalia, Sirenia): proposed designation of a neotype, and proposed conservation of Halitherium Kaup, 1838 by designation of a type species.
Bull. Zool. Nomencl.
44(2): 122-125. June 1987.
–In order to suppress the name Halianassa studeri, the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature is asked to designate as its neotype the holotype of Pugmeodon schinzii, and to designate P. schinzii as type species of Halitherium, thereby making Halianassa studeri a junior objective synonym of Halitherium schinzii. The formal rejection of the names Halianassa and studeri is requested, as well as a ruling that the correct original spelling of Halytherium be deemed to be Halitherium. These proposals were accepted; see Opinion 1535 (ICZN, 1989).
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Domning, Daryl Paul
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1987c |
How long have manatees been in Florida?
Save the Manatee Club News
(Florida Dept. Nat. Resources & Florida Audubon Soc.),
Aug. 1987: [1-2].
–Brief pop. acc. of the sir. fossil record in Florida, showing that (contrary to a current rumor) manatees were not recently introduced into the state. See also Domning (2005).
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Domning, Daryl Paul
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1988 |
Fossil Sirenia of the West Atlantic and Caribbean region. I. Metaxytherium floridanum Hay, 1922.
Jour. Vert. Pal.
8(4): 395-426. 12 tabs. 12 figs. Dec. 14, 1988.
–Describes the history of study of fossil sirs. from the Bone Valley area, Polk and Hillsborough Cos., Florida; the geology and age of the Bone Valley deposits; the osteology of a large sample of M. floridanum from Bone Valley and a few specimens from elsewhere in Florida; and the phylogenetic relationships of the species. M. floridanum is considered to be Middle-Late Miocene in age, and a senior synonym of M. ossivallense. Reports of M. calvertense and "Hesperosiren" in the Bone Valley Formation actually pertain to M. floridanum.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
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1989a |
Kelp evolution: a comment.
Paleobiology
15(1): 53-56. "Winter 1989" (mailed June 13, 1989).
–Comments on Estes & Steinberg (1988), arguing that kelps radiated prior to the Middle Miocene and were subject to intense marine-mammal herbivory from the Late Oligocene on. See also Estes & Steinberg (1989).
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Domning, Daryl Paul
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1989b |
Fossil sirenians from the Suwannee River, Florida and Georgia. In: G.S. Morgan (ed.), Miocene paleontology and stratigraphy of the Suwannee River basin of north Florida and south Georgia.
Southeastern Geol. Soc. Guidebook
No. 30: 54-60. 2 figs. Oct. 7, 1989.
–Describes the discoveries, relationships, and probable feeding habits of "Halitherium" olseni, Dioplotherium manigaulti, and Metaxytherium sp. found in the Miocene of the Suwannee River basin. See also G. S. Morgan (1989).
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Domning, Daryl Paul
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1989c |
Fossil Sirenia of the West Atlantic and Caribbean region. II. Dioplotherium manigaulti Cope, 1883.
Jour. Vert. Pal.
9(4): 415-428. 2 tabs. 6 figs. Dec. 19, 1989.
–Describes the history of study of fossil sirs. from the South Carolina phosphate beds; the age of beds in South Carolina and Florida yielding Dioplotherium; the osteology of available specimens of D. manigaulti, including a skull from the Lower Miocene of Florida; and the cladistic relationships of the species, which is formally referred to the Rytiodontinae together with Rytiodus and "Halitherium" olseni. Rytiodontines are hypothesized to have fed primarily on large seagrass rhizomes, and a similar adaptation is suggested for the ancestors of Dugong dugon.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
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1989d |
Fossil Sirenia of the West Atlantic and Caribbean region. III. Xenosiren yucateca, gen. et sp. nov.
Jour. Vert. Pal.
9(4): 429-437. 1 tab. 7 figs. Dec. 19, 1989.
–Describes a partial skull from the Upper Miocene or Lower Pliocene of Yucatan, Mexico; it is considered a rytiodontine and a direct descendant of Dioplotherium. Its cranial specializations are interpreted as adaptations for uprooting seagrass rhizomes using both jaws and tusks.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
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1990a |
Sirenian rhizivory studies. In: L. W. Lefebvre & J. A. Powell, Jr., Manatee grazing impacts on seagrasses in Hobe Sound and Jupiter Sound in southeast Florida during the winter of 1988-89.
NTIS Document No. PB 90-271883 (vi + 36):
34-36.
–Describes observations and experiments conducted to determine how thoroughly manatees can excavate and remove seagrass rhizomes, and how effective tusks of extinct dugongids might have been for this purpose.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
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1990b |
Fossil Sirenia of the West Atlantic and Caribbean region. IV. Corystosiren varguezi, gen. et sp. nov.
Jour. Vert. Pal.
10(3): 361-371. 1 tab. 4 figs. Sept. 20, 1990.
–Describes a skull from the Early Pliocene of Yucatan, and skull fragments and tusks from possibly correlative deposits in Florida. The new form is considered a rytiodontine and possible sister taxon of Rytiodus.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
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1991a |
Sexual and ontogenetic variation in the pelvic bones of Dugong dugon (Sirenia).
Mar. Mamm. Sci.
7(3): 311-316. 2 figs. July 1991 (mailed Aug. 15, 1991).
–Describes variation in innominate bones of 41 male and 29 female dugongs from Queensland, and presents a key for assigning such bones to broad categories of sex, age, and sexual maturity.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
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1991b |
A new genus for Halitherium olseni Reinhart, 1976 (Mammalia: Sirenia).
Jour. Vert. Pal.
11(3): 398. Sept. 30, 1991.
–Names and diagnoses the new genus Crenatosiren, and creates the new combination C. olseni.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
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1991c |
Why save the manatee? In: J. E. Reynolds, III & D. K. Odell, Manatees and dugongs.
New York, Facts on File (xiv + 192):
167-173. Oct. 1991.
–An essay based on ideas originally outlined by Domning in Sirenews No. 3: 1-4 (April 1985). Lists and discusses a graded series of reasons for protecting manatees and other endangered species and their habitats.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
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1993a |
[Letter to the editor.]
Nat. Hist.
102(9): 2. "Sept. 1993" (mailed Aug. 1993).
–Points out that Steller's sea cow and not the blaauwbock was the first "large-bodied mammalian species" to become extinct in historic times, contrary to a statement by S. J. Gould.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
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1994a |
West Indian tuskers.
Nat. Hist.
(New York)
103(4): 72-73. 1 fig. Apr. 1994.
–Errata: Nat. Hist. 103(5): 6, May 1994. Pop. acc. of fossil dugongines and other sirs. in the Caribbean and their implications for the paleoecology and evolution of seagrass communities.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
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1994b |
A phylogenetic analysis of the Sirenia. In: A. Berta & T. A. Deméré (eds.), Contributions in marine mammal paleontology honoring Frank C. Whitmore, Jr.
Proc. San Diego Soc. Nat. Hist.
29: 177-189. 2 tabs. 4 figs. May 1, 1994.
–Revs.: S. A. McLeod, Jour. Vert. Pal. 16(1): 183-185, Mar. 19, 1996; J. E. Heyning, Mar. Mamm. Sci. 12(2): 326-329, "Apr. 1996" (publ. Mar. 29, 1996). Presents the results of a cladistic analysis of 36 species and subspecies of sirs. using cranial and dental characters. Formally refers the subfamily Miosireninae to the Trichechidae, and introduces the name Trichechinae for the remaining trichechids. Dugong dugon is placed within the clade previously called the Rytiodontinae, and the senior name Dugonginae is extended to include this entire clade. A revised provisional classification of the Sirenia is presented.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
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1995 |
What do we know about the evolution of the dugong? In: Mermaid Symposium: First International Symposium on Dugong and Manatees. November 15-17, 1995, Toba, Mie, Japan. Abstracts.
Toba (Japan), Toba Aquarium:
23-24.
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1996a |
Bibliography and index of the Sirenia and Desmostylia.
Smithson. Contrib. Paleobiol.
No. 80: iii + 611. Frontisp. July 25, 1996.
–The first publication of the present database. Lists approximately 4,590 titles alphabetically by author; many entries annotated. Covers the neobiology, paleobiology, and ethnobiology of the Sirenia and Desmostylia, 1494-1994. The index employs 1,059 subject headings and cross references, including all Linnean names and combinations ever used for sirs. and desmostylians, plus names of all reported sir. food plants and parasites. More than 40% of the main entries are fully indexed, and many others are partially indexed, yielding over 13,950 index entries, most of which are themselves annotated and include page references. Six appendices list serial publications devoted to the Sirenia, additional sources for the history of sirenology and sir. conservation, and coins and postage stamps depicting sirs., and provide a classification and synonymy of the Sirenia and Desmostylia, a summary of the nomenclature of the Recent sirs., and an alphabetical list of species-group names of sirs. and desmostylians.
Only original nomenclatural acts appearing for the first time in this publication are indexed here. These comprise new synonymies of Halitherium schinzii lareolensis Pilleri with H. schinzii (Kaup) (385), of Metaxytherium riveroi Varona with M. crataegense (Simpson) (386), of M. krahuletzi excelsum Pilleri with M. krahuletzi Depéret (386), of M. catalaunicum Pilleri with M. medium (Desmarest) (387), and of Prototherium solei Pilleri and P. montserratense Pilleri with "P." intermedium Bizzotto (388); also emendation of the spelling of "Metaxytherium" kachchhense Bajpai, Singh, and Singh (386).
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1996b |
Common patterns of evolution among ungulates evolving into marine mammals: examples from Cetacea and Sirenia. (Abstr.) In: J. E. Repetski (ed.), Sixth North American Paleontological Convention Abstracts of Papers. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. June 9-June 12, 1996.
Pal. Soc. Special Publ.
No. 8: 105. Read June 12, 1996.
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1997a |
Sirenia. Chap. 23 in: R. F. Kay, R. H. Madden, R. L. Cifelli, & J. J. Flynn (eds.), Vertebrate paleontology in the Neotropics: the Miocene fauna of La Venta, Colombia.
Washington & London, Smithsonian Inst. Press (xv + 592):
383-391. 4 figs.
–Spanish summ. Describes new sir. specimens from the Middle Miocene of Colombia, referring all the La Venta specimens (including the holotype of Metaxytherium ortegense Kellogg, 1966) to Potamosiren magdalenensis Reinhart, 1951. A Late Miocene tooth from the Río Acre (Brazil-Peru border) described by Frailey (1986) is interpreted as a fourth lower deciduous premolar of Ribodon. Potamosiren is considered ancestral to all other trichechines, and its thick molar enamel is interpreted as an adaptation to eating soft but increasingly abrasive aquatic plants.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
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1997b |
Fossil Sirenia of the west Atlantic and Caribbean region. VI. Crenatosiren olseni (Reinhart, 1976).
Jour. Vert. Pal.
17(2): 397-412. 9 tabs. 9 figs. June 19, 1997.
–Redescribes the species on the basis of the holotype and new material from the Late Olig. of Florida and South and North Carolina. It is regarded as the most primitive member of the Dugonginae and the sister group of all other known dugongines. This subfamily evidently arose in the West Atlantic-Caribbean region during the Oligocene.
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1997c |
Marine mammals. In: F. F. Steininger, S. Iaccarino, & F. Cati (eds.), In search of the Paleogene/Neogene boundary. Part 3: The global stratotype section and point. The GSSP for the base of the Neogene (the Paleogene/Neogene boundary).
Giornale di Geologia
(3)58(1/2): 177-180.
–Briefly discusses the biostratigraphic utility of the lineages of Cetacea, Pinnipedia, Sirenia, and Desmostylia that are known to have ranged across the Oligocene-Miocene boundary. Considers the fossil records of these taxa to be insufficiently known for them to be used for more than crude stratigraphic correlations.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
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1999a |
Fossils explained 24: Sirenians (seacows).
Geology Today
15(2): 75-79. 6 figs. Mar.-Apr. 1999.
–Gen. acc. of sirs. and their fossil record and evolutionary history.
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1999b |
Endangered species: the common denominator. Chap. 15 in: J. R. Twiss, Jr. & R. R. Reeves (eds.), Conservation and management of marine mammals.
Washington & London, Smithsonian Inst. Press (xi + 471 pp.):
332-341. Sept. 1999.
–Rev.: P. Shaughnessy, Mar. Mamm. Sci. 16(4): 843, Oct. 3, 2000.
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1999c |
Sirenians. In: R. Singer (ed.), Encyclopedia of paleontology. Vol. 2: M-Z.
Chicago & London, Fitzroy Dearborn Publs. (xiii + 689-1435):
1089-1090.
–Vol. 1 = pp. xix + 1-687. Short gen. acc. of sirs. and sir. evolution.
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1999d |
Oligocene Sirenia of the Caribbean region. Appendix 1 (p. 29) in: H. L. Dixon & S. K. Donovan. Report of a field meeting to the area around Browns Town, parish of St. Ann, north-central Jamaica, 21st February, 1998.... with appendices by Daryl P. Domning and Paul D. Taylor.
Jour. Geol. Soc. Jamaica
33: 24-30.
–Summarizes the Oligocene sir. taxa recorded from the wider Caribbean region, and reports Late Olig. rib frags. from the Browns Town Formation.
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2000 |
The readaptation of Eocene sirenians to life in water. In: J.-M. Mazin, V. de Buffrénil, & P. Vignaud (eds.), Secondary adaptation of tetrapods to life in water.
Historical Biology
(Special Issue)
14(1-2): 115-119. 1 fig.
–Describes in general terms the evolution of hydrostatic and hydrodynamic locomotor and diving adaptations in sirs., tracing the changes in gross body form exhibited by the four families and comparing them with convergent changes seen in contemporary cetaceans.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
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2001a |
Sirenians, seagrasses, and Cenozoic ecological change in the Caribbean. In: W. Miller III & S. E. Walker (eds.), Cenozoic palaeobiology: the last 65 million years of biotic stasis and change.
Palaeogeogr. Palaeoclim. Palaeoecol. (Special Issue)
166(1-2): 27-50. 2 figs. Feb. 1, 2001.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
(detail)
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2001b |
Evolution of the Sirenia and Desmostylia. In: J.-M. Mazin & V. de Buffrénil (eds.), Secondary adaptation of tetrapods to life in water.
Munich, Verlag Dr. Friedrich Pfeil (367 pp.):
151-168. 7 figs. Apr. 10, 2001?
–Review: B. L. Beatty, Jour. Vert. Pal. 23(2): 474-475, June 17, 2003.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
(detail)
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2001c |
The earliest known fully quadrupedal sirenian.
Nature
(London)
413(6856): 625-627. 2 figs. Oct. 11, 2001.
–Notices: New Scientist No. 2312: 27, Oct. 13, 2001; C. Reed, Geotimes 46(12): 8, 1 fig., Dec. 2001; C. Sagne, Universalia (Encyclopaedia Universalis France, Paris): 282, 1 fig., 2002; S. K. Donovan, Geology Today 18(2): 42, Mar./Apr. 2002; D. R. Prothero, Geotimes 47(7): 24, July 2002; Science Year (The World Book Annual Science Supplement) 2003: 245, 1 fig., 2002.
Describes Pezosiren portelli n.gen. n.sp., a prorastomid from the early Middle Eocene of Jamaica.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
(detail)
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2001d |
Supposedly unique features of the desmostylian tibia are also found in other mammals.
Bull. Ashoro Mus. Pal.
2: 23-26. 1 tab. 1 fig. Mar. 30, 2001.
–Compares the tibiae of desmostylians with those of diverse fossil & Recent mammals, with regard to torsion of the tibia and tilt of the ankle joint relative to the axis of the tibial shaft. Concludes that desmostylians are not outside the range of variation in these characters seen in other mammals, and were probably adapted for slow ambulatory locomotion on land.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
(detail)
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2001e |
Sirenia (dugongs and manatees). In: Encyclopedia of Life Sciences.
London, Macmillan.
–Also published online in Aug. 2000; online version revised in March 2004 and March 2005.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
(detail)
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2002a |
New "intermediate form" ties seacows firmly to land.
Repts. Natl. Center for Science Education
(Berkeley, Cal.)
21(5-6): 38-42. 1 fig. "Sept.-Dec. 2001" [mailed Mar. 2002].
–Describes how Pezosiren portelli and other fossil sirs. demonstrate the fact of major evolutionary change in a group of mammals.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
(detail)
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2002b |
The terrestrial posture of desmostylians. In: R.J. Emry (ed.), Cenozoic mammals of land and sea: tributes to the career of Clayton E. Ray.
Smithson. Contr. Paleobiol.
93: 99-111. 6 figs. Dec. 18, 2002.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
(detail)
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2002c |
Desmostylia. In: W.F. Perrin, B. Würsig, & J.G.M. Thewissen (eds.), Encyclopedia of marine mammals.
San Diego, Academic Press (xxxviii + 1414):
319-322. 1 tab. 2 figs.
–Ed. 2 (2009): pp. 307-310.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
(detail)
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2002d |
Sirenian evolution. In: W.F. Perrin, B. Würsig, & J.G.M. Thewissen (eds.), Encyclopedia of marine mammals.
San Diego, Academic Press (xxxviii + 1414):
1083-1086. 3 figs.
–Ed. 2 (2009): pp. 1016-1019, 4 figs.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
(detail)
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2005 |
Fossil Sirenia of the West Atlantic and Caribbean region. VII. Pleistocene Trichechus manatus Linnaeus, 1758.
Jour. Vert. Pal.
25(3): 685-701. 4 tabs. 8 figs. Sept. 30, 2005.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
(detail)
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2008b |
Sirenia. Chap. 36 in: C.M. Janis, G.F. Gunnell, & M.D. Uhen (eds.), Evolution of Tertiary mammals of North America. Vol. 2: Small mammals, xenarthrans, and marine mammals.
Cambridge, Cambridge Univ. Press (viii + 795):
629-638. 3 figs. June 12, 2008.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
(detail)
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2008c |
Desmostylia. Chap. 37 in: C.M. Janis, G.F. Gunnell, & M.D. Uhen (eds.), Evolution of Tertiary mammals of North America. Vol. 2: Small mammals, xenarthrans, and marine mammals.
Cambridge, Cambridge Univ. Press (viii + 795):
639-644. 3 figs. June 12, 2008.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
(detail)
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2012 |
The early years of the Amazonian manatee project at INPA, Manaus, Brazil.
Aquatic Mammals
38(2): 204-222. 11 figs.
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Domning, Daryl Paul
(detail)
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2013 |
Order Sirenia – Dugongs, Manatees. In: J. Kingdon, D. Happold, M. Hoffmann, T. Butynski, M. Happold, & J. Kalina (eds.), Mammals of Africa. Volume I. Introductory Chapters and Afrotheria.
London, Bloomsbury Publishing:
201-202. 3 figs. Feb. 2013.
–Introduction to the sir. chapter; subsequent parts of the chapter (pp. 203-212) are by J. E. Reynolds III, H. Marsh, P. Dutton, and J. A. Powell, Jr. Illustrations include sketches by J. Kingdon.
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Domning, Daryl Paul; Buffrénil, Vivian de
(detail)
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1991 |
Hydrostasis in the Sirenia: quantitative data and functional interpretations.
Mar. Mamm. Sci.
7(4): 331-368. 5 tabs. 18 figs. Oct. 1991.
–Analyzes the distribution of skeletal mass in T. m. latirostris and the positions of the centers of gravity and buoyancy in T. inunguis, concluding that increased volume and density of bones (= "pachyosteosclerosis", a term introduced here) do indeed serve in sirs. as ballast to maintain horizontal trim and neutral buoyancy. The design and position of the lungs also seem to serve this purpose. Selection for maintenance of trim and maximization of turning moments of the flippers may help account, respectively, for loss of hind limbs and shortening of the neck. The gross anatomy of a sir. (T. inunguis) is illustrated in serial cross sections for the first time. Summarizes the distribution of pachyosteosclerosis in various fossil sirs., and concludes that this condition is fully adaptive and in no sense "pathological".
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Domning, Daryl Paul; Clark, James M.
(detail)
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1993 |
Jamaican Tertiary marine Vertebrata. In: R. M. Wright & E. Robinson (eds.), Biostratigraphy of Jamaica.
Geol. Soc. Amer. Mem.
182: 413-415. Dec. 1993.
–Reviews the occurrences of Prorastomus sirenoides in Early and Middle Eocene rocks of Jamaica (414).
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Domning, Daryl Paul; Deméré, Thomas A.
(detail)
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1984 |
New material of Hydrodamalis cuestae (Mammalia: Dugongidae) from the Miocene and Pliocene of San Diego County, California.
Trans. San Diego Soc. Nat. Hist.
20(12): 169-188. 4 tabs. 7 figs. Nov. 20, 1984.
–Reviews the geology and biostratigraphy of the San Mateo and San Diego Formations, and describes new cranial and postcranial specimens of H. cuestae from both; confirms the supposed abnormality of the holotype and the large size of the species in the southern part of its range.
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Domning, Daryl Paul; Frye, Fredric L.
(detail)
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1975 |
Pathology of two fossil sea cows (Mammalia: Sirenia).
PaleoBios
(Berkeley, Univ. Calif. Mus. Pal.)
No. 18: 1-4. 2 pls. July 10, 1975.
–Reprinted in a bound vol. of the early issues of PaleoBios, 1980. Describes fractures, osteomyelitis, and ossifying spondylosis in Metaxytherium jordani and osteitis deformans or osteitis fibrosa in Hydrodamalis n.sp. from California.
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Domning, Daryl Paul; Gingerich, Philip D.
(detail)
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1994 |
Protosiren smithae, new species (Mammalia, Sirenia), from the late Middle Eocene of Wadi Hitan, Egypt.
Contr. Mus. Pal. Univ. Michigan
29(3): 69-87. 3 tabs. 11 figs. Nov. 30, 1994.
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Domning, Daryl Paul; Hayek, Lee-Ann C.
(detail)
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1984 |
Horizontal tooth replacement in the Amazonian manatee (Trichechus inunguis).
Mammalia
(Paris)
48(1): 105-127. 7 tabs. 7 figs. Mar. 5, 1984.
–French summ. Analysis of tooth-loss data from captive manatees indicates rates of tooth movement on the order of 1 mm/month. The rates vary directly with food (especially grass) consumption, and are probably controlled by the mechanical stress of chewing. The replacement process seems adapted to a diet that is both tough and abrasive, and does not work as well when (as in Florida manatees) these two factors are decoupled.
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Domning, Daryl Paul; Hayek, Lee-Ann C.
(detail)
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1986 |
Interspecific and intraspecific morphological variation in manatees (Sirenia: Trichechus).
Mar. Mamm. Sci.
2(2): 87-144. 7 tabs. 4 figs. Apr. 1986.
–Discusses the external and internal characteristics of the living manatee species, with an extensive statistical analysis of measurements and qualitative features of the skull and mandible. No significant sexual dimorphism was found (97). Salient ontogenetic changes in the skull are briefly noted (97-99). The subspecies T. m. manatus and T. m. latirostris are found to be morphologically distinguishable and taxonomically valid; the vernacular name "Antillean manatee" is proposed for the former (125). Cold weather in the northern Gulf of Mexico and strong currents in the Straits of Florida are suggested as causes of the apparent genetic isolation of Florida manatees. Alleged subspecies of T. senegalensis are considered to be baseless (126). Detailed diagnoses are given for all the species and subspecies (126-130). The functional significance of diagnostic cranial differences is discussed (130-131). Cladistic analysis suggests that T. manatus and T. senegalensis are each other's closest relatives (132-136); the senegalensis-like features of a Pleistocene skull from South Carolina illustrate the general primitiveness of the African species.
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Domning, Daryl Paul; Magor, Diana Marion
(detail)
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1977 |
Taxa de substituição horizontal de dentes no peixe-boi.
Acta Amazonica
7(3): 435-438. Sept. 1977.
–Preliminary report on tooth replacement in T. inunguis. Toothrow movement, initiated by weaning, is on the order of 1 mm/month in captive animals and is directly proportional to intake of solid food.
The cover of this issue depicts Domning bottle-feeding a manatee calf.
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Domning, Daryl Paul; Myrick, Albert C., Jr.
(detail)
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1980 |
Tetracycline marking and the possible layering rate of bone in an Amazonian manatee (Trichechus inunguis). In: W. F. Perrin & A. C. Myrick, Jr. (eds.), Age determination of toothed whales and sirenians.
Repts. Internatl. Whaling Comm.,
_
Special Issue 3: 203-207. 3 figs.
–The successful marking of a rib, using a 7.1-8.5 mg/kg dosage of Terramycin, suggests a periosteal bone deposition rate of one layer per year. Layering in ribs and mandibles of T. manatus is also discussed.
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Domning, Daryl Paul; Pervesler, Peter
(detail)
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2001 |
The osteology and relationships of Metaxytherium krahuletzi Depéret, 1895 (Mammalia: Sirenia).
Abh. Senckenberg. Naturf. Ges.
553: 1-89. 19 tabs. Frontisp. 10 figs. 20 pls. Mar. 20, 2001.
–German summ.
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Domning, Daryl Paul; Ray, Clayton Edward
(detail)
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1986 |
The earliest sirenian (Mammalia: Dugongidae) from the eastern Pacific Ocean.
Mar. Mamm. Sci.
2(4): 263-276. 1 tab. 6 figs. Oct. 1986.
–A partial skull and mandible from the Early Miocene Nye Mudstone in Oregon is referred to Halitheriinae gen. et sp. indet. The possible entry of sirs. into the North Pacific in the Late Oligocene and Early Miocene is discussed in terms of climate and paleogeography (273-274).
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Domning, Daryl Paul; Thomas, Herbert
(detail)
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1987 |
Metaxytherium serresii (Mammalia: Sirenia) from the Early Pliocene of Libya and France: a reevaluation of its morphology, phyletic position, and biostratigraphic and paleoecological significance. In: N. T. Boaz, A. El-Arnauti, A. W. Gaziry, J. de Heinzelin, & D. D. Boaz (eds.), Neogene paleontology and geology of Sahabi.
New York, Alan R. Liss (xv + 401 pp.):
205-232. 12 tabs. 13 figs.
–Arabic, French, and German summs. Reviews the history of the name Metaxytherium serresii (206-207); summarizes the record of Metaxytherium in Europe (207-209); describes the material of M. serresii from Sahabi, Libya (209-223); presents a cladistic analysis of European Halitherium and Metaxytherium (223-228); and reviews the stratigraphic context of M. serresii at Montpellier, France (228-229). Concludes that H. christolii, M. krahuletzi, M. medium, M. serresii, and M. forestii form a single lineage, probably derived from H. schinzii. The small size of M. serresii is attributed to dwarfing caused by poor nutrition, due in turn to reduced diversity, quality, and/or quantity of seagrasses in the post-Messinian Mediterranean.
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Domning, Daryl Paul; Aguilera, Orangel A.
(detail)
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2008a |
Fossil Sirenia of the West Atlantic and Caribbean region. VIII. Nanosiren garciae, gen. et sp. nov. and Nanosiren sanchezi, sp. nov.
Jour. Vert. Pal.
28(2): 479-500. 8 tabs. 16 figs. June 12, 2008.
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Domning, Daryl Paul; Barnes, Lawrence G.
(detail)
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2007 |
A new name for the 'Stanford skeleton' of Paleoparadoxia (Mammalia, Desmostylia).
Jour. Vert. Pal.
27(3): 748-751. 2 figs. Sept. 12, 2007.
–Names Paleoparadoxia repenningi, n.sp.
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Domning, Daryl Paul; Beatty, Brian Lee
(detail)
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2007 |
Use of tusks in feeding by dugongid sirenians: observations and tests of hypotheses. In: J.S. Reidenberg & J.T. Laitman (eds.), Anatomical adaptations of aquatic mammals.
Anat. Rec.
290(6): 523-538. 1 tab. 6 figs. June 2007 (Mailed week of May 21, 2007).
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Domning, Daryl Paul; Morgan, Gary Scott; Ray, Clayton Edward
(detail)
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1982 |
North American Eocene sea cows (Mammalia: Sirenia).
Smithson. Contrib. Paleobiol.
No. 52: iii + 69. 3 tabs. 34 figs. Sept. 3, 1982.
–Briefly reviews the worldwide Eocene sir. record, and reports in detail on the 22 known New World Eocene localities (1-17). New specimens from Florida (18-39) and North Carolina (39-59) are described, compared with other sirs., and referred to Protosiren sp. New records of Pleistocene Trichechus manatus from the Waccasassa River, Florida (18), and of Protosiren n.sp. from the Late Eocene of Egypt (55-56, 59), are also reported. The primitive sir. dental formula is confirmed to have been 3.1.5.3, and the significance of this for eutherian phylogeny is pointed out (59-60). The pan-Tethyan distribution of Eocene sirs. and its biostratigraphic potential, the possible sequence of sir. adaptive radiations (60-61), and the probable seagrass diet of Eocene sirs. (61-62) are discussed; concludes that the distribution of fossil sirs. is a more reliable guide to the past presence of seagrasses than are the distributions of Foraminifera or other organisms.
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Domning, Daryl Paul; Pervesler, Peter
(detail)
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2013 |
The sirenian Metaxytherium (Mammalia: Dugongidae) in the Badenian (Middle Miocene) of Central Europe.
Austrian Journal of Earth Sciences
105(3): 125-160. 10 tabs. 11 figs.
–German summ.
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Domning, Daryl Paul; Ray, Clayton Edward; McKenna, Malcolm Carnegie
(detail)
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1986 |
Two new Oligocene desmostylians and a discussion of tethytherian systematics.
Smithson. Contrib. Paleobiol.
No. 59: iii + 56. 23 figs. May 28, 1986.
–Describes Behemotops, n.gen. (6), B. proteus (6) and B. emlongi (23), n.spp. from Washington and Oregon, respectively, as the most primitive known desmostylians. Reviews at length the history of desmostylian and tethytherian systematics, and presents a cladistic analysis of the Tethytheria (36-38), concluding that the Desmostylia and Proboscidea are sister-groups whose next closest relatives are the Sirenia. Moeritherium, Anthracobune, and Minchenella are also discussed in detail (38-45); the latter is considered a possible ancestor of both Proboscidea and Desmostylia. Desmostylians are regarded as herbivores that fed intertidally and subtidally (47-48).
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Domning, Daryl Paul; Rice, Dale W.; Shoshani, Jeheskel; Hoffmann, Robert S.
(detail)
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1982 |
Order Sirenia. In: J. H. Honacki, K. E. Kinman, & J. W. Koeppl (eds.), Mammal species of the world: a taxonomic and geographic reference.
Lawrence (Kansas), Allen Press & Assoc. Systematics Colls. (ix + 694 pp.):
305-306.
–Ed. 2: see D. E. Wilson (1993). Gives very brief nomenclatural and distributional notes on the Recent sirs., citing their current conservation status under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) and the U.S. Endangered Species Act, and their International Species Inventory System (ISIS) numbers.
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Domning, Daryl Paul; Sorbi, Silvia
(detail)
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2011 |
Rytiodus heali, sp. nov., a new sirenian (Mammalia: Dugonginae) from the Miocene of Libya.
Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology
31(6): 1338-1355. 1 tab. 13 figs. "Nov. 2011" (publ. online Nov. 8, 2011; mailed Dec. 29, 2011).
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Donati, Annabelle
(detail)
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1993 |
I wonder if sea cows give milk: and other neat facts about unusual animals.
Racine (Wisconsin), Western Publishing Co., Inc.:
1-32. Illus.
–Children's book, including a cover illustration and one other illustration of manatees on a 2-page spread, with a brief but accurate text on manatees and other sirs. (8-9).
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Donder, Vic de
(detail)
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1992 |
Le chant de la sirène.
Paris, Gallimard (Coll. Découvertes Gallimard no. 152).
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Dong, Jinhai; Song, Guangze; Wang, Guangjie
(detail)
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1992 |
Preliminary study on anatomy and histology of larynx, trachea and lung of Dugong dugon.
Oceanologia et Limnologia Sinica
23(4): 433-437. 1 tab. 2 figs. 2 pls. July 1992.
–In Chinese; Engl. summ.
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Donndorff, Johann August
(detail)
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1792 |
Zoologische Beyträge zur XIII. Ausgabe des Linnéischen Natursystems.... Erster Band. Die Säugthiere.
Leipzig, Weidmannschen Buchhandlung:
xx + 840.
–Allen 424. Vol. 2 (birds) publ. 1794-95. "Trichechus Manatus", including all the then-known species of sirs., 128-131.
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Donovan, Stephen K.; Domning, Daryl Paul; Garcia, Frank A.; Dixon, Harold L.
(detail)
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1990 |
A bone bed in the Eocene of Jamaica.
Jour. Paleont.
64(4): 660-662. 1 tab. 3 figs. "July 1990" (publ. Sept. 1990).
–Describes an exposure of the early Middle Eocene Chapelton Formation at Dump, near Christiana, Manchester Parish, which yielded a new specimen of Prorastomus sirenoides as well as other fossil vertebrates. This specimen, a partial skeleton, was the first specimen of Prorastomus collected in situ.
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Donovan, Stephen K.; Portell, Roger W.; Domning, Daryl Paul
(detail)
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2007 |
Contrasting patterns and mechanisms of extinction during the Eocene-Oligocene transition in Jamaica. Chap. 8 in: W. Renema (ed.), Biogeography, time, and place: distributions, barriers, and islands.
Dordrecht, Springer (xii + 414): 247-273. 9 figs.
–Pezosiren portelli and other sirs.; 248, 259-261, 265.
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Dooley, Alton C., Jr.
(detail)
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2005 |
Miocene vertebrate fossils from the Potomac River, Westmoreland County, Virginia. In: L.W. Ward & A.C. Dooley, Jr. (eds.), Geology and paleontology of the Stratford Hall Plantation and Westmoreland State Park. 35th Annual Virginia Geological Field Conference September 23-25, 2005.
Virginia Mus. Nat. Hist. Guidebook
No. 5: 23-42?
–Fossil of "manatus" collected by John Finch (1833) at Stratford Hall, Virginia, not in Maryland as stated by Harlan (1825b) (32).
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Dophin, Yannicke
(detail)
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1984 |
Mise en évidence d'une structure prismatique dans l'émail d'un reptile archosaurien actuel: Alligator mississippiensis (Daudin).
C.R. Acad. Sci. Paris,
Sér. II: Mec.-Phys., Chim., Sci. Terre, Sci. Univ. 298(20): 911-914. Illus. May 1984.
–Engl. summ. Mention of Metaxytherium.
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Doran, Alban H. G.
(detail)
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1878 |
Morphology of the mammalian ossicula auditûs.
Trans. Linn. Soc. London
(2)1: 371-497. Pls. 58-64.
–Sirs., 464-470, pl. 63.
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Doran, Alban H. G.
(detail)
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1884 |
On the auditory ossicles of Rhytina stelleri.
Jour. Linn. Soc. London (Zool.)
17: 366-370. 3 figs. Read Dec. 20, 1883.
–Compares the ossicles of Rhytina with those of Halicore and Manatus.
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Dorantes de Carranza, Baltasar
(detail)
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1902 |
Sumaria relación de las cosas de la Nueva España, con noticia individual de los descendientes legítimos de los conquistadores y primeros pobladores españoles.
Mexico, Impr. del Museo Nacional:
viii + 491.
–Written in 1604. The manatee material (pp. 136ff.) is copied from Gómara and Las Casas, with and without acknowledgment, respectively (reprinted by Durand, 1983: 69-70, 90).
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Dosch, Friedrich
(detail)
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1915 |
Bau und Entwicklung des Integuments der Sirenen.
Jena. Zs. Natw.
53(= n.s. 46)(4): 805-854. 15 figs. Oct. 4, 1915.
–Engl. transl.: Natl. Research Council of Canada Tech. Transl. No. 1626, 1973, by D. A. Sinclair.
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Douglas, Sue
(detail)
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1982a |
Florida's manatee mystery: scientists puzzle over a sudden die-off.
Defenders
57(4): 12-15. 6 figs. + back cover illus. Aug. 1982.
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Douglas, Sue
(detail)
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1982b |
To save a vanishing Floridian.
Oceans
15(6): 8-15. Cover illus. + 7 figs. Nov.-Dec. 1982.
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Drasche, R. von
(detail)
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1884 |
Revision der in der Nematoden-Sammlung des k. k. zoologischen Hofcabinetes befindlichen Original-Exemplare Diesing's und Molin's.
Verh. zool.-bot. Ges. Wien
33: 107-118.
–Redescription of Heterocheilus tunicatus.
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Drewes, Harald; Fraser, G. D.; Snyder, G. L.; Barnett, H. F., Jr.
(detail)
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1961 |
Geology of Unalaska Island and adjacent insular shelf, Aleutian Islands, Alaska.
U.S. Geol. Surv. Bull.
1028-S: 583-676. 3 tabs. Figs. 81-103. Pls. 75-78.
–Considers remains of ?Cornwallius and Mya cf. truncata from Unalaska to be indicative of a cool shallow-water environment in the Late Oligocene or Early Miocene (606-607, 667).
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Driscoll, C. P.
(detail)
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1999 |
Legislation, regulation, and conservation of wild marine mammals.
Jour. Amer. Vet. Med. Assoc.
214(8): 1187-1191. Apr. 15, 1999.
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Du Chaillu, Paul Belloni
(detail)
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1861a |
[Descriptions of new species of mammals discovered in western equatorial Africa.]
Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist.
7: 358-367. Read Nov. 7, 1860.
–Tentatively proposes the new specific name Manatus Oweni, which "probably" is synonymous with M. Vogelii, if the latter be valid(!). Gives the vernacular name manga from the "Camma country", with a short description and measurements of a manatee that lacked nails; notes that the species eats leaves fallen from the banks and aquatic grass, and avoids salt water (367). See also J.E. Gray (1862).
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Du Chaillu, Paul Belloni
(detail)
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1861b |
Explorations & adventures in equatorial Africa; with accounts of the manners and customs of the people, and of the chace of the gorilla, crocodile, leopard, elephant, hippopotamus, and other animals.
London, John Murray:
xviii + 479. Illus. 1 map.
–Lists "Manatus Oweni" among "Species Discovered by F. [sic] B. Du Chaillu" (471). See also J.E. Gray (1861).
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Dubois, Alain
(detail)
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1991 |
Miscellanea nomenclatorica batrachologica (XVIII).
Alytes
8(3-4): 107-120. 4 figs.
–In French; Engl. summ. Traces the convoluted origins of the names Siren lacertina and Siren bartholini (both coined by Linnaeus' sudent Oesterdam, 1766), and the connection of the latter name with Trichechus (109, 117). It stems ultimately from a manatee from the "sea of Brazil" dissected by P. Paw (P. Pavius) in Leiden; fig. 4 reproduces a plate from Bartholin (1654: 189) showing its forelimb and manus skeleton and a rib, doubtless of a West Indian manatee.
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D |
Dubrovo, Irina Aleksandrovna; Sinel'nikova, Valentina Nikolayevna
(detail)
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1971 |
Desmostilidy neogena Kamchatki. [Neogene desmostylids of Kamchatka.]
Dokl. Akad. Nauk SSSR
(Earth Sci. Sects.)
199(3): 670-673. 2 figs. Aug. 1971 (presented June 5, 1970).
–This serial is also published in Engl. by the Amer. Geol. Inst. Describes Desmostylus hesperus teeth from deposits in Kamchatka considered Miocene in age on the basis of the Desmostylus and molluscs. Considers all other species of Desmostylus, as well as Kronokotherium, synonyms of D. hesperus.
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Duerden, J. E.
(detail)
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1901 |
The marine resources of the British West Indies.
West Indian Bull.
(Imper. Dept. Agric. for the West Indies)
2: 121-127.
–Manatee, 125, 127.
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Duff, Robert
(detail)
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1866 |
British Guiana: being notes on a few of its natural productions, industrial occupations, and social institutions.
Glasgow, T. Murray & Son:
viii + 394. Illus.
–Sirs., 135-139.
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Dugong Network Okinawa
(detail)
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2000 |
For the protection of dugongs offshore Okinawa (material).
Ginowan (Okinawa), Dugong Network Okinawa:
1-38 + separate unbound 24-page Appendix. "July 2000" [publ. Aug. 14, 2000]; Appendix publ. Aug. 25, 2000.
–Compilation of articles, resolution, news clippings, and stranding data relating to dugongs in Okinawa.
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Duguy, R.; Cyrus, J.-L.
(detail)
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1976 |
Catalogue des mammifères marins conservés au Muséum de Marseille.
Bull. Mus. Hist. Nat. Marseille
36: 37-39.
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Duguy, R.; Defretin, R.
(detail)
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1979 |
Catalogue des collections de mammifères marins du Musée d'Histoire Naturelle de Lille.
Ann. Soc. Sci. Nat. Charente-Marit.
6(6): 475-481.
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Duhamel du Monceau, Henri Louis
(detail)
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1782 |
Traité général des pêches, et histoire des poissons qu'elles fournissent, tant pour la subsistance des hommes, que pour plusieurs autres usages qui ont rapport aux arts et au commerce.
Paris, Veuve Desaint:
Vol. 4 (Dixieme Section): 1-73. 15 pls.
–Allen 370. Entire work authored by H. L. Duhamel du Monceau & L. H. de La Marre: Traité général des pesches [sic], ..., Paris, Saillant & Nyon, & Desaint, 4 vols., 1769-82. The name of De La Marre appears only on title-page of part I, section 1 (1769).
Manatee, Article VIII ("Du Lamentin"), 56-59, pl. 13. This account is chiefly remarkable for the report that a female manatee and calf were once stranded by a storm on the coast of Haute-Normandie, half a league from Dieppe (56-57). The local fishermen are said to have been unacquainted with this species, although Duhamel later goes on to say that fishermen from Dieppe and Dunkerque used to sail to the Amazon River to hunt manatees, which they preserved and transported to the Antilles to sell. He gives a detailed account of the techniques of capturing manatees and salting or drying their flesh. Finally, he mentions a reported manatee occurrence in the St. Lawrence River in Canada, but seems uncertain of its veracity; he notes that his Canadian informants did not know the name "Lamentin", but allowed that manatees there might be known by some other name (59).
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Duignan, Pádraig J.; House, Carol; Walsh, Michael T.; Campbell, Terry; Bossart, Gregory D.; Duffy, Noel; Fernandes, Peter J.; Rima, Bert K.; Wright, Scott D.; Geraci, Joseph R.
(detail)
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1995 |
Morbillivirus infection in manatees.
Mar. Mamm. Sci.
11(4): 441-451. 1 tab. 1 fig. Oct. 26, 1995.
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Duke-Elder, S. (Ed.)
(detail)
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1957 |
System of ophthalmology. Vol. 1. The eye in evolution.
London, Henry Kempton.
–Sirs., 446, 472-473, 480, 493-496, 502-503.
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Duméril, André Marie Constant
(detail)
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1806 |
Zoologie analytique, ou méthode naturelle de classification des animaux, rendue plus facile à l'aide de tableaux synoptiques.
Paris, Allais:
xxxii + 344.
–Allen 478. "XIIIe. Famille, Amphibies" [= Pinnipedia + Sirenia], including Dugong and Manatus, 26-27.
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Duméril, André Marie Constant
(detail)
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1837 |
Communication sur le même sujet [Dinotherium giganteum].
C.R. Acad. Sci. Paris
4(12): 427. Read Mar. 20, 1836.
–?Abstr.: L'Institut 5: 94? Comment on de Blainville (1837).
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Dumont, Maitena; Laurin, Michel; Jacques, Florian; Pellé, Eric; Dabin, Willy; Buffrénil, Vivian de
(detail)
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2013 |
Inner architecture of vertebral centra in terrestrial and aquatic mammals: a two-dimensional comparative study.
Jour. Morphol.
274(5): 570-584. Illus. + online supporting information. DOI: 10.1002/jmor.20122 May 2013 (publ. online Feb. 8, 2013).
–ABSTRACT: Inner vertebral architecture is poorly known, except in human and laboratory animals. In order to document this topic at a broad comparative level, a 2D-histomorphometric study of vertebral centra was conducted in a sample of 98 therian mammal species, spanning most of the size range and representing the main locomotor adaptations known in therian taxa. Eleven variables relative to the development and geometry of trabecular networks were extracted from CT scan mid-sagittal sections. Phylogeny-informed statistical tests were used to reveal the respective influences of phylogeny, size, and locomotion adaptations on mammalian vertebral structure. The use of random taxon reshuffling and squared change parsimony reveals that 9 of the 11 characteristics (the two exceptions are total sectional area and structural polarization) contain a phylogenetic signal. Linear discriminant analyses suggest that the sampled taxa can be arranged into three categories with respect to locomotion mode: a) terrestrial + flying + digging + amphibious forms, b) coastal oscillatory aquatic taxa, and c) pelagic oscillatory aquatic forms represented by oceanic cetaceans. Pairwise comparison tests and linear regressions show that, when specific size increases, the length of trabecular network (Tt.Tb.Le), as well as trabecular proliferation in total sections (Pr.Tb.Tt), increase with positive allometry. This process occurs in all locomotion categories but is particularly pronounced in pelagic oscillators. Conversely, mean trabecular width has a lesser increase with size in pelagic oscillators. Trabecular orientation is not influenced by size. All tests were corrected for multiple testing. By using six structural variables or indices, locomotion mode can be predicted with a 97.4% success rate for terrestrial forms, 66.7% for coastal oscillatory, and 81.3% for pelagic oscillatory. The possible functional meaning of these results and their potential use for paleobiological inference of locomotion in extinct taxa are discussed.
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Duncan, J. F.
(detail)
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1908 |
Capt. Parkinson's manatee.
Forest & Stream
71(16): 611-612. Oct. 17, 1908.
–Account of a male manatee, "between twelve and fifteen feet long and estimated to weigh between fifteen hundred and two thousand pounds," which was caught at Ocean View, Virginia, but escaped. (See also Anon., 1908a.)
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Dupon, J. F.
(detail)
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1969 |
Recueil de documents pour servir à l'histoire de Rodrigues.
Port-Louis, R. Coquet.
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Dupuy, André R.
(detail)
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1972 |
Le Parc national des Oiseaux du Djoudj (République du Sénégal).
Bull. Inst. Fondam. Afr. Noire, Sér. A, Sci. Nat.
34(3): 774-781. 7 figs. 1 map.
–Notes that T. senegalensis is "very rare" in the park, sometimes ascending small rivers at the flood stage (780).
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Dupuy, André R.
(detail)
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1973 |
Premier inventaire des mammifères du Parc national de Basse Casamance (Sénégal).
Bull. Inst. Fondam. Afr. Noire, Sér. A, Sci. Nat.
35(1): 186-197.
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Dupuy, André R.; Maigret, J.
(detail)
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1976 |
Les mammifères marins des côtes du Sénégal. 1. Bilan des observations signalées entre 1960 et 1976.
Bull. Inst. Fondam. Afr. Noire, Sér. A, Sci. Nat.
38(4): 921-928. 4 figs.
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Dupuy, André R.; Maigret, J.
(detail)
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1978 |
Les mammifères marins des côtes du Sénégal. 2. Observations signalées en 1977.
Bull. Inst. Fondam. Afr. Noire, Sér. A, Sci. Nat.
40(2): 457-465.
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Durand, José
(detail)
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1950a |
Ocaso de sirenas; manatíes en el siglo XVI.
México, Tezontle:
1-129. Illus.
–Ed. 2: Ocaso de sirenas: esplendor de manatíes, México, Edit. Fondo de Cultura Económica, May 1983: 1-239, illus. Comparison and discussion of the early accounts of manatees. The expanded 1983 ed. is notable for its annotated reproductions of illustrations of manatees by Oviedo, Hernández, Clusius, Rochefort, du Tertre, Exquemelin, Guzmán, Labat, Gumilla, Buffon, Caulín, Pennant, Home, Cuvier, Stannius, and Wislocki; of dugongs by Leguat, Renard, Camper, Home, and Cuvier; of Hydrodamalis by Plenisner and Brandt; and of hippos and "mermaids" by Tachard, Leguat, Valentyn, and Renard.
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Durand, José
(detail)
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1950b |
Manatí, mato, manato.
Nueva Revista de Filología Española
(México)
4: 274-276.
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D |
Durham, J. Wyatt
(detail)
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1950 |
Megascopic paleontology and marine stratigraphy. In: The 1940 E. W. Scripps cruise to the Gulf of California, Part 2.
Geol. Soc. Amer. Mem.
43: 1-216.
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D |
Durham, J. Wyatt; Allison, Edwin C.
(detail)
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1960 |
The geologic history of Baja California and its marine faunas. In: Symposium: The biogeography of Baja California and adjacent seas. Part 1: Geologic history.
Syst. Zool.
9: 47-91.
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x |
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Duvernoy, Georges-Louis
(detail)
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1835a |
Plusieurs notes sur quelques ossemens fossiles de l'Alsace et du Jura.
Mém. Soc. Mus. Hist. Nat. Strasbourg
2, Mém. GG: 1-12. 1 pl. Read Aug. 4, 1835.
–Allen 847. The first note, "I. Sur un cétacé fossile, voisin des dugongs et des lamantins, trouvé à Roedersdorf, dans le Département du Haut-Rhin" (1-9, pl.), describes a headless skeleton from the "calcaire grossier" (age?).
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Duvernoy, Georges-Louis
(detail)
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1835b |
Tableaux des ordres, des familles et des genres de mammifères, adoptés pour le cours de zoologie de la Faculté des Sciences.
Mém. Soc. Mus. Hist. Nat. Strasbourg
2, Mém. KK: 1-10. 5 unnumbered tabs.
–Allen 846. "Ordre XIV. Amphibies trirèmes.... Fam. des Lamantins" comprises Manatus americanus, Halicore Dugung, and Rytina or St[ellerus]. borealis (8, tab. 4); the table includes diagnoses in hierarchical form.
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Duvernoy, Georges-Louis
(detail)
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1835c |
Sur le squelette d'un cétacé fossile découvert dans une carrière de Roedersdorf, village du département du Haut-Rhin.
L'Institut
3(126): 326-327. Oct. 7, 1835.
–Allen 848. Abstr., Froriep's Notizen 46: 275-277? Probably a summary of Duvernoy (1835a).
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Dybas, Cheryl Lyn
(detail)
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2003 |
Harmful algal blooms: biosensors provide new ways of detecting and monitoring growing threat in coastal waters.
Bioscience
53(10): 918-923.
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Dybowski, Benedikt
(detail)
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1883 |
Notice sur la différence sexuelle entre les crânes de la Rhytina stelleri.
Proc. Zool. Soc. London
1883(1): 72-73. June 1883 (read Feb. 20, 1883).
–Mentions several supposed points of difference, due mainly to the more robust build of the presumed male. The Aleuts are said to distinguish the male skulls by the term "Byk" (bull).
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