The Geography of MammalsArno Press, 1978 - 338 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 16
Página 41
... Malayan Islands . Finally , the Papuan Sub - region , with its luxuriant vegetation and tropical forests , seems to be extremely favourable to the presence of Bats , of which there are more than sixty species known to occur within its ...
... Malayan Islands . Finally , the Papuan Sub - region , with its luxuriant vegetation and tropical forests , seems to be extremely favourable to the presence of Bats , of which there are more than sixty species known to occur within its ...
Página 140
... Malayan islands — a distribution shared by hardly any other of the Oriental genera of mammals . One of the Slow Lemurs , Nycticebus , is common to this and the Malayan Sub - region ; it bears a certain resem- blance to the Indian genus ...
... Malayan islands — a distribution shared by hardly any other of the Oriental genera of mammals . One of the Slow Lemurs , Nycticebus , is common to this and the Malayan Sub - region ; it bears a certain resem- blance to the Indian genus ...
Página 143
... Malaya , where the absence of competition has enabled it to survive . Among the Malayan Rodents we find the squirrels ( Sciuridae ) even more abundant than in the last Sub- region . Two of the species belong to a separate genus ...
... Malaya , where the absence of competition has enabled it to survive . Among the Malayan Rodents we find the squirrels ( Sciuridae ) even more abundant than in the last Sub- region . Two of the species belong to a separate genus ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
Africa animals Ant-eater Antelopes Arctic Armadilloes Asia Atlantic Australian Region Bats beds belong birds Borneo boundary Bovida Cape Carnivora Celebes Central Cetaceans Chimpanzee Chiroptera closely allied coast confined considerable number contains Deer distinct districts Eastern Edentates endemic entirely Ethiopian Region Europe existing extends extinct fauna forests forms genera genus Geographical Distribution greater number inhabitants Insectivores islands known Lemurs Macacus Madagascar mainland Malagasy Malagasy Sub-region Malay Peninsula Malayan MAMMAL-FAUNA mammalian mammals Marsupials Monkeys Monotremes mountains naturalists Nearctic Region nearly Neotropical Region North northern number of genera number of species occur Ocean Old World Opossum Order Oriental Region Pacific Palearctic Region Papuan Sub-region Patagonia peculiar genera Phalanger Pinnipeds Pliocene present range recent remarkable represented restricted Rodents Sea-regions SECTION single species Sirenian South America Southern Sub-family Sumatra SUMMARY AND DEDUCTIONS Tapirs three genera total number tropical Ungulata Ungulates Viverrida Wallace's Line West African Western whole widely distributed Zealand