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Pleistocene Mammals of North America
Bjorn Kurten,Elaine Anderson +1 more
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The article was published on 1980-10-15 and is currently open access. It has received 907 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Platygonus & Homotherium.read more
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The earliest known fisher (Mustelidae), a new species from the Rattlesnake Formation of Oregon
Joshua X. Samuels,Jennifer Cavin +1 more
TL;DR: The Rattlesnake specimen is more robust than other fisher species, possibly representing something close to the ancestry of all fishers, and shows remarkable similarity to extant P. pennanti, highlighting the highly conservative nature of gulonine mustelids.
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Phylogeography of the root vole Microtus oeconomus in Russian Far East: A special reference to comparison between Holarctic and Palaearctic voles
TL;DR: The divergence time between the two region populations of Holarctic arvicolids could be estimated as a few ten thousand years at most on the basis of the genetic distances and the geological time between Kamchatka and Kuril Archipelago as 10,000 years ago previously reported.
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The scimitar-toothed cat Machairodus aphanistus (Carnivora: Felidae) in the Vallès-Penedès Basin (NE Iberian Peninsula)
Joan Madurell-Malapeira,Joan Madurell-Malapeira,Josep M. Robles,Isaac Casanovas-Vilar,Juan Abella,Juan Abella,Pau Obradó,David M. Alba +7 more
TL;DR: In this paper, all the published and unpublished scimitar-toothed cat remains from the Valles-Penedes Basin (NE Iberian Peninsula), in order to confirm their taxonomic attribution to Machairodus aphanistus as well as to provide more precise information about its chronological distribution in this basin.
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Wolf body mass, skull morphology, and mitochondrial DNA haplotypes in the Riding Mountain National Park region of Manitoba, Canada
TL;DR: Wolves with NW haplotypes hybridize with C. lupus and coyotes (Canis latrans Say, 1823) and could mediate gene flow between canids.
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Cambios en los patrones de endemismo de los mamíferos terrestres de México por el calentamiento global
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyzed the impact of climate change on the distribution of Mexican land mammals using a maximum entropy algorithm (MaxEnt) and using their projections under climate scenario A2 according to three general circulation models.