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Pleistocene Mammals of North America

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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.

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Body Size Overlap, Habitat Partitioning and Living Space Requirements of Terrestrial Vertebrate Predators: Implications for the Paleoecology of Large Theropod Dinosaurs

TL;DR: In this paper, two tyrannosaurid species from the late Campanian Dinosaur Park Formation of western Canada are similar in both size and morphology, suggesting that they were segregated on the basis of habitat and/or biogeographic province.
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Tripartite genetic subdivisions in the ornate shrew (Sorex ornatus).

TL;DR: The northern ornate shrew clade is phylogenetically clustered with another species of shrew suggesting that it may be a unique lowland form of the vagrant shrew that evolved in parallel to their southern California counterparts.
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Native fishes, exotic mammals, and the conservation of desert springs

TL;DR: This work document changes in spring habitats and extinctions of fish populations due to management practices at two spring reserves: Ash Meadows in the southwestern United States and Dalhousie in central Australia.
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The Plio-Pleistocene cheetah-like cat Miracinonyx inexpectatus of North America

TL;DR: A cladistic analysis suggests that the New and Old World forms are distinct at the generic level and the North American taxa from Acinonyx are removed and placed in the genus Mirac inonyx.
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Phylogeny for species of Haemonchus (Nematoda: Trichostrongyloidea): considerations of their evolutionary history and global biogeography among Camelidae and Pecora (Artiodactyla).

TL;DR: Phylogenetic analysis of 25 morphological characters among the 12 species of Haemonchus resulted in 1 most parsimonious tree, which emphasizes the importance of continued documentation of faunal diversity in the context of predictive foundations derived from phylogenetic studies.