Barajas-Rebolledo, Laura Maria Guarín, Edwar Roncancio Duque, Néstor Ramírez-Chaves, Héctor E.
Published in
Mammalia
The Complejo Volcánico Doña Juana – Cascabel National Natural Park is located between the departments of Cauca and Nariño in the southern Andean Region of Colombia. Due to the country’s social challenges and the difficult access to the Doña Juana – Cascabel National Natural Park the biological knowledge concerning groups such as mammals, is based o...
hoinsoudé, gabriel
“The Dahomey Gap” is a human-derived mostly savannah region that separates the Guineo-Congolian rainforest block into two major units: the Upper Guinean and the Lower Guinean Forest blocks. Several forest patches are distributed throughout this savannah-dominated habitat. The mammal communities in the Dahomey Gap region have been poorly studied. In...
Mika, Katelyn Marinić, Mirna Singh, Manvendra Muter, Joanne Brosens, Jan Joris Lynch, Vincent J
Published in
eLife
Pregnancy is a complicated process. It has three phases: the body recognizes the embryo, it maintains the pregnancy, and finally, it induces labor. These stages happen in all mammals, but the details are different in humans. Human pregnancy and labor last longer. We menstruate. Our placentas invade deeper into the uterus, and the cues that signal p...
Trindade, Fernanda J Rodrigues, Maíra R Figueiró, Henrique V Li, Gang Murphy, William J Eizirik, Eduardo
Published in
Molecular Biology and Evolution
Phylogenetic reconstruction and species delimitation are often challenging in the case of recent evolutionary radiations, especially when postspeciation gene flow is present. Leopardus is a Neotropical cat genus that has a long history of recalcitrant taxonomic problems, along with both ancient and current episodes of interspecies admixture. Here, ...
He, Kai Eastman, Triston G Czolacz, Hannah Li, Shuhao Shinohara, Akio Kawada, Shin-Ichiro Springer, Mark S Berenbrink, Michael Campbell, Kevin L
Published in
eLife
The shrews, moles and hedgehogs that surround us all belong to the same large group of insect-eating mammals. While most members in this ‘Eulipotyphla order’ trot on land, some, like moles, have evolved to hunt their prey underground. A few species, such as the water shrews, have even ventured to adopt a semi-aquatic lifestyle, diving into ponds an...
Yusefi, Gholam Hosein
Under the framework of a “conservation biogeography” approach, initially, I reviewed and updated the taxonomy and distribution of the rich but understudied mammalian diversity of Iran. This data then formed the basis for the biogeographical regionalization of this complex transitional area using hierarchical clustering and infomap network methods. ...
Manger, Paul R Siegel, Jerome M
The presence of dreams in human sleep, especially in REM sleep, and the detection of physiologically similar states in mammals has led many to ponder whether animals experience similar sleep mentation. Recent advances in our understanding of the anatomical and physiological correlates of sleep stages, and thus dreaming, allow a better understanding...
Manger, Paul R Siegel, Jerome M
Published in
The Journal of comparative neurology
The presence of dreams in human sleep, especially in REM sleep, and the detection of physiologically similar states in mammals has led many to ponder whether animals experience similar sleep mentation. Recent advances in our understanding of the anatomical and physiological correlates of sleep stages, and thus dreaming, allow a better understanding...
Solé, Floréal Fischer, Valentin Denayer, Julien Speijer, Robert P Fournier, Morgane Le Verger, Kevin Ladevèze, Sandrine Folie, Annelise Smith, Thierry
peer reviewed / The Quercy Phosphorites Formation in France is world famous for its Eocene to Miocene faunas, especially those from the upper Eocene to lower Oligocene, the richest of all. The latter particularly helped to understand the ‘Grande Coupure’, a dramatic faunal turnover event that occurred in Europe during the Eocene-Oligocene transitio...
Bennett, D J Sutton, M D Turvey, S T
Published in
Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences
How does past evolutionary performance impact future evolutionary performance? This is an important question not just for macroevolutionary biologists who wish to chart the phenomena that describe deep-time changes in biodiversity but also for conservation biologists, as evolutionarily distinct species-which may be deemed 'low-performing' in our cu...