Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 124
pro vyhledávání: '"William F. Smith-Vaniz"'
Autor:
Briggs, John C.
Publikováno v:
Copeia, 2000 May 01. 2000(2), 634-635.
Externí odkaz:
https://www.jstor.org/stable/1448227
Autor:
Gilbert, Carter R.
Publikováno v:
Copeia, 1970 Jun 01. 1970(2), 401-403.
Externí odkaz:
https://www.jstor.org/stable/1441686
Autor:
Schultz, Eric
Publikováno v:
The Quarterly Review of Biology, 2001 Mar 01. 76(1), 90-90.
Externí odkaz:
https://www.jstor.org/stable/2664188
Publikováno v:
Copeia. 3/30/2012, Vol. 2012 Issue 1, p1-1. 1p.
Autor:
Smith, C. Lavett
Publikováno v:
Copeia, 1994 Feb 01. 1994(1), 253-254.
Externí odkaz:
https://www.jstor.org/stable/1446699
Autor:
WILLIAM F. SMITH-VANIZ
Publikováno v:
Zootaxa. 5252:1-180
Sixty species of jawfishes (Opistognathus) from the Indo-West Pacific are reported in an updated review, including descriptions of 18 new species: Opistognathus albomaculatus n.sp., O. asper n.sp., O. aurolineatus n.sp., O. bathyphilus n.sp., O. bipo
Publikováno v:
ZooKeys, Vol 794, Iss , Pp 95-133 (2018)
A new species of jawfish, Opistognathus thionyi sp. n., is described from the Vitória-Trindade Chain and Fernando de Noronha Archipelago off Brazil, a disjunct distribution of ca. 1,800 km. Opistognathus thionyi and its allopatric Caribbean sister-s
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/695db5a9b0514cadaccc609136411cde
Autor:
Eric Schultz
Publikováno v:
The Quarterly Review of Biology. 76:90-90
Publikováno v:
ZooKeys
ZooKeys, Vol 794, Iss, Pp 95-133 (2018)
ZooKeys 794: 95-133
ZooKeys, Vol 794, Iss, Pp 95-133 (2018)
ZooKeys 794: 95-133
A new species of jawfish,Opistognathusthionyisp. n., is described from the Vitória-Trindade Chain and Fernando de Noronha Archipelago off Brazil, a disjunct distribution of ca. 1,800 km.Opistognathusthionyiand its allopatric Caribbean sister-species
Autor:
Luke Tornabene, D. Ross Robertson, James L. Van Tassell, William F. Smith-Vaniz, Richard L. Pyle, Carole C. Baldwin, David R. Bellwood
Publikováno v:
PALAIOS. 34:245-247
[Extract] Accurate interpretation of fossils of one organism inside another is essential for understanding predator-prey relationships, food-web structure, and energy flows in ancient ecosystems. Fossils of a fish inside the mouth or stomach of anoth