Academic literature on the topic 'Marsupialia'

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Journal articles on the topic "Marsupialia"

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Cifelli, Richard L., and Christian De Muizon. "Marsupial mammal from the Upper Cretaceous North Horn Formation, Central Utah." Journal of Paleontology 72, no. 3 (May 1998): 532–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022336000024306.

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Little is known of the non-dinosaurian fauna from the Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) part of the North Horn Formation, despite its biogeographic importance. Herein we describe a new marsupial mammal from the unit, founded on an exceptionally complete specimen of a juvenile individual, and present new information on the incisor region of early marsupials, based on comparison with complete specimens from the early Paleocene of Bolivia. Alphadon eatoni, new species, is the smallest Lancian species of the genus, and departs from a presumed marsupial morphotype in having the second lower incisor enlarged. The species is, however, primitive in lacking a “staggered” pattern to the incisor series and in having a labial mandibular foramen, and in these respects it differs from Paleocene and later marsupials. Poor representation of other taxa precludes meaningful comparison to most other North American Cretaceous marsupials, although Eodelphis, thought to be distantly related, also has an enlarged i2. Although Alphadon is characterized by many primitive features, the relative development of the incisors is not what would be predicted in a morphological antecedent to later Marsupialia.
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Green, Brian, Jim Merchant, and Keith Newgrain. "Milk Composition in the Eastern Quoll, Dasyurus viverrinus (Marsupialia : Dasyuridae)." Australian Journal of Biological Sciences 40, no. 4 (1987): 379. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/bi9870379.

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The milk constituents of Dasyurus viverrinus, a carnivorous marsupial, exhibited major quantitative and qualitative changes during the course of lactation. The milk produced in the early stages of lactation was dilute, about 13-16070 (w/w) solids before 3 weeks with carbohydrate representing the major fraction. In the latter stages of lactation the milk was concentrated, around 30% solids, and lipid was the predominant fraction. Palmitic acid was the major fatty acid present in early-stage milk but oleic acid became predominant in milk after 10 weeks post-partum. The changes in milk composition in D. viverrinus were similar to those described for the milks of herbivorous marsupials which therefore suggests that this pattern may be uniform throughout the Marsupialia.
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Griffiths, M., and N. G. Simms. "Observations on the anatomy of mammary glands in two species of conilurine rodent (Muridae: Hydromyinae) and in an opossum (Marsupialia: Didelphidae)." Australian Mammalogy 16, no. 1 (1993): 9. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/am93002.

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The pups of Pseudomys nanus and P. australis are attached to their mothers' teats for extended periods of time, analogous to the situation encountered in pouchless marsupials. The structures in the mammary glands involved in facilitating prolonged attachment are different in the two rodent species and both kinds are different from those in marsupial glands including those of Monodelphis domestica, the subject of the present study. In P. nanus, the teats are anchored to postero-ventrally directed, tubular diverticula of the body wall. In P. australis there are no diverticula. However, support for the mammary glands and teats is afforded by the body wall, in the form of two well-developed fan-shaped muscles dorsal to the mammary glands in conjunction with a broad lamina of connective tissue, smooth and striated muscle situated between the skin of the belly and the mammary glands. In M. domestica, the teats are anchored to swathes of striated voluntary muscle, derived from the ilio-marsupialis muscles which pass ventrally through the secretory parenchyma to be inserted onto the bases of the teats. Since this musculature has not been observed in the mammary glands of any eutherians so far studied, nor in those of Monotremata, it is put that it is a character unique to the Marsupialia.
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Denyer, Alice L., Sophie Regnault, and John R. Hutchinson. "Evolution of the patella and patelloid in marsupial mammals." PeerJ 8 (August 19, 2020): e9760. http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.9760.

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The musculoskeletal system of marsupial mammals has numerous unusual features beyond the pouch and epipubic bones. One example is the widespread absence or reduction (to a fibrous “patelloid”) of the patella (“kneecap”) sesamoid bone, but prior studies with coarse sampling indicated complex patterns of evolution of this absence or reduction. Here, we conducted an in-depth investigation into the form of the patella of extant marsupial species and used the assembled dataset to reconstruct the likely pattern of evolution of the marsupial patella. Critical assessment of the available literature was followed by examination and imaging of museum specimens, as well as CT scanning and histological examination of dissected wet specimens. Our results, from sampling about 19% of extant marsupial species-level diversity, include new images and descriptions of the fibrocartilaginous patelloid in Thylacinus cynocephalus (the thylacine or “marsupial wolf”) and other marsupials as well as the ossified patella in Notoryctes ‘marsupial moles’, Caenolestes shrew opossums, bandicoots and bilbies. We found novel evidence of an ossified patella in one specimen of Macropus rufogriseus (Bennett’s wallaby), with hints of similar variation in other species. It remains uncertain whether such ossifications are ontogenetic variation, unusual individual variation, pathological or otherwise, but future studies must continue to be conscious of variation in metatherian patellar sesamoid morphology. Our evolutionary reconstructions using our assembled data vary, too, depending on the reconstruction algorithm used. A maximum likelihood algorithm favours ancestral fibrocartilaginous “patelloid” for crown clade Marsupialia and independent origins of ossified patellae in extinct sparassodonts, peramelids, notoryctids and caenolestids. A maximum parsimony algorithm favours ancestral ossified patella for the clade [Marsupialia + sparassodonts] and subsequent reductions into fibrocartilage in didelphids, dasyuromorphs and diprotodonts; but this result changed to agree more with the maximum likelihood results if the character state reconstructions were ordered. Thus, there is substantial homoplasy in marsupial patellae regardless of the evolutionary algorithm adopted. We contend that the most plausible inference, however, is that metatherians independently ossified their patellae at least three times in their evolution. Furthermore, the variability of the patellar state we observed, even within single species (e.g. M. rufogriseus), is fascinating and warrants further investigation, especially as it hints at developmental plasticity that might have been harnessed in marsupial evolution to drive the complex patterns inferred here.
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Kirsch, John A. W., Mark S. Springer, and François-Joseph Lapointe. "DNA-hybridisation Studies of Marsupials and their Implications for Metatherian Classification." Australian Journal of Zoology 45, no. 3 (1997): 211. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/zo96030.

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We review past DNA-hybridisation studies of marsupials and present a reanalysis of the data, utilising results from our and additional studies to formulate and rationalise a new classification of Marsupialia. In the reanalysis, 13 individual DNA-hybridisation matrices, many lacking some pairwise comparisons, were sutured in stages to provide the basis for generating a tree of 101 marsupials plus an outgroup eutherian; a fourteenth matrix provided data for a tree including eight additional eutherians and a monotreme. Validation was achieved by jackknifing on taxa for each matrix as well as on tables combining two or more matrices generated during assembly of the 102-taxon data set. The results are consistent with most conclusions from the individual studies and dramatise the unevenness of hierarchical levels in current classifications of marsupials. In particular, the affinities of the American marsupial Dromiciops gliroides with, and the distinctness of marsupial bandicoots from, Australasian metatherians are reaffirmed, while opossums are shown to be as internally divergent as are most members of the order Diprotodontia. Calibration of the 102-taxon tree and dating of the major dichotomies suggest that no extant marsupial lineage originated before the latest Cretaceous, and that all of them together with most South American and all Australasian fossils should be recognised as a monophyletic group contrasting with a largely Laurasian (if possibly paraphyletic) taxon. These inferences, together with the details of the phylogeny, mandate that the misleading ‘Australian’ v. ‘American’ distinction be abandoned, even as a geographic convenience.
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Cowan, PE. "Changes in milk composition during lactation in the common brushtail possum, Trichosurus vulpecula (Marsupialia: Phalangeridae)." Reproduction, Fertility and Development 1, no. 4 (1989): 325. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/rd9890325.

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The milk constituents of Trichosurus vulpecula, a folivorous marsupial, showed marked quantitative and qualitative changes during the course of lactation. The milk produced in the early stages of lactation was dilute, with about 9-13% (w/w) solids during the first 3 weeks, comprising mostly carbohydrate and protein (35-40%). At 20 weeks, about three-quarters of the way through lactation, the milk was much more concentrated, about 28% solids, with lipid the predominant fraction (30-35%), after a marked decline in carbohydrate content (20-25%). Concentrations of the electrolytes sodium and potassium also underwent marked changes. The changes in milk composition of T. vulpecula during the first three-quarters of lactation were similar to those described for a range of herbivorous, insectivorous and carnivorous marsupials. In the last quarter of lactation, however, brushtail possum milk maintained a relatively stable composition, with higher levels of carbohydrate and lower levels of lipid than for other marsupials. There appears to be a uniform pattern of changes in milk composition throughout the Marsupialia over most of lactation, with family differences evident only in the latter stages.
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Zapata Muñoz, Jessica, Maribel Echeverry Hernández, Sergio Andrés Correa, Cristian Ferney Esquivel, Daisy A. Gómez-Ruiz, Ana Cristina Cadavid, and Ricardo Zambrano Valdés. "Estudio anatómico mediante radiografía de zarigüeya común (Didelphis marsupialis) en zonas periurbanas de Medellín, Colombia." Revista de Investigaciones Veterinarias del Perú 32, no. 4 (August 24, 2021): e19048. http://dx.doi.org/10.15381/rivep.v32i4.19048.

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Este trabajo busca describir la morfología radiológica de la zarigüeya común (Didelphis marsupialis), estableciendo las bases para una correcta manipulación y manejo clínico adecuado. Los individuos fueron capturados con trampas Tomahawk cebadas en el corregimiento de Santa Elena, municipio de Medellín, Colombia. Se identificó el sexo y se verificó la posible presencia de crías en el marsupio (animales con crías fueron liberados). Se utilizó un protocolo anestésico basado en xilacina, tiletamina y zolazepam y se procedió a las tomas radiográficas lateral derecha, dorsoventral y ventrodorsal en el esqueleto axial (cráneo, tórax, abdomen y pelvis) y medio-laterales, y en vista anteroposterior y dorso-plantar y palmar en el esqueleto apendicular. Se encontró coincidencias con otros marsupiales en la presencia de la ossa marsupialia o hueso epipúbico, la fórmula vertebral y la ausencia de la patela; además., se confirma la presencia de estructuras como la bulla timpánica.
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Casartelli, C., S. R. Rogatto, and I. Ferrari. "Cytogenetic analysis of some Brazilian marsupials (Didelphidae: Marsupialia)." Canadian Journal of Genetics and Cytology 28, no. 1 (February 1, 1986): 21–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/g86-005.

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Three species of marsupials from the Amazon region (Marmosa cinerea, Caluromys lanatus, and Didelphis marsupialis) and two from the region of São Paulo (Didelphis marsupialis and Didelphis albiventris) were studied. The G-banding pattern of the species with 2n = 14 (M. cinerea and C. lanatus) was very similar, as well as the pattern of G-bands in the species with 22 chromosomes (Didelphis). All of the autosomes of M. cinerea and D. albiventris have centromeric C-bands and the Y chromosome is totally C-band positive. The long arm of the M. cinerea X chromosome is completely C-band positive except for a negative band close to the centromeric region. In D. albiventris the long arm of the X chromosome is C-band positive except for a negative band close to the telomeric region. In M. cinerea the silver-stained nucleolar organizer regions (Ag-NORs) are found in the acrocentric chromosomes, being located in the telomeric region of one pair and in the centromeric region of the other pair. Caluromys lanatus has centromeric Ag-NORs in one acrocentric and in one submetacentric chromosome pairs. Didelphis marsupialis has three chromosome pairs with telomeric Ag-NORs. In D. albiventris the Ag-NORs are terminal and located in both arms of one pair and in the long arm of two pairs of chromosomes.Key words: cytogenetics, marsupials, chromosomes.
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CÁCERES, N. C., and E. L. A. MONTEIRO-FILHO. "Tamanho corporal em populações naturais de Didelphis (Mammalia: Marsupialia) do Sul do Brasil." Revista Brasileira de Biologia 59, no. 3 (August 1999): 461–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/s0034-71081999000300011.

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Atualmente, poucos são os dados biométricos de marsupiais disponíveis no Brasil considerando-se sua riqueza de espécies. Baseando-se nisto, as relações de tamanho corporal de populações naturais do gambá-de-orelha-branca, Didelphis albiventris, e do gambá-de-orelha-preta, D. marsupialis, foram verificadas em dois remanescentes florestais de Curitiba, Sul do Brasil, entre fevereiro de 1995 e fevereiro de 1997. Como resultado, houve uma forte relação entre a erupção de dentes, o peso e a maioria das medidas corporais obtidas de ambas as espécies. Em conseqüência, parâmetros como o comprimento da cabeça podem ser utilizados para estimar os demais parâmetros corporais dos marsupiais estudados. Foi também observado dimorfismo sexual quanto ao tamanho corporal e formato da cabeça para D. marsupialis. Comparativamente, as fêmeas adultas de D. albiventris apresentam maior tamanho que as fêmeas adultas de D. marsupialis, pelo menos no Sul do Brasil. Houve evidências de que alguns Indivíduos podem ter um aumento em seu peso corporal durante o outono, talvez como uma maneira de suportar a estação com menor disponibilidade de alimentos. Por outro lado, D. albiventris armazena gorduras mais freqüentemente, independente da estação do ano. Assim, as estratégias adaptativas de ambas as espécies de marsupiais quanto ao tamanho corporal no Sul do Brasil apresentaram algumas diferenças e provavelmente são resultantes de modos de vida também diferentes, apesar de seu parentesco próximo.
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Soderquist, TR, and CR Dickman. "A Technique for Marking Marsupial Pouch Young With Fluorescent Pigment Tattoos." Wildlife Research 15, no. 5 (1988): 561. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/wr9880561.

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Small quantities of fluorescent pigments were tattooed into the pinnae of pouch young Dasyurus geoffroii and Isoodon obesulus (Marsupialia), and into the pinnae of 5-day-old Mus rnusculus (Rodentia). The tattoos contrasted sharply with natural skin pigmentation when scanned with a UV light. Of 11 pigments tested, Flare 610 pigments were the most persistent, remaining visible for a minimum of 6 months. The technique facilitates rapid, cheap and reliable marking of marsupial pouch young, and should be generally applicable for determining filial relationships in a wide range of marsupial species.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Marsupialia"

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Warburton, Natalie Marina. "Functional morphology and evolution of marsupial moles (Marsupialia, Notoryctemorphia)." University of Western Australia. School of Animal Biology, 2003. http://theses.library.uwa.edu.au/adt-WU2004.0038.

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Marsupial moles (genus Notoryctes) are the most highly specialised burrowing marsupials. The specialisations of the appendicular musculo-skeletal system of the marsupial moles are extensive and widespread; the major alterations are concentrated in, but not restricted to, the forelimb. Many of the derived features of the muscular system appear to be adaptations for improving the mechanical advantage of the limbs for burrowing. A number of the specialisations of the muscular system of the marsupial moles are convergent with those previously documented in other fossorial mammals, including golden moles, rodents and armadillos. There are, however, a number of unique specialisations of the musculo-skeletal system of Notoryctes. The functional morphology of the locomotor apparatus of marsupial moles is interpreted on the basis of the descriptions of the anatomy of the skeletal and muscular systems. The burrowing technique of the marsupial moles is a modified form of the parasagittal digging method that is used by other fossorial mammals, such as golden moles, armadillos and some rodents including pocket gophers. Differences in the functional morphology of the hindlimb between marsupial moles and other fossorial mammals are a reflection of the fact that marsupial moles do not construct permanent open burrow systems, but instead constantly dig through loose soil, backfilling as they progress. The functional morphology of the tail is uniquely specialised in the marsupial moles to function as the fifth limb during the pentapedal burrowing locomotion of marsupial moles. The remains of Miocene fossil marsupial mole, while clearly pleisiomorphic with respect to the appendicular skeletal morphology of modern notoryctids, demonstrate a high degree of specialisation for digging. It is hypothesised that the Miocene marsupial mole was already substantially specialised for a fossorial lifestyle, and thus pre-adapted for a subterranean lifestyle developed in correlation with the desertification of the Australian continent. Phylogenetic affinities of marsupial moles within the Marsupialia have long been enigmatic. While specialisation of the musculo-skeletal system have been so widespread as to obscure almost any phylogenetically relevant patterns, there is some evidence to support an association between notoryctids and peramelid bandicoots. Interspecific differences between the two species of marsupial moles, Notoryctes typhlops and N. caurinus, are minor but do support the separation of the two species.
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Chapman, Jamie. "The marsupial zona pellucida : its structure and glycoconjugate content." Title page, abstract and contents only, 2003. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09PH/09phc4661.pdf.

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Bibliography: leaves 262-298. This thesis investigated the structure and glycoconjugate composition of the zona pellucida (ZP) surrounding marsupial oocytes and the changes that occur during ovarian development, following ovulation, and following cortical granule exocytosis. The glycoconjugates of the oviduct epithelial lining of the brushtail possum around the time of ovulation were also examined to determine if there was any contribution of the oviductal secretions to the post-ovulatory ZP.
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Martins, Eduardo Guimarães. "Ecologia populacional e alimentar de Gracilinanus microtarsus (Marsupialia: Didelphidae)." [s.n.], 2007. http://repositorio.unicamp.br/jspui/handle/REPOSIP/316225.

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Orientador: Sergio Furtado dos Reis
Tese (doutorado): Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Instituto de Biologia
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Resumo: Gracilinanus microtarsus (Marsupialia: Didelphidae) é um pequeno marsupial de hábitos noturnos e arborícola que habita áreas de Mata Atlântica e Cerrado no Brasil. Os objetivos deste trabalho foram determinar a posição de G. microtarsus ao longo de duas dimensões ecológicas ? estratégia reprodutiva e dieta ? e definir níveis de agregação relevantes à dinâmica populacional da espécie. O estudo foi realizado no período de agosto de 2000 a fevereiro de 2003 em uma área de cerradão localizada no município de Américo Brasiliense, São Paulo. Os dados foram obtidos de indivíduos capturados em uma grade de captura de 3.600 m2. No total, foram capturados 91 indivíduos de G. microtarsus. Os resultados mostraram que os machos apresentam altas taxas de mortalidade após o início do período reprodutivo, indicando que G. microtarsus é melhor descrito como semélparo parcial. Usando as estimativas de sobrevivência e dados adicionais sobre a biologia de G. microtarsus, foi construído um modelo de dinâmica populacional estocástico. Os resultados das simulações desse modelo estocástico mostraram que as probabilidades de quasi-extinção e de extinção de G. microtarsus são sensíveis ao número de indivíduos que sobrevivem à queimadas no cerradão. Quanto à dieta, os resultados mostraram que G. microtarsus é principalmente insetívoro e que sua dieta é significativamente influenciada pelo sexo, estação e recurso alimentar. Além disso, a dieta varia entre indivíduos e a variação interindividual também é influenciada pelo sexo e estação
Abstract: The gracile mouse opossum Gracilinanus microtarsus (Marsupialia: Didelphidae) is a small marsupial with nocturnal and arboreal habits that lives in the Atlantic Rainforest and forested areas of the Cerrado in Brazil. The objectives of this study were to determine the placement of G. microtarsus along two ecological scales, namely, reproductive strategy and diet, as well as to define levels of aggregation relevant to the dynamics of this species. This study was conducted from August 2000 to February 2003 in an area of cerradão located in Américo Brasiliense, São Paulo. Data were collected from individuals captured in a 3,600 m2 trapping grid. A total of 91 individual G. microtarsus was captured. The results showed that males have high mortality rates after the beginning of the mating period, which suggests that G. microtarsus is best described as partially semelparous. Using survival estimates and additional data on the biology of G. microtarsus, it was constructed a stochastic population dynamic model. The results of the simulations showed that quasi-extinction and extinction probabilities of G. microtarsus are sensitive to the number of individuals that survive fires in the cerradão. As for the diet, the results showed that G. microtarsus is primarily insectivorous and that its diet is significantly affected by sex, season, and food resource. Furthermore, diet varies among individuals and the variation also is affected by sex and season
Doutorado
Ecologia
Doutor em Ecologia
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Brewer, Philippa Biological Earth &amp Environmental Sciences Faculty of Science UNSW. "Palaeontology of primitive wombats." Publisher:University of New South Wales. Biological, Earth & Environmental Sciences, 2008. http://handle.unsw.edu.au/1959.4/43156.

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Wombats (Vombatidae, Marsupialia) are fossorial marsupials that are most closely related to koalas amongst living marsupials. The cheek teeth of wombats are unique amongst Australian marsupials in being hypselodont (the condition where the teeth continue to grow throughout life and the formation of roots is suppressed). Hypselodonty is an adaptation to high degrees of tooth wear. The fossil record of vombatids is largely restricted to Pliocene to recent deposits and is largely represented by isolated teeth. Six genera are currently recognised from these deposits, all of which have hypselodont teeth. To date, a single isolated vombatid tooth has been described from pre-Pliocene deposits of South Australia and is the only example of a vombatid cheek tooth that possesses roots. Seventy specimens, representing five species of vombatid, have been recovered from Oligo-Miocene deposits in the Riversleigh World Heritage Site in northwestern Queensland and are described here. Among these are four new species and one new genus. A new species of Warendja from Riversleigh is described. It represents the oldest known hypselodont vombatid. This species is compared with additional specimens of the Pleistocene species of Warendja (W wakefieldi). Three species of Rhizophascolonus and a new monotypic genus are also described. Phylogenetic analysis of these taxa indicates that Rhizophascolonus may represent a sister taxon to the other vombatids. These specimens comprise almost all known examples of Oligo-Miocene vombatids. Most of the specimens are isolated teeth and are highly variable in size and morphology. Cusp detail is clearly preserved on many, allowing for omparison with the cusp morphology on juvenile cheek teeth of the common wombat (Vombatus ursinus). All of the taxa found in the deposits at Riversleigh share a number of characters such as marked differences in enamel thickness and height around the cheek teeth. It is argued here that these shared characters are indicative of high amounts of tooth wear and/or occlusal stresses acting on the trailing edge enamel. Combined with evidence of scratch-digging adaptations of the forelimbs it is suggestive of a rhizophagous niche for at least some of these early vombatids.
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Torunsky, Roberta. "Phylogeny and phylogeography of the endemic New Guinean Murexia (Marsupialia, Dasyuridae) /." Available to subscribers only, 2007. http://proquest.umi.com/pqdweb?did=1328050151&sid=11&Fmt=2&clientId=1509&RQT=309&VName=PQD.

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Roberts, Karen K. Biological Earth &amp Environmental Sciences Faculty of Science UNSW. "Oligo-Miocene pseudocheirid diversity and the early evolution of ringtail possums (Marsupialia)." Awarded By:University of New South Wales. Biological, Earth & Environmental Sciences, 2008. http://handle.unsw.edu.au/1959.4/41517.

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The marsupial family Pseudocheiridae is currently known from seventeen species of six genera in Australia and New Guinea. These small to medium-sized arboreal animals are nocturnal and folivorous. Extinct pseudocheirids are recognised from several mid to late Cenozoic fossil localities across Australia and New Guinea. The single largest collection of pseudocheirid fossils has been recovered from the Oligo-Miocene freshwater carbonates of the Riversleigh World Heritage Area in northwest Queensland. This collection, which includes the first pseudocheirid cranial fossils, forms the basis of this investigation. Three new extinct pseudocheirid genera together containing four species are identified and described. Six new species of Paljara, Marlu and Pildra are also described from Riversleigh. Two of the new Marlu species are reported from South Australia??s Leaf Locality. From Riversleigh, Marlu kutjamarpensis is identified and additional material of Paljara tirarensae and P. nancyhawardae documented. New species attributed to Marlu and Pildra necessitate revision of those genera. Cranial material is identified for three of the new species. The rostrum of archaic pseudocheirids is shorter than in extant forms but cranial morphology is similar overall. Phylogenetic relationships of all extinct pseudocheirids are analysed. They include all new and previously described species, most of which have never been examined in a parsimony-based analysis. Two hypotheses of pseudocheirid evolution are presented: a paired lineage hypothesis and a single lineage hypothesis. Both hypotheses demonstrate that species of Paljara are not the most plesiomorphic pseudocheirids, Marlu praecursor does not cluster with other species of Marlu, the new genus Gawinga is most closely related to Paljara and there are no representatives of the extant genus Pseudochirops in any pre-Pliocene locality. All extant pseudocheirids cluster to form a crown clade sister to a stem lineage of Pseudokoala and Marlu species. Pseudocheirids are found in all Oligo-Miocene faunal zones of Riversleigh. Species of Paljara and Marlu are most frequently recovered from Faunal Zone B and C deposits respectively. Four pseudocheirid species biostratigraphically correlate the Kutjamarpu local fauna of the Leaf Locality with Faunal Zones B and C of Riversleigh, suggesting an early to middle Miocene age for both deposits. Modern pseudocheirids first evolved no later than the late Miocene from a descendant of the Marlu + Pseudokoala lineage when all other Oligo-Miocene pseudocheirids became extinct. At least three pseudocheirid lineages dispersed to New Guinea approximately five million years ago, but ecological barriers probably prevented subsequent migrations between the two landmasses.
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PAES, R. D. "Padrões de variação genética e morfológica em Monodelphis de listras (Marsupialia: Didelphidae)." Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo, 2012. http://repositorio.ufes.br/handle/10/3820.

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Atualmente são reconhecidas 5 espécies de catitas de listras, Monodelphis americana, M. iheringi, M. umbristriata, M. scalops e M. theresa. Como o nome vulgar indica, listras dorsais são marcantes no agrupamento, sendo que a descrição das espécies baseou-se na presença e conspicuidade das mesmas, além do tamanho corporal. No entanto, há controvérsias quanto à identificação e validade de táxons, devidas ao número pequeno de exemplares conhecidos para algumas espécies e observações acerca da variação na pelagem principalmente quanto às faixas. Enquanto estudos morfológicos até o momento não apresentaram resultados conclusivos em relação a estas questões, estudos genéticos comparativos, que contemplem amostragem abrangente em termos taxonômicos e em relação à área de ocorrência dos táxons, são pouco numerosos. Assim, este trabalho investigou se variações morfológicas e genéticas intra e interespecíficas previamente identificadas em populações simpátricas de M. americana e M. iheringi são recorrentes em outros locais, se há padrões 0 variação de pelagem no grupo de listras e função adaptativa das mesmas, e quais implicações sistemáticas desta variação. Foi analisada morfologia qualitativa de séries de exemplares de todas as idades e sexos, encobrindo a distribuição geográfica pelo Brasil, além de análises filogenéticas com sequências de citocromo b. Para M. americana, foram recuperados 5 subclados, que são acompanhados por morfotipos diagnosticáveis seguindo gradação latitudinal de distribuição, que se dá por todo país. Dentre estes, 4 subgrupos têm distribuição limitada por cursos de rios e, ainda, identifica-se variação morfológica ligada ao sexo e idade em 2 subgrupos, onde há sobreposição com outro táxon de listra na região Sudeste. Dados morfológicos e genéticos incluíram M. umbristriata em 1 destes clados, atestando sinonímia com M. americana. Entre M. scalops e M. theresa, a avaliação de todas as fases etárias, descrições originais e dados moleculares, confirmaram sinonímia e disposição limitada ao Sudeste. Em M. iheringi, ambos os sexos mostram-se listrados por toda vida ao longo da distribuição, restrita ao Sul e Sudeste. Ainda, o grupo de listras não é monofilético, pois M. scalops não é filogeneticamente mais próxima às espécies-irmãs, M. americana e M. iheringi. Assim, conspicuidade de listras e rarefação das mesmas são homoplasias, ocasionando convergência morfológica entre jovens das 3 espécies e diferenciação de pelagem nos machos de M. americana e M. scalops na maturação sexual. Provavelmente, listras nítidas nos juvenis auxiliam na evasão de predadores, enquanto seleção sexual direciona perda das mesmas em simpatria visando reconhecimento de pares em relação ao outro táxon.
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Iamamoto, Keila. "Pesquisa do vírus rábico em mamíferos silvestres de uma reserva natural particular no Município de Ribeirão Grande, São Paulo." Universidade de São Paulo, 2005. http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/10/10134/tde-26102006-104736/.

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No Brasil e em alguns países da América Latina, a incidência de raiva transmitida por animais domésticos tem diminuído enquanto tem aumentado em animais silvestres. Durante os últimos anos, no Brasil, a raiva tem sido diagnosticada em morcegos hematófagos ou não, primatas não-humanos, cachorros-do-mato, quatis, guaxinins, capivaras, cervos, gambás e outras espécies silvestres. O presente estudo foi realizado em parceria com biólogos, pesquisadores na área de monitoramento de fauna silvestre, e o objetivo foi pesquisar a presença do vírus rábico em mamíferos silvestres de vida livre, provenientes de uma reserva natural particular, localizado no município de Ribeirão Grande, São Paulo, região que já foi alvo de raiva nos últimos anos. Durante o período de 2002 a 2004, 104 amostras de cérebro de animais capturados foram enviadas para diagnóstico no Laboratório de Raiva da UNESP de Araçatuba, SP, acondicionadas em pipetas plásticas do tipo Pasteur individuais. Os animais pertenciam a três ordens, Chiroptera (47,1%), Rodentia (46,2%) e Marsupialia (6,7%), sendo de diferentes idades e sexos. As amostras foram submetidas ao teste de imunofluorescência direta e inoculação intracerebral em camundongos e todas apresentaram resultado negativo para a raiva. Segundo dados da Coordenação do Programa de Controle da Raiva do Estado de São Paulo a raiva é endêmica na região estudada e a porcentagem de positividade em morcegos nos últimos dez anos é de 1,8%. Embora dos diagnósticos tenham sido negativos neste estudo, não é possível afirmar que o vírus rábico não circula naquela propriedade
In Brazil and some Latin American countries, the incidence of rabies transmitted by domestic animals has decreased while it has been increasing in wild animals. During the last few years rabies has been diagnosed in hematophagous or nonhematophagous bats, nonhuman primates, crab-eating foxes, coatis, raccoons, capybaras, deers, skunks and some other species. The present study was carried out with biologists, researchers in wild fauna monitoring and the objective was to search the presence of the rabies virus in wildlife mammals from a private natural reserve, in Ribeirão Grande city, SP, region that was target of rabies in the last few years. During 2002 to 2004, 104 brain samples of captured animals were sent for diagnosis to UNESP Rabies Laboratory from Araçatuba, SP, conditioned in individuals Pasteur plastic pipettes. The animals belonged to three different orders, Chiroptera (47,1%), Rodentia (46,2%) and Marsupialia (6,7%), and to different ages and sex. The samples were submitted to direct fluorescent antibody test and mouse inoculation test and all samples resulted negative for rabies. According to data of the Rabies Control Program Coordination from São Paulo State, rabies is endemic in the studied region and the percentage of positive cases in bats during the last 10 years was 1,8%. Although all diagnosis were negative in this study, it is not possible to affirm that the rabies virus do not circulate in that property
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Sánchez, Dómina Andrea Rosarito. "Hábitos alimentarios de thylamys pallidior (marsupialia, didelphidae) en el desierto del Monte central." Bachelor's thesis, Universidad Nacional de Cuyo. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, 2018. http://bdigital.uncu.edu.ar/14019.

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Los estudios que involucran la oferta de recursos en el ambiente y el modo en que las especies los explotan, permiten mejorar el entendimiento de esta relación. El presente trabajo propone estudiar la estrategia alimentaria de hábitos alimentarios, especie marsupial que habita en el desierto del Monte y cuya dieta presenta muy poca variabilidad estacional y está compuesta por 70% artrópodos y 30% material vegetal. Los objetivos planteados en esta tesina implican caracterizar y cuantificar la dieta de T. pallidior, describir la variación de recursos alimentarios (plantas y artrópodos) en relación al régimen de precipitaciones, evaluar la dieta en función de la disponibilidad y determinar si existen cambios estacionales en la selección de dieta y amplitud de nicho. El trabajo fue llevado a cabo en la Reserva de Biósfera Ñacuñan, Santa Rosa, Mendoza. Se tuvieron en cuenta muestreos realizados durante 2014 y 2016.
Fil: Sánchez Dómina, Andrea Rosarito. Universidad Nacional de Cuyo. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales.
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Antunes, Gertrud Müller. "Diversidade e potencial zoonótico de parasitos de Didelphis albiventris Lund, 1841 (Marsupialia: Didelphidae)." reponame:Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertações da UFRGS, 2005. http://hdl.handle.net/10183/5795.

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Didelphis albiventris, gambá-de-orelha-branca, é um marsupial de hábitos crepusculares e noturnos que se alimenta de frutos, insetos, pequenos répteis e anfíbios, filhotes de aves e pequenos mamíferos. Com a destruição de seu “habitat” natural devido às queimadas e desmatamentos, esses animais têm-se aproximado, cada vez mais, das regiões peridomiciliar e domiciliar, onde procuram abrigo e alimentos. Com o objetivo de conhecer a diversidade de parasitos de D. albiventris e relatar os que apresentam potencial zoonótico, foram examinados 30 exemplares desta espécie, através de necropsia, para coleta de ectoparasitos da superfície externa do corpo e helmintos dos órgãos e conteúdos estomacal e intestinal. Os sifonápteros foram removidos da superfície externa dos animais, conservados em álcool etílico a 70°GL, clarificados em líquido de Nesbitt, desidratados em etanol, diafanizados em creosoto de Faya e montados em lâminas com bálsamo do Canadá para identificação. Os carrapatos foram removidos da superfície externa dos animais, conservados em álcool etílico a 70°GL e identificados ao estereomicroscópio, segundo chaves específicas de Aragão & Fonseca (1961) e Guimarães et al (2001). Os helmintos foram recolhidos com auxílio de estiletes e pinças, clarificados em lactofenol e montados entre lâminas e lamínulas com bálsamo do Canadá para identificação ao microscópio. Do total de animais examinados, 70% estavam infestados com pulgas das espécies Polygenis (Neopolygenis) atopus, Polygenis (Polygenis) rimatus, Polygenis (Polygenis) roberti roberti, Polygenis (Polygenis) sp., Craneopsylla minerva minerva e Ctenocephalides felis felis, todas essas registradas pela primeira vez sobre D. albiventris e, exceto C. felis felis, são também registradas pela primeira vez no estado do Rio Grande do Sul. Carrapatos foram encontrados em 43,33% dos animais examinados, representados pelas espécies Ixodes loricatus, Amblyomma aureolatum e Amblyomma sp, sendo A. aureolatum registrado pela primeira vez parasitando D. albiventris no Brasil. Os helmintos encontrados foram: Filo Nematoda - Capillaria spp. (esôfago, traquéia, faringe e pulmão), Didelphostrongylus hayesi (pulmão), Turgida turgida (estômago), Gnathostoma sp. (estômago e fígado), Travassostrongylus orloffi, Viannaia hamata e Trichuris minuta no intestino delgado e Trichuris didelphis, Cruzia tentaculata e Aspidodera raillieti no intestino grosso; Classe Trematoda – Echinostoma revolutum, Plagiorchis didelphidis, Rhopalias coronatus, R. baculifer, Brachylaema migrans e Didelphodiplostomum variabile, todos no intestino delgado; Classe Cestoda – exemplares da família Diphyllobotriidae, no intestino delgado; e Filo Acanthocephala – Hamanniella microcephala e Centrorhynchus sp., ambos no intestino delgado. Dos helmintos encontrados, os que apresentam potencial zoonótico segundo a literatura são T. turgida, Gnathostoma sp., Capillaria spp., B. migrans, E. revolutum e Família Diphyllobotriidae. Além disso, os sifonápteros e ixodídeos encontrados são potenciais vetores de patógenos que infectam humanos. D. albiventris, portanto, apresenta grande diversidade parasitária, incluindo espécies que podem potencialmente atingir o homem, alertando para a importância destes marsupiais na disseminação de doenças entre animais e humanos.
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Books on the topic "Marsupialia"

1

Barrett, Norman. Kangaroos and other marsupials. London: Watts, 1991.

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Marko, Katherine. Pocket babies. New York: Franklin Watts, 1995.

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Bender, Lionel. Kangaroos and other marsupials. Edited by Thompson George 1944 ill, Robson Denny, and Stidworthy John 1943-. New York: Gloucester Press, 1988.

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Selsam, Millicent Ellis. A first look at kangaroos, koalas, and other animals with pouches. New York: Walker, 1985.

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Gomes, Nelson Fernandes. Revisão sistemática do gênero Monodelphis (Marsupialia). São Paulo: Gomes, 1991.

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Triggs, Barbara. The wombat: Common wombats in Australia. Sydney, Australia: UNSW Press, 1996.

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Triggs, Barbara. The wombat: Common wombats in Australia. Kensington, NSW, Australia: New South Wales University Press, 1988.

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Windsor, Harry. The heart of a surgeon: The memoirs of Harry Windsor. Kensington: New South Wales University Press, 1988.

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1954-, Cockburn Andrew, ed. Evolutionary ecology of marsupials. Cambridge [Cambridgeshire]: Cambridge University Press, 1985.

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Tyndale-Biscoe, Hugh. Reproductive physiology of marsupials. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1987.

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Book chapters on the topic "Marsupialia"

1

Mossman, Harland W. "Marsupialia." In Vertebrate Fetal Membranes, 54–58. London: Macmillan Education UK, 1987. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-09065-5_8.

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Ax, Peter. "Marsupialia — Placentalia." In Multicellular Animals, 267–86. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-08874-6_42.

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Fowler, Murray E. "Order Marsupialia (Opossums)." In Biology, Medicine, and Surgery of South American Wild Animals, 211–18. Ames, Iowa, USA: Iowa State University Press, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9780470376980.ch21.

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Holz, Peter. "Marsupials." In Zoo Animal and Wildlife Immobilization and Anesthesia, 521–28. Hoboken, NJ, USA: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781118792919.ch32.

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Ruiz-Piña, Hugo Antonio, Jaime Rendón-von Osten, and Rosa María Flores-Serrano. "Chapter 3. Didelphis virginiana (Marsupialia, Didelphimorphia): A Proposal for its Use as a Biomonitor of Environmental Pollution." In Marsupial and Placental Mammal Species in Environmental Risk Assessment Strategies, 47–64. Cambridge: Royal Society of Chemistry, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/9781839163470-00047.

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Williams, Ray. "Carnivorous Marsupials." In Care and Handling of Australian Native Animals, 67–74. P.O. Box 20, Mosman NSW 2088, Australia: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales, 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.7882/rzsnsw.1990.017.

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Hangay, George, Susan V. Gruner, F. W. Howard, John L. Capinera, Eugene J. Gerberg, Susan E. Halbert, John B. Heppner, et al. "Marsupial Lice." In Encyclopedia of Entomology, 2301. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-6359-6_1736.

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Freeman, Marianne Sarah. "Marsupial Diet." In Encyclopedia of Animal Cognition and Behavior, 4055–61. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-55065-7_1157.

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Amanat, Sonia, Preethi Srinivasan, Jonathan Mayer, Ravi Bhavsar, Zane Ali, Hashim Paracha, and Michael C. Granatosky. "Marsupial Locomotion." In Encyclopedia of Animal Cognition and Behavior, 4072–77. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-55065-7_1200.

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Freeman, Marianne Sarah. "Marsupial Diet." In Encyclopedia of Animal Cognition and Behavior, 1–8. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-47829-6_1157-1.

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Conference papers on the topic "Marsupialia"

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Tavakoli, Reza, and Pouya Kamalinejad. "Development of Tethered Flying Robots with PAUT Capabilities for C-Scan and In-Service Inspection Mini-Crawler/Uav: Marsupial Robotic Approach." In Offshore Technology Conference. OTC, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4043/31854-ms.

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Abstract Avestec has successfully developed proprietary contact-based flying robots (SKYRON™) for ultrasonic (UT) A scan measurement of metallic surfaces. The technology has been successfully validated with many asset owners in onshore and offshore industrial campaigns. Although the flying contact-based robot can easily access most asset surfaces to perform inspections, it has some limitations when it comes to challenging and dense spaces. Such shortcoming is exasperated specially for pipe inspection in offshore environments. Pipes are usually located in the vicinity of one another or in close proximity to walls or other structures, which makes it practically impossible for an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) to reach to every side of the pipe and carry out circumferential (3/6/9/12) measurement as needed. In order to enhance the advantages of contact-based aerial robots and overcome the aforementioned limitations, a marsupial robotic methodology has been followed by means of combining the proprietary contact-based UAV and a custom omni-directional mini crawler in a collaborative robotics fashion. An advanced marsupial connection between the two robots both in terms of mechanical (e.g., carrier/passenger roles) and control mechanism (e.g. master/slave roles) and versatility of the task deliveries can potentially introduce a lot of advantages over a single flying robot for asset inspection. In addition, Phased Array Ultrasonic (PAUT) sensory package has been integrated into the marsupial robot to expand NDT capabilities for inspection including thickness measurements, corrosion mapping, defect detection (e.g. such as cracks, voids, and pits caused by corrosion), weld inspection and many more.
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Murphy, Robin R. "Marsupial robots for law enforcement." In Enabling Technologies for Law Enforcement, edited by Simon K. Bramble, Edward M. Carapezza, and Lenny I. Rudin. SPIE, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.417560.

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Murphy, Robin R., Michelle Ausmus, Magda Bugajska, Tanya Ellis, Tonia Johnson, Nia Kelley, Jodi Kiefer, and Lisa Pollock. "Marsupial-like mobile robot societies." In the third annual conference. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/301136.301236.

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Janssen, Michael, and Nikos Papanikolopoulos. "Enabling complex behavior by simulating marsupial actions." In 2007 Mediterranean Conference on Control & Automation. IEEE, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/med.2007.4433903.

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Lee, Chris Yu Hsuan, Graeme Best, and Geoffrey A. Hollinger. "Stochastic Assignment for Deploying Multiple Marsupial Robots." In 2021 International Symposium on Multi-Robot and Multi-Agent Systems (MRS). IEEE, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/mrs50823.2021.9620693.

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Reineking, W., K. von Dörnberg, V. Molnár, JH Bräsen, J. Schmitz, P. Wohlsein, and J. Junginger. "Familiäre Häufung von Amyloidose in einer Springbockpopulation (Antidorcas marsupialis) in Deutschland?" In 63. Jahrestagung der Fachgruppe Pathologie der Deutschen Veterinärmedizinischen Gesellschaft. © Georg Thieme Verlag KG, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0040-1713043.

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Allen, G. R., and J. W. V. Storey. "The Australian Geographic Team Marsupial Solar-Powered Car." In SAE International Congress and Exposition. 400 Commonwealth Drive, Warrendale, PA, United States: SAE International, 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.4271/880620.

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Stankiewicz, Paul G., Stephen Jenkins, Galen E. Mullins, Kevin C. Wolfe, Matthew S. Johannes, and Joseph L. Moore. "A Motion Planning Approach for Marsupial Robotic Systems." In 2018 IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems (IROS). IEEE, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/iros.2018.8593392.

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Miskovic, Nikola, Stjepan Bogdan, Eula Nad, Filip Mandic, Matko Orsag, and Tomislav Haus. "Unmanned marsupial sea-air system for object recovery." In 2014 22nd Mediterranean Conference of Control and Automation (MED). IEEE, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/med.2014.6961462.

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Gerdzhev, Martin, Jimmy Tran, Alexander Ferworn, and Devin Ostrom. "DEX - A design for Canine-Delivered Marsupial Robot." In Rescue Robotics (SSRR). IEEE, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ssrr.2010.5981561.

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Reports on the topic "Marsupialia"

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Karl Vernes, Karl Vernes. An expedition in search of one of Australia's most mysterious marsupials. Experiment, June 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.18258/11466.

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