sengis.org
Current Topics | Sengis (Elephant Shrews)
http://www.sengis.org/current-topics.php
Sengi carving from mopane tree root by Lipe of the Tikoloshe Root Carvers, Omaruru, Namibia, October 2014. Etendeka round-eared sengi (. In Namib Desert diorama at California Academy of Sciences (taxidermy by Alicia Goode). Wood sculpture of a checkered sengi (. Or locally called "mpili", carved in 2011 by Rafael from near Nduli Village, Pemba, Mozambique. A fanciful "cone sengi" painted in 2013 by artist Tiffany Bozic. By a TingaTinga artist, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, 2006. A New Genus for. That was rece...
sengis.org
Photographic Gallery | Sengis (Elephant Shrews)
http://www.sengis.org/photographic.php
Click on images for enlargement. Click here. To see the gallery of photos for the newly discovered Gray Faced Sengi. Href="images/golden rumped5 new.jpg". Anteater-like nose is used to search for prey. Href="images/golden rumped3 new.jpg". Weight = 550 g. Gedi Ruins, Kenya. Href="images/Kumbe in koala exhibit crop.jpg". Black and Rufous Sengi. Weight = 520 g. Captive from Tanzania at the Philadelphia Zoo, July 2002. Photo: Heidi Hellmuth, Philadelphia Zoo. Href="images/new shrew baby2.jpg". Weight = 710 g.
tenrec.org
Tenrec Systematics
http://www.tenrec.org/systemat.htm
Back to Tenrec Resources and Information. Tenrec Resources and Information:. Excerpt of the Afrotherian systematics from the website of the IUCN/SSC Afrotheria Specialist Group. The following classification has been assembled by members of the IUCN-SSC Afrotheria Specialist Group. Superscripts refer to footnotes in each section. The binomial for each species is followed by the 2008 IUCN Red List. DD] = Data Deficient. LC] = Least Concern. NT] = Near Threatened. CR] = Critically Endangered. Recognized as ...
physiologyonline.physiology.org
ARTICLES | Physiology
http://physiologyonline.physiology.org/content/30/4/273
Skip to main content. Other Journals from APS. Search for this keyword. The Hibernation Continuum: Physiological and Molecular Aspects of Metabolic Plasticity in Mammals. Sandra L. Martin. Published 1 July 2015. School of Life Sciences, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, Nevada; and. Find this author on Google Scholar. Find this author on PubMed. Search for this author on this site. Sandra L. Martin. Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, Colorado.
sengis.org
Distribution | Sengis (Elephant Shrews)
http://www.sengis.org/distribution.php
Google no longer supports their Google Earth plug-in, so the partial solution below is temporary until we find a solution to fully present the maps. To view and work with an interactive distribution map (2012 versions), copy the text under each image below, and paste it into the KMZ Viewer, where it asks for a URL. Then, click “view on the map”. DISREGARD the green “Start Download” button on the KMZ Viewer. On the loaded map, use pan and zoom functions, and toggle between map and satellite in upper right.
sengis.org
Videos | Sengis (Elephant Shrews)
http://www.sengis.org/videographic.php
These video clips were taken on 16 mm cine film and then converted to video after the color in the film had degraded with time. The filming was organized by Galen Rathbun, while he was doing his dissertation research. Dr. Lance Tickell of the University of Nairobi, Kenya, and the BBC Natural History Unit, Bristol, England were the cinematographers. Your browser does not support the video tag. Gedi Ruins, Watamu, Kenya, ca. 1971. The four giant sengis (genus. Your browser does not support the video tag.