Reintroduction of Giant Tortoises, Geochelone gigantea, to the
Regional Node for the Ocean Biogeographic Information System
Regional environments, lifehistory patterns, and
Regional biogeography of shallow reef fish and macro
Refining dwarf galaxias (Galaxiella pusilla)
Reevaluation of the Geographical Distribution of Bradypus
Reef fish of the Sugar Loaf Islands
Reef fish associations with sea urchins in an Atlantic
Redalyc.Taxonomic, functional, and phenetic components of
Redalyc.Phylogenetic position of Mexican jackrabbits within the
Red-headed Woodpecker Minnesota Conservation Plan
Red fox takeover of arctic fox breeding den: an observation from
Recruitment of marine invertebrates - University of California, Santa
Reciprocal facilitation and non-linearity maintain habitat engineering
Recently discovered fossils at Oregons John Day Fossil Beds National Monument reveal a new species that scientists believe was the last non-human primate in North America. The small, lemur-like animal is believed to have crossed a land bridge at the Bering Strait about 29 million years ago, according to Dr. Joshua Samuels, John Day Fossil Beds National Monument chief of paleontology. This new species shows little resemblance to other North American primates, said Samuels. Where it came from and how it is related to other primates has long been a mystery.
Recent Sightings of Longsnout Seahorse
Recent invasion of the tropical Atlantic by an Indo
Recent invasion of the tropical Atlantic by an Indo