Donnerstag, 03 Dezember 2020 07:15

BOTHMA, J. du P. & WALKER, C. (1999)

Larger Carnivores of the African Savannas.

X + 274 Seiten. E-Book https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-662-03766-9
Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 1999. DOI https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-03766-9

Abstract:

The Cheetah

The cheetah Acinonyx jubatus has had a long association with man, but its first contact with humans was actually in India and on the plains of southern Africa. Because of their speed and hunting prowess, captive cheetahs have been used by man as food hunters for many centuries. The oldest record of a captive cheetah is depicted on a decorated silver vase from a Scythian burial site at Maikop in the Caucasus Range, which shows the cheetah wearing a collar. This vase dates back to approximately 700 to 300 BC. However, it is likely that early man joined other scavengers in robbing cheetahs of their kills long before the Maikop culture. In doing so, these early hunters probably exploited the cheetah’s relative timidity, daytime hunting habits, and also its open plains habitat. The Moghul Emperor Akbar the Great is also said to have kept up to 3000 cheetahs to hunt antelope, while sketches of a Dionysian procession in Alexandria during the reign of Ptolemy II from 309 to 246 BC show a cheetah on a leash. Even before the ancient Assyrian empire in Mesopotamia and during the reign of the pharaohs in Egypt, captive cheetahs were used for coursing game. During the fifth century and the early Renaissance in Italy cheetahs were also employed for this purpose. Despite its timidity, the ancient Egyptians endowed the cheetah with the spirit of courage, but today it is regarded more as a symbol of elusive grace in a declining wilderness than as a fierce hunter.

bothma-biblio

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Mittwoch, 02 Dezember 2020 13:23

GOMPPER, M. E. (2009)

Population ecology of the white‐nosed coati (Nasua narica) on Barro Colorado Island, Panama.

Journal of Zoology 241(3): 441-455
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-7998.1997.tb04836.x


Abstract:

The white‐nosed coati, Nasua narica, is a common Neotropical carnivore with a social structure of band‐living adult females and solitary adult males. A coati population on Barro Colorado Island, Panama, was studied over a four‐year period by mark‐recapture, radiotelemetry. and direct observation of habituated individuals. The population density was approximately 51.5 individuals/km2 and the sex ratio was 1:1. Band size varied from six to 26 individuals (mean = 15.3) with extensive fluctuation within and between years. Mean foraging group size was smaller (7.2 individuals) than population group size, and fluctuated with food availability, synchronous parturition, and the emigration of mature males. Mean home‐range size of six bands was 0.33 km2, and ranges of adjacent bands overlapped from 0–66%. One band fissioned during the study; however, the resulting bands did not disperse from the original home range. Seven adult males had a mean home‐range size of 0.37 km2, each extensively overlapping the home ranges of several other males. Observations of 10 adult males whose natal bands were known indicate that when males disperse they do not simultaneously leave the band's home range. Rather, their home ranges remain within or broadly overlapping those of their natal bands. This dispersal pattern is unusual within the order Carnivora.

gompper-biblio

Freigegeben in G

Predicted distributions and conservation status of two threatened Southeast Asian small carnivores: The banded civet and Hose 's civet.

Mammalia 77(3): 261–271. DOI 10.1515/mammalia-2012-0110  

Abstract:

Knowledge of the distribution and habitat preferences of a species is of paramount importance when assessing its conservation status. We used accurately recorded occurrence records and ecological niche modelling to predict the distribution of two threatened and poorly known small carnivore species that occur in Southeast Asia, the banded civet (Hemigalus derbyanus) and Hose’s civet (Diplogale hosei), and analysed their spatial niche differentiation for habitat and elevation. We then identified possible anthropogenic threats, and used our modelling predictions to recommend surveying priorities. The predicted distribution of the banded civet was principally in lowland evergreen forest in southern Myanmar/Thailand, Peninsular Malaysia, Sumatra, Borneo and three Mentawai Islands (Siberut, Sipora and South Pagai), and for Hose ’ s civet in evergreen forest across the higher elevation regions of Borneo. Our niche analyses suggested that there is a tendency for these two species to separate spatially along an elevation gradient: the banded civet is mainly found in lowland areas, whereas Hose ’ s civet primarily occurs at higher elevations. Our study strongly indicated that these two viverrids are forest-dependent species that may be threatened by forest loss, degradation and fragmentation. Field surveys should be prioritised in areas where each species is predicted to occur and no records currently exist.

jennings-biblio

Freigegeben in J

Distribution, population size and morphometrics of the giant-striped mongoose Galidictis grandidieri Wozencraft 1986 in the sub-arid zone of south-.western Madagascar.

Mammalia 75(4): 353-361
DOI: 10.1515/MAMM.2011.045
Volltext: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/256087449_Distribution_population_size_and_morphometrics_of_the_giant-striped_mongoose_Galidictis_grandidieri_Wozencraft_1986_in_the_sub-arid_zone_of_south-western_Madagascar

Abstract:
Galidictis grandidieri (Wozencraft 1986) is a nocturnal carnivoran endemic to the threatened spiny forest ecosystem of the Mahafaly Plateau in southern Madagascar. Previous investigations estimated a total population size of about 3000 individuals restricted to an area of 440 squkm, making it one of the geographically most limited and rarest mammalian carnivoran species worldwide. Given the increasing threat through habitat destruction we compiled additional mor- phometric measurements and investigated the distribution and abundance of the species, using grid and transect cap- tures. G. grandidieri were larger than indicated by previous samples and showed signifi cant sexual dimorphism with a mean body mass of 1640 g for males and 1400 g for females (overall mean: 1500 g). The highest densities were found in the littoral forest at the western edge of the Mahafaly Plateau (six to eight individuals/squkm). From there, its abundance declined exponentially towards the east. The distribution of G. grandidieri is probably determined by decreasing water accessibility away from the cliff. We estimate a total distri-bution area of about 1500 squkm and a total population size between 3115 and 4995 animals. Based on these estimates, G. grandidieri occurs in a much larger area than assumed so far, but reaches lower densities.

marquardt-biblio

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Sonntag, 29 November 2020 09:08

HINTON, H. E. & DUNN, A. M. S. (1967)

Mongooses - Their natural history and behaviour.

144 Seiten, 10 s/w Bildtaferln und 26 Strichzeichnungen.
Verlag Oliver & Boyd, Edinburgh und London.

Inhalt:

  • General natural history
  • Snakes and other venomous animals
  • Reproduction and parental care
  • Life span
  • Attack and defence
  • Sexual and some other types of behaviour
  • Play
  • Language
  • In the Hawaiian Islands
  • Indian folk tales
  • In Ancient Egypt
  • Mongooses as pets
  • Portraits of some species
  • Diseases and parasites
  • The kinds of mongooses

hinton-biblio

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Samstag, 28 November 2020 10:01

SCHREBER, J. C. D., von (1774-1855)

Die Säugthiere in Abbildungen nach der Natur mit Beschreibungen.

Verlag Wolfgang Walther, Erlangen

 

Faksimile:

Erster Theil: https://digi.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/diglit/schreber1841tafelbd1 

Textbände 3-7, Bildtafeln, 5 Ergänzungsbände von  GOLDFUSS, G. A. & WAGNER, J. A.‏:
https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/bibliography/67399#/summary
https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.67399

schreber-biblio

Freigegeben in S

The hog-badger is not an edentate: systematics and evolution of the genus Arctonyx (Mammalia: Mustelidae)

Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 154 (2): 353–385. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1096-3642.2008.00416.x

Abstract:

Hog-badgers (mustelid carnivorans classified in the genus Arctonyx) are distributed throughout East and Southeast Asia, including much of China, the eastern Indian Subcontinent, Indochina and the large continental Asian island of Sumatra. Arctonyx is usually regarded as monotypic, comprising the single species A. collaris F. Cuvier, 1825, but taxonomic boundaries in the genus have never been revised on the basis of sizeable series from throughout this geographical range. Based on a review of most available specimens in world museums, we recognize three distinctive species within the genus, based on craniometric analyses, qualitative craniodental features, external comparisons, and geographical and ecological considerations. Arctonyx albogularis (Blyth, 1853) is a shaggy-coated, medium-sized badger widely distributed in temperate Asia, from Tibet and the Himalayan region to eastern and southern China. Arctonyx collaris F. Cuvier, 1825, is an extremely large, shorter-haired badger, distributed throughout Southeast Asia, from eastern India to Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos. The world's largest extant badger, A. collaris co-occurs with A. albogularis in eastern India and probably in southern China, and fossil comparisons indicate that its geographical range may have extended into central China in the middle Pleistocene. The disjunctly distributed species Arctonyx hoevenii (Hubrecht, 1891), originally described within the order ‘Edentata’ by a remarkable misunderstanding, is the smallest and darkest member of the genus and is endemic to the Barisan mountain chain of Sumatra. Apart from A. hoevenii, no other Arctonyx occurs on the Sunda Shelf below peninsular Thailand. The natural history of each species of Arctonyx, so far as is known, is briefly reviewed.

helgen-biblio

Freigegeben in H
Montag, 23 November 2020 16:34

SMITH, M., BUDD, J. & GROSS, C. (2003)

The Distribution of Blanford's fox (Vulpes cana Blanford, 1877) in the United Arab Emirates.

Journal of Arid Environments 54 (1): 55-60.
https://doi.org/10.1006/jare.2001.0891

Abstract:

Blanford's fox, Vulpes cana, was first recorded in Arabia in 1981 and in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) in 1995. It has since been shown that they are locally abundant in their range in the north-eastern mountains of UAE. Population density, as determined by catch-per-unit-effort (CPUE), was compared for several sampled sites. Predators or the lack thereof may produce the trends observed, as foxes may be an important food source for Arabian leopards. External body measurements, except for body weight, are similar to those previously recorded. Tail tip color is not conclusive in their identification, as individuals with white- and black-tipped tails have been caught.

smith-biblio

Freigegeben in S
Freitag, 20 November 2020 13:12

HALTENORTH, T. (1957)

Die Wildkatze.

100 S., 25 s/w-Abb..
Die Neue Brehm-Bücherei 189. 1. Auflage.
A. Ziemsen Verlag, Wittenberg Lutherstadt, 1957.

Inhalt:

Der Band ist die erste Monographie  über die Wildkatze in deutscher Sprache. Jahrelange Beobachtungen an Wildkatzen und die Kenntnis der einschlägigen Literatur befähigen den Verfasser, diese Monographie so umfassend wie nur igend möglich zu gestalten. Es wird auf die Formbildung in und außerhalb Mitteleuropas, die Unterarten, fossile Vorkommen, Artgeschichte, Gattungsverwandtschaft und die Stellung der Gattung Felis im System eingegangen. Aussehen und Gestalt sowie Leben und Verhalten werden beschrieben, weitere Kapitel befassen sich mit der Jugendentwicklung, dem Seelenleben, der Beudeutung für den Menschen, Parasiten und den Vergleich von Haus- und Wildkatze.

haltenorth-biblio

Freigegeben in H

A revised taxonomy of the Felidae.

The final report of the Cat Classification Task Force of the IUCN/SSC Cat Specialist Group.

Cat News Special Issue 11, 80 pp, mit Farbfotos und Verbreitungskarten. ISSN 1027-2992.

Volltext: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/316880566_A_revised_taxonomy_of_the_Felidae_The_final_report_of_the_Cat_Classification_Task_Force_of_the_IUCNSSC_Cat_Specialist_Group

Executive summary:

  1. The current classification of the Felidae was reviewed by a panel of 22 experts divided into core, expert and review groups, which make up the Cat Classification Task Force CCTF of the IUCN Cat Specialist Group.
  2. The principal aim of the CCTF was to produce a consensus on a revised classification of the Felidae for use by the IUCN.
  3. Based on current published research, the CCTF has fully revised the classification of the Felidae at the level of genus, species and subspecies.
  4. A  novel  traffic-light  system  was  developed  to  indicate  certainty  of  each  taxon  based  on  morphological,  molecular,  biogeographical  and  other  evidence.  A  concordance  of  good  evidence  in  the  three  principal  categories was required to strongly support the acceptance of a taxon.
  5. Where disagreements exist among members of the CCTF, these have been highlighted in the accounts for each species. Only further research will be able to answer the potential conflicts in existing data.
  6. A total of 14 genera, 41 species and 77 subspecies is recognised by most members of the CCTF, which is a  considerable  change  from  the  classification  proposed  by  Wozencraft  (2005),  the  last  major  revision  of  the  Felidae.
  7. Future areas of taxonomic research have been highlighted in order to answer current areas of uncertainty.8.  This  classification  of  the  Felidae  will  be  reviewed  every  five  years  unless  a  major  new  piece  of  research  requires a more rapid revision for the conservation benefit of felid species at risk of extinction.

kitchener-biblio

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