Language
English
German
^M
Dutch
Spanish
Title:
Hibernation and longevity in the Turkish hamster Mesocricetus brandti
Source:
Science [0036-8075] Lyman, C P yr:1981
Basic
Sorry, no full text available...
Please use the document delivery service (see below)
Holding information
Holdings in library search engine
ALBERT
Document delivery
Request document via
Library/Bibliothek
Users interested in this article also expressed an interest in the following:
description
1.
POHL, H.
"Control of annual rhythms of reproduction and hibernation by photoperiod and temperature in the turkish hamster."
Journal of thermal biology
12.2 (1987): 119-123.
description
2.
Hall VD, VD.
"Hibernation in the female Turkish hamster (Mesocricetus brandti): an investigation of the role of the ovaries and of photoperiod."
Biology of Reproduction
27.4 (1982): 811-815.
description
3.
BUZADZIC, B.
"ANTIOXIDANT DEFENSES IN THE GROUND SQUIRREL CITELLUS-CITELLUS 2. THE EFFECT OF HIBERNATION."
Free radical biology & medicine
9.5 (1990): 407-414.
description
4.
Heth, G.
"Similarity in the qualities of individual odors among kin and species in Turkish (Mesocricetus brandti) and golden (Mesocricetus auratus) hamsters."
Journal of comparative psychology
113.3 (1999): 321-326.
description
5.
Butler, R.
"Are there life forms that age negligibly or not at all?"
The Gerontologist
44 (2004): 130-130.
description
6.
Johnston, R E E.
"Lesions centered on the medial amygdala impair scent-marking and sex-odor recognition but spare discrimination of individual odors in female golden hamsters."
Behavioral neuroscience
113.2: 345-357.
description
7.
Jagiello, G M.
"The chromomere map of the pachytene spermatocyte of the Turkish hamster (Mesocricetus brandti)."
Genome
34.4 (1991): 626-30.
description
8.
Cranford, A.
"Body temperature, heart rate and oxygen consumption of normothermic and heterothermic western jumping mice (Zapus princeps)."
Comparative biochemistry and physiology. A, Comparative physiology
74.3 (1983): 595-9.
description
9.
Heth, G.
"Kin recognition in golden hamsters: evidence for phenotype matching."
Animal behaviour
56.2 (1998): 409-417.
description
10.
van den Hurk, R.
"Enhanced serum oestrogen levels and highly steroidogenic, luteinized atretic follicles in the ovaries of the Djungarian hamster (Phodopus sungorus) kept under a short pholtoperiod from birth."
European journal of endocrinology
147.5 (2002): 701-710.
description
11.
Johnston, P.
"Memory for individuals: hamsters (Mesocricetus auratus) require contact to develop multicomponent representations (concepts) of others."
Journal of comparative psychology
122.2 (2008): 121-31.
description
12.
Tatar, M.
"Negligible senescence during reproductive dormancy in Drosophila melanogaster."
American Naturalist, The
158.3 (2001): 248-58.
description
13.
Mateo, J.
"Kin recognition by self-referent phenotype matching: weighing the evidence."
Animal cognition
6.1 (2003): 73-76.
description
14.
Petrulis, A E.
"Causes of scent marking in female golden hamsters (Mesocricetus auratus): specific signals or classes of information?"
Journal of comparative psychology
111.1: 25-36.
description
15.
Maras, Pamela M.
"Chemosensory and steroid-responsive regions of the medial amygdala regulate distinct aspects of opposite-sex odor preference in male Syrian hamsters."
The European journal of neuroscience
24.12 (2006): 3541-3552.
description
16.
Johnston, Robert E.
"Chemical communication in rodents: From pheromones to individual recognition."
Journal of mammalogy
84.4 (2003): 1141-1162.
description
17.
Li, Chun-I I.
"Medial amygdala modulation of predator odor-induced unconditioned fear in the rat."
Behavioral neuroscience
118.2 (2004): 324-32.
description
18.
Petrulis, A.
"Effects of vomeronasal organ removal on individual odor discrimination, sex-odor preference, and scent marking by female hamsters."
Physiology & behavior
66.1 (1999): 73-83.
description
19.
Johnston, R E E.
"Pheromones, the vomeronasal system, and communication. From hormonal responses to individual recognition."
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
855.1: 333-348.
description
20.
Mateo, J.
"Kin recognition and the 'armpit effect': evidence of self-referent phenotype matching."
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
267.1444 (2000): 695-700.
View More...
View Less...
Select All
Clear All
Save Citations
Select Format
RefWorks
EndNote
ProCite
Reference Manager
Submit citation export
Advanced
Author
Other articles by this author? -- in
GeoRef
author:
Lyman, C P
O'Brien, R C
Greene, G C
Papafrangos, E D
last name
initials
Other articles by this author? -- in
Online Contents Geosciences
author:
Lyman, C P
O'Brien, R C
Greene, G C
Papafrangos, E D
last name
initials
Web Search
Find related information in
a Web Search Engine
Excite
Google
HotBot
Ixquick
ZOO
Ask
Yahoo!
Bing
Naver
Search Terms:
Search for related information in
Google Scholar
Article Title
Author Name
Journal Title
Other Search
Search Terms:
A service provided by the
Library of the Wissenschaftspark Albert Einstein
, Potsdam, Germany.
© 2005 SFX by Ex Libris Inc.