rangifer tarandus उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- The " glacial-interglacial cycles of the upper Pleistocene had a major influence on the evolution " of " Rangifer tarandus " and other Arctic and sub-Arctic species.
- In North America, wila is particularly important for the northern flying squirrel ( " Glaucomys sabrinus " ) and the woodland caribou ( " Rangifer tarandus caribou " ).
- Unlike many other " Rangifer tarandus " subspecies and their ecotypes, the Porcupine herd is stable at relatively high numbers, but the 2013 photo-census was not counted by January 2014.
- Isolation of " Rangifer tarandus " in refugia during the last glacial the Wisconsin in North America and the Weichselian in Eurasia-shaped " intraspecific genetic variability " particularly between the North American and Eurasian parts of the Arctic.
- For example, Banfield's 1961 classification of the migratory George River Caribou Herd, in the Ungava region of Quebec, as subspecies " Rangifer tarandus caribou ", woodland caribou, remains although other woodland caribou are mainly sedentary.
- According to the then-Canadian Wildlife Service Chief Mammalogist, Frank Banfield, the earliest record of " Rangifer tarandus caribou " in North America, is from a 1.6 million year old tooth found in the Yukon Territory.
- According to the Grubb, " Rangifer tarandus " is " circumboreal in the tundra and taiga " from " Alaska ( USA ) and Canada including most Arctic islands, and USA ( Northern Idaho and the Great Lakes region ).
- The "'barren-ground caribou "'( " Rangifer tarandus groenlandicus " ) is a subspecies of the caribou that is found mainly in the Canadian territories of Nunavut and the Northwest Territories, along with Kitaa, Greenland.
- In 2013 Finnish and Russian researchers began a collaborative comprehensive population study using telemetry tags, collars linked to satellites to track the populations of the rare and threatened " Rangifer tarandus fennicus . " which is found in eastern Finland and northwest Russia.
- For example, Banfield's 1961 classification of the migratory George River Caribou Herd, in the Ungava region of Quebec and Labrador, as subspecies " Rangifer tarandus caribou ", woodland caribou, remains although other woodland caribou are mainly sedentary.