Severnij Polyus Prezentaciya
( Pyrrhura rupicola) References [ ] • Arndt, T. Anmerkungen zu einigen Pyrrhura-Formen mit der Beschreibung einer neuen Art und zweier neuer Unterarten. Papageien 8/2008. Geographic variation, taxonomy and distribution of some Amazonian Pyrrhura parakeets. Ornitologia Neotropical 13 (4): 337-363.
• Juniper, T., and M. A Guide to the Parrots of the World. Pica Press, East Sussex.
Oryzomys peninsulae, also known as the Lower California rice rat, is a species of rodent from western Mexico. Restricted to the southern tip of the Baja California peninsula, it is a member of the genus Oryzomys of family Cricetidae. Polyura sempronius. Polyura (pyrrhus) sempronius, the tailed emperor, is a large butterfly by Australian standards, with a wingspan of some 75 mm for males and 85 mm for females. The uncommon but widespread butterfly occurs in a variety of habitat types in northern and eastern Australia, where it occurs predominantly in.
Jaramillo, M. Schulenberg, F. Stotz, and K.
Version 28 Jun. • Restall, R., C.
Rodner, and M. Birds of Northern South America - An Identification Guide. Christopher Helm, London.
• Ribas, C., L. Joseph, and C. Miyaki (2006). Molecular systematics and patterns of diversification in Pyrrhura (Psittacidae), with special reference to the picta-leucotis complex. Mostri e pirati gioco. Igra bagz banni na telefon. Auk 123 (3): 660-680.
The ( Oryzomys palustris), a relative of O. peninsulae from the eastern United States It is uncertain how Oryzomys peninsulae arrived at its recent locale in Baja California Sur. In 1922, Nelson suggested that it may have been from another part of Mexico in a shipment of farm products, but this hypothesis is disproved by the clear differentiation from other western Mexican Oryzomys that the species exhibits. The species's range may be in nature: while Oryzomys is currently found along the eastern coast of the only as far north as coastal southern, the past distribution of the genus may have extended further northward, perhaps even into the southwestern, and from there south into Baja California.
Subsequent disappearance of Oryzomys from the northern regions would have led to its observed, with O. peninsulae isolated on the peninsula. This possibility is supported by the relatively close resemblance between O. peninsulae and O. couesi mexicanus, from coastal western Mexico. Alternatively, the ancestor of Oryzomys peninsulae may have arrived by during the late, about six million years ago, when the southern tip of the Baja California peninsula was an island located near what is now and in western Mexico. Some plants and birds from the area may have a similar heritage.
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