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Post by another specialist on May 10, 2007 20:31:20 GMT
No problems baghira
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Post by another specialist on Sept 7, 2007 19:31:56 GMT
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Post by Melanie on Sept 28, 2008 13:33:46 GMT
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Post by sebbe67 on Sept 30, 2008 21:11:05 GMT
Probable occurrence of a brown bear (Ursus arctos) in Sonora, Mexico, in 19762008, Southwestern Naturalist 53: 256-260 Measurements taken on the skull of a bear shot in northern Sonora, Mexico, in 1976 revealed that the skull is from a brown bear (Ursus arctos). The skull appears to be that of a juvenile (sex unknown) and, to our knowledge, represents only the fourth confirmed record of a brown bear from Sonora, although anecdotal accounts exist from the mid-1800s to early 1900s. The present record also establishes that brown bears, considered extirpated from Mexico since the 1960s, were present in Sonora within the past 30 years. www.carnivoreconservation.org/portal/p_detail.php?recordid=14570
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Post by another specialist on Nov 20, 2008 9:53:24 GMT
Conservation Biology in Theory and Practice By Graeme Caughley, Anne Gunn
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Post by Sebbe on Jan 31, 2010 18:18:21 GMT
USNM 99657, Washington, USA. Sex: Female Collected: 13 Nov 1899, Colonia Garcia, Chihuahua, Mexico.
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Post by another specialist on Feb 12, 2010 11:34:15 GMT
where did you get the image sebbe?
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Post by Melanie on Nov 25, 2013 9:37:07 GMT
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Post by Melanie on Nov 24, 2014 19:43:41 GMT
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Post by koeiyabe on Dec 5, 2015 1:41:13 GMT
"Lost Animals (in Japanese)" by WWF Japan (1996)
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Post by Melanie on Dec 14, 2015 15:08:16 GMT
No valid subspecies anymore. Ceballos 'Mammals of Mexico', 2014
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