scholarly journals Field biology of the platypus ( Ornithorhynchus anatinus ): historical and current perspectives

1998 ◽  
Vol 353 (1372) ◽  
pp. 1081-1091 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. R. Grant ◽  
P. D. Temple–Smith

The field biology of the platypus, Ornithorhynchus anatinus , was first studied by a number of expatriate biologists who visited the Australian colonies to collect specimens in the 1800s. Their work was followed in the early to mid–1900s by a group of resident natural historians and later by an increasing number of academic biologists. All of these workers contributed significantly to the current understanding of the field biology of this unique Australian species. The platypus occupies much the same general distribution as it did prior to European occupation of Australia, except for its loss from the state of South Australia. However, local changes and fragmentation of distribution due to human modification of its habitat are documented. The species currently inhabits eastern Australia from around Cooktown in the north to Tasmania in the south. Although not found in the west–flowing rivers of northern Queensland, it inhabits the upper reaches of rivers flowing to the west and north of the dividing ranges in the south of the state and in New South Wales and Victoria. Its current and historical abundance, however, is less well known and it has probably declined in numbers, although still being considered as common over most of its current range. The species was extensively hunted for its fur until around this turn of this century. The platypus is mostly nocturnal in its foraging activities, being predominantly an opportunistic carnivore of benthic invertebrates. The species is homeothermic, maintaining its low body temperature (32°C), even while foraging for hours in water below 5°C. Its major habitat requirements include both riverine and riparian features which maintain a supply of benthic prey species and consolidated banks into which resting and nesting burrows can be excavated. The species exhibits a single breeding season, with mating occurring in late winter or spring and young first emerging into the water after 3—4 months of nurture by the lactating females in the nesting burrows. Natural history observations, mark and recapture studies and preliminary investigations of population genetics indicate the possibility of resident and transient members of populations and suggest a polygynous mating system. Recent field studies have largely confirmed and extended the work of the early biologists and natural historians.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kathryn Kost ◽  
◽  
Isaac Maddow-Zimet ◽  
Ashley C. Little

Key Points In almost all U.S. states, pregnancies reported as occurring at the right time or being wanted sooner than they occurred comprised the largest share of pregnancies in 2017, though proportions varied widely by state. The proportion of pregnancies that were wanted later or unwanted was higher in the South and Northeast than in other regions, and the proportion of pregnancies that occurred at the right time or were wanted sooner was higher in the West and Midwest. From 2012 to 2017, the wanted-later-or-unwanted pregnancy rate fell in the majority of states. However, no clear pattern emerged for any changes in the rate of pregnancies that were reported as wanted then or sooner or in the rate of those for which individuals expressed uncertainty.


2019 ◽  
Vol 67 (3) ◽  
pp. 173
Author(s):  
Peter D. Shaughnessy ◽  
Simon D. Goldsworthy

Long-nosed fur seals (Arctocephalus forsteri) were tagged as pups in colonies on Kangaroo Island, South Australia in eight consecutive pupping seasons from 1988–89 to 1995–96. Thirty-nine tagged animals were sighted on the southern Australian coast, being 0.89% of those tagged. They were aged from 9 months to 14 years 6 months, with half in their second and third years. Most records (88%) were of animals that moved eastwards. The most distant records were from Sydney in the east (1700 km), south of Tasmania in the south (1240 km) and Head of Bight in the west (700 km). One animal was seen twice, both times on the north coast of Kangaroo Island, once underwater and two years later ashore. Satellite telemetry studies of juvenile A. forsteri from Kangaroo Island showed that they typically forage in pelagic waters ~1000 km further south in association with the subtropical front. The study reported here shows that some animals tagged as pups disperse widely as juveniles around the southern Australian coast. The possibility of genetic interchange between breeding colonies is suggested by sightings of three tagged females aged 4 years and older at non-natal colonies.


1955 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 429-447
Author(s):  
Joaquín Meade

The huasteca region in northeastern Mexico covers sections of the six states of Tamaulipas, Veracruz, San Luis Potosí, Hidalgo, Puebla, and Querétaro. Its boundaries are approximately the following: to the north the river Soto la Marina, known in the sixteenth century as the Rio de las Palmas; to the south the Rio Cazones; to the east the Gulf of Mexico and to the west the mountainous section of the eastern Sierra Madre.The Christian conversion of the Huasteca began, no doubt, in 1518 with the expedition of Juan de Grijalva, who actually sailed as far north as Tuxpan and Tamiahua in the Huastec region of the state of Veracruz. John Diaz, a priest, accompanied this expedition. In 1519 Francisco de Garay, then in Jamaica, sent Alonso Alvarez de Pineda to Tampico and the Río Panuco, where he stayed some time and made contact with the Huastecs who belong to the great Maya family.


2013 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 87-105 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah C. Clayton

AbstractThe city of Teotihuacan has long been viewed as a primate center, dominating surrounding settlements in the Basin of Mexico politically and economically, but its specific relationships with subordinate polities are not well understood. In this article I consider the diverse roles that two rural settlements played in the intraregional structure of the Teotihuacan state. Specifically, I investigate differences in architecture and ceramic assemblages at Axotlan, in the Cuauhtitlan region to the west, and Cerro Portezuelo, in the Texcoco region to the south. Results of this research demonstrate that Teotihuacan's relationships with smaller settlements in the Basin of Mexico differed considerably in intensity and changed through time. This variation reflects specific administrative and economic strategies crafted by the state as well as varying degrees of political and economic autonomy among rural settlements.


GEOgraphia ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 19 (41) ◽  
pp. 67
Author(s):  
Ricardo Gilson da Costa Silva ◽  
Francilene Sales da Conceição

Resumo: Na Amazônia brasileira o agronegócio da soja cristaliza os espaços da globalização, opondo o campesinato e as forças hegemônicas do capital. A produção familiar (campesinato) é pressionada pelos mecanismos coercitivos impostos pelas forças hegemônicas do capital, ancorado na modernização do espaço, através do agronegócio da soja. Este deve ser entendido como o processo multiescalar de conversão de áreas agrícolas em campo de expansão econômica do capital globalizado. Essa é a situação que atualmente se configura no sul do estado de Rondônia e no oeste do estado do Pará, notadamente nos municípios de Vilhena/RO, Santarém e Belterra/PA. Palavras-chave: Geografia da Amazônia. Espaços da globalização. Campesinato. Agronegócio. AGRIBUSINESS AND PEASANTRY IN THE BRAZILIAN AMAZON: GEOGRAPHIC TRANSFORMATIONS IN TWO REGIONS OF THE STATES OF RONDÔNIA AND PARÁ. Abstract: Soy agribusiness in the Brazilian Amazon reflects the spaces of globalization. Through this dynamic peasantry opposes to the hegemonic forces of capital. Peasantry is pressed by coercive mechanisms imposed by this capital, embedded in the modernization of space. In this context agribusiness should be understood as a multiscale processes that leads the conversion of agricultural areas into others under the control of globalized capital. This is the situation currently being developed in the South of the Rondonia State and in the West of the State of Para, more precisely in the municipalities of Vilhena (RO), Santarém and Belterra (PA) . Keywords: Amazon Geography, Globalization spaces, Peasantry, Agribusiness. AGRONEGOCIO Y CAMPESINATO EN LA AMAZONÍA BRASILEÑA: TRANSFORMACIONES GEOGRÁFICAS EN DOS REGIONES EN LOS ESTADOS DE RONDÔNIA Y PARÁ Resumen: En la Amazonia brasileña el agronegocio de la soja cristaliza los espacios de la globalización, oponiéndose al campesinado y las fuerzas hegemónicas del capital. La producción familiar (campesinado) es presionada por los mecanismos coercitivos impuestos por las fuerzas hegemónicas del capital, anclado en la modernización del espacio, a través del agronegocio de la soja. Este debe ser entendido como el proceso multiescalar de conversión de áreas agrícolas en campo de expansión económica del capital globalizado. Esta es la situación que actualmente se configura en el sur del estado de Rondônia y en el oeste del estado de Pará, notadamente en los municipios de Vilhena/RO, Santarém y Belterra/PA. Palabras clave: Geografía de la Amazonia. Espacios de la globalización. Campesinado. Agronegocios.


GEOgraphia ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 19 (41) ◽  
pp. 67
Author(s):  
Ricardo Gilson da Costa Silva ◽  
Francilene Sales da Conceição

Resumo: Na Amazônia brasileira o agronegócio da soja cristaliza os espaços da globalização, opondo o campesinato e as forças hegemônicas do capital. A produção familiar (campesinato) é pressionada pelos mecanismos coercitivos impostos pelas forças hegemônicas do capital, ancorado na modernização do espaço, através do agronegócio da soja. Este deve ser entendido como o processo multiescalar de conversão de áreas agrícolas em campo de expansão econômica do capital globalizado. Essa é a situação que atualmente se configura no sul do estado de Rondônia e no oeste do estado do Pará, notadamente nos municípios de Vilhena/RO, Santarém e Belterra/PA. Palavras-chave: Geografia da Amazônia. Espaços da globalização. Campesinato. Agronegócio. AGRIBUSINESS AND PEASANTRY IN THE BRAZILIAN AMAZON: GEOGRAPHIC TRANSFORMATIONS IN TWO REGIONS OF THE STATES OF RONDÔNIA AND PARÁ. Abstract: Soy agribusiness in the Brazilian Amazon reflects the spaces of globalization. Through this dynamic peasantry opposes to the hegemonic forces of capital. Peasantry is pressed by coercive mechanisms imposed by this capital, embedded in the modernization of space. In this context agribusiness should be understood as a multiscale processes that leads the conversion of agricultural areas into others under the control of globalized capital. This is the situation currently being developed in the South of the Rondonia State and in the West of the State of Para, more precisely in the municipalities of Vilhena (RO), Santarém and Belterra (PA) . Keywords: Amazon Geography, Globalization spaces, Peasantry, Agribusiness. AGRONEGOCIO Y CAMPESINATO EN LA AMAZONÍA BRASILEÑA: TRANSFORMACIONES GEOGRÁFICAS EN DOS REGIONES EN LOS ESTADOS DE RONDÔNIA Y PARÁ Resumen: En la Amazonia brasileña el agronegocio de la soja cristaliza los espacios de la globalización, oponiéndose al campesinado y las fuerzas hegemónicas del capital. La producción familiar (campesinado) es presionada por los mecanismos coercitivos impuestos por las fuerzas hegemónicas del capital, anclado en la modernización del espacio, a través del agronegocio de la soja. Este debe ser entendido como el proceso multiescalar de conversión de áreas agrícolas en campo de expansión económica del capital globalizado. Esta es la situación que actualmente se configura en el sur del estado de Rondônia y en el oeste del estado de Pará, notadamente en los municipios de Vilhena/RO, Santarém y Belterra/PA. Palabras clave: Geografía de la Amazonia. Espacios de la globalización. Campesinado. Agronegocios.


2003 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 152
Author(s):  
Leigh W. Sage

LIKE all genera in the Goodeniaceae, the south-west of Western Australia is the centre of diversity for Lechenaultia R.Br. with 20 of 26 species in the genus endemic to the region (Keighery and Sage 1999; Morrison 1992). Many species of Lechenaultia (and Goodeniaceae) have habitat preferences for ephemerally wet sites (watercourses and lake edges), especially in the Eremaean Botanical Province (unpubl. data). Species such as L. striata (nomenclature follows Western Australian Herbarium 1998 and Orchard and Wilson 2001) and L. galactites are disturbance opportunists, showing prolific population growth after fire events (S. van Leeuwen, pers. comm.; unpubl. data). Of the remaining species scattered across central and eastern Australia, L. aphylla is the least known with only two non-flowering collections from the extreme eastern Great Victoria Desert bioregion of South Australia (including the holotype). A recent collection of the species made over 1 100 km to the west highlights the lack knowledge of the species and bioregion in general.


2017 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
DEVENDRA SOLANKI ◽  
JIGNESH KANEJIYA ◽  
BHARATSINH GOHIL

Turris clausifossata, a Conoid, Turrid is being reported for the first time from Gopnath coast, Gulf of Khambhat the state of Gujarat situated on the west coast of India. Turris clausifossata was first recorded7 from Dwarka, Gulf of Kachchh, Gujarat (21°49’N, 68°55’E), but not brought to light as first record to the west coast of India. Yet, its occurrence was reported only at two coasts of Gujarat. Current research reveals that Turris clausifossata is extending its distribution range to the south of Dwarka on the west coast of India. Present study was carried out from April 2015 to March 2016 and in this study, a status of species presented in form of population dynamics and seasonal availability.


2017 ◽  
Vol 129 (1) ◽  
pp. 37
Author(s):  
Matt J. Nimbs

The southwest coast of Western Australia is heavily influenced by the south-flowing Leeuwin Current. In summer, the current shifts and the north-flowing Capes Current delivers water from the south to nearshore environments and with it a supply of larvae from cooler waters. The nudibranch Tenellia catachroma (Burn, 1963) was considered restricted to Victorian waters; however, its discovery in eastern South Australia in 2013 revealed its capacity to expand its range west. In March 2017 a single individual was observed in shallow subtidal waters at Cape Peron, Western Australia, some 2000 km to the west of its previous range limit. Moreover, its distribution has extended northwards, possibly aided by the Capes Current, into a location of warming. This observation significantly increases the range for this Victorian emigrant to encompass most of the southern Australian coast, and also represents an equatorward shift at a time when the reverse is expected.


1959 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 52 ◽  
Author(s):  
RM McKenzie

The concentrations of cobalt, zirconium, nickel, copper, vanadium, molybdenrun, manganese, and zinc have been determined in 10 profiles of terra rossas and 9 of rendzinas from South Australia. The soils from the lower south-eastern part of the State contain lower concentrations of all these elements than do those near Adelaide, particularly for cobalt, copper, and zinc. This difference is reflected in the concentrations found in the underlying calcareous material, and can account for the widespread deficiencies in cobalt and copper which occur ill the South-East.


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