Neotoma magister

This datasheet on Neotoma magister covers Identity, Further Information.

[1]  J. W. Gidley,et al.  The Pleistocene Vertebrate Fauna From Cumberland Cave Maryland , 2018 .

[2]  R. Eckerlin The Fleas (Siphonaptera) of West Virginia , 2016, Annals of Carnegie Museum.

[3]  M. T. Mengak Home Range and Movement of the Allegheny Woodrat ( Neotoma magister ) in Virginia , 2014 .

[4]  P. Wood,et al.  Fall Movements of Allegheny Woodrats in Harvested and Intact Stands in West Virginia , 2005 .

[5]  J. Wright,et al.  A Possible Role for the Chestnut Blight in the Decline of the Allegheny Woodrat , 2005 .

[6]  J. Edwards,et al.  Raccoon Roundworm in Raccoons in Central West Virginia , 2004 .

[7]  T. Schuler Fifty years of partial harvesting in a mixed mesophytic forest: composition and productivity , 2004 .

[8]  D. C. Dunning,et al.  Orientation in Cave-Dwelling wood rats , 1979, Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology.

[9]  K. Logiudice Trophically Transmitted Parasites and the Conservation of Small Populations: Raccoon Roundworm and the Imperiled Allegheny Woodrat , 2003 .

[10]  Kathleen L O Giudice Trophically Transmitted Parasites and the Conservation of Small Populations: Raccoon Roundworm and the Imperiled Allegheny Woodrat , 2003 .

[11]  Jane L. Rodrigue,et al.  Longevity Record for a Wild Allegheny Woodrat (Neotama magister) in West Virginia , 2002 .

[12]  R. Bradley,et al.  Molecular systematics of the genus Neotoma. , 2002, Molecular phylogenetics and evolution.

[13]  P. Wood,et al.  MICROSATELLITE DNA ANALYSIS OF POPULATION STRUCTURE IN ALLEGHENY WOODRATS (NEOTOMA MAGISTER) , 2002 .

[14]  M. T. Mengak Reproduction, Juvenile Growth and Recapture Rates of Allegheny Woodrats (Neotoma magister) in Virginia , 2002 .

[15]  P. Wood,et al.  Summer Microhabitat Selection by Foraging Allegheny Woodrats (Neotoma magister) in a Managed Forest , 2002 .

[16]  P. Wood,et al.  Allegheny Woodrat (Neotoma magister) Food Habits in the Central Appalachians , 2002 .

[17]  S. Johnson Reassessment of the Allegheny Woodrat (Neotomamagister) in Indiana , 2002 .

[18]  K. Logiudice Latrine Foraging Strategies of Two Small Mammals: Implications for the Transmission of Baylisascaris procyonis , 2001 .

[19]  R. Bradley,et al.  MOLECULAR PHYLOGENETICS OF THE NEOTOMA FLORIDANA SPECIES GROUP , 2001 .

[20]  W. Mark Ford,et al.  Movements of allegheny woodrats in relation to timber harvesting. , 2001 .

[21]  P. Wood,et al.  Microsatellite DNA markers for the study of Allegheny woodrat (Neotoma magister) populations and cross‐species amplification in the genus Neotoma , 2000, Molecular ecology.

[22]  Gary W. Miller,et al.  Maintaining species diversity in the central Appalachians , 1998 .

[23]  Clyde Jones Revised checklist of North American mammals north of Mexico, 1997 / , 1997 .

[24]  J. Planz,et al.  Molecular Phylogeny of the Neotoma floridana Species Group , 1996 .

[25]  R. H. Yahner,et al.  Microhabitat and Landscape Characteristics Associated with the Threatened Allegheny Woodrat , 1996 .

[26]  J. Hayes,et al.  Clinal variation and morphology of woodrats (Neotoma) of the eastern United States , 1993 .

[27]  J. B. Stangl,et al.  Abbreviated guide to pronunciation and etymology of scientific names for North American land mammals north of Mexico , 1993 .

[28]  J. Hayes,et al.  Variation in Mitochondrial DNA and the Biogeographic History of Woodrats (Neotoma) of the Eastern United States , 1992 .

[29]  W. Cudmore Nest associates and ectoparasites of the eastern wood rat, Neotoma floridana, in Indiana , 1986 .

[30]  R. Richards The Quaternary Distribution of the Eastern Woodrat, Neotoma floridana, in Indiana , 1986 .

[31]  A. Berta Pleistocene Mammals of North America , 1981 .

[32]  H. Hamilton,et al.  The Baker Bluff Cave deposit, Tennessee, and the late Pleistocene faunal gradient , 1978, Bulletin of Carnegie Museum of Natural History.

[33]  K. P. Kinsey Agonistic Behavior and Social Organization in a Reproductive Population of Allegheny Woodrats, Neotoma floridana magister , 1977 .

[34]  H. Hamilton,et al.  The Clark’s Cave bone deposit and the late Pleistocene paleoecology of the central Appalachian Mountains of Virginia , 1977, Bulletin of Carnegie Museum of Natural History.

[35]  E. Birney An Assessment of Relationships and Effects of Interbreeding among Woodrats of the Neotoma floridana Species-Group , 1976 .

[36]  K. P. Kinsey Social behaviour in confined populations of the Allegheny woodrat, Neotoma floridana magister , 1976, Animal Behaviour.

[37]  R. Richards The Woodrat in Indiana: Recent Fossils , 1971 .

[38]  S. M. Zervanos EFFECTS OF PHOTOPERIOD ON THE DAILY ACTIVITY OF THE ALLEGHENY WOOD RAT (NEOTOMA FLORIDANA) , 1969 .

[39]  D. E. Davis,et al.  Perception of Red Light by Woodrats (Neotoma floridana) , 1968 .

[40]  E. Odum,et al.  The Woodrats of the Eastern United States , 1957 .

[41]  W. H. Burt,et al.  A Comparative Study of the Bacula of Wood Rats (Subfamily Neotominae) , 1942 .

[42]  E. L. Poole A life history sketch of the Allegheny woodrat. , 1940 .

[43]  E. L. Poole Notes on the Young of the Allegheny Wood Rat , 1936 .

[44]  J. W. Gidley,et al.  New Mammalia in the Pleistocene Fauna from Cumberland Cave , 1933 .

[45]  G. G. Goodwin New Records and Some Observations on Connecticut Mammals , 1932 .

[46]  C. L. Newcombe An Ecological Study of the Allegheny Cliff Rat (Neotoma Pennsylvanica Stone) , 1930 .

[47]  A. Wetmore The Wood Rat in Maryland , 1923 .