Panbiogeography: The New WorldLéon Croizat, 1958 - Biogeography |
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Page 36
... former " reached " it at the end of a long trail of reduction of range and extinction , or , better to say , were eventually confined there with spent powers for change by a recurrent history of adversity elsewhere . The Dicruridae , on ...
... former " reached " it at the end of a long trail of reduction of range and extinction , or , better to say , were eventually confined there with spent powers for change by a recurrent history of adversity elsewhere . The Dicruridae , on ...
Page 100
... former only 107 in Africa , but 420 in the New World ) and Capitonidae ( about 252 races , 76 species ; of the former 140 in Africa , 41 in the New World ) it is easily to be seen that even as regards the Piciformes , and in spite of ...
... former only 107 in Africa , but 420 in the New World ) and Capitonidae ( about 252 races , 76 species ; of the former 140 in Africa , 41 in the New World ) it is easily to be seen that even as regards the Piciformes , and in spite of ...
Page 504
... former ; ii ) The latter have many less monotypic genera ( of a single raceless species ) than the former ( about 8 in the Formicariidae , some 19 in the Furnariidae ) which generally agrees with the formicariid massing tending toward ...
... former ; ii ) The latter have many less monotypic genera ( of a single raceless species ) than the former ( about 8 in the Formicariidae , some 19 in the Furnariidae ) which generally agrees with the formicariid massing tending toward ...
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Common terms and phrases
accordingly affinity Africa Amazonas Andean Antioquia Argentina assuredly Bahamas biogeographic birds Bogotá Bolívar Bolivia Bond Brazil Capitonidae Caribbean Cauca Cayman Central America Chapter Colombia colonizing flights conclusion contrary Cordillera Costarica course Cretaceous Cuba Cundinamarca disconnected discussion distribution Eastern ecology Ecuador endemic essentially eventually evolution fauna follows form-making forms fossil Galapagos genera genus geography geological Geosyncline Greater Antilles groups Guiana Hellmayr highlands Hispaniola Honduras Huila islands Jamaica landbridges Lesser Antilles Macarena Madagascar Magdalena major mammals massing matter Matthew means of dispersal Mérida Mexico Mimidae modern Nariño naturalist nature Node North Northern Northwestern Nuclear Central America Pacific Panama pattern Peru phytogeography Picidae plants Portorico races range reader records Revilla Gigedo Río Santa Marta science of dispersal score sector Sierra Simpson South America Southern southward species stand Táchira taxonomic Territorio Amazonas Tertiary track Trinidad BWI Troglodytidae tropical understanding Venezuela West Western Ecuador whole World