- cameloides)
usually grow smaller,
while moose in the
north and
northeast (A. a.
buturlini) can
match the
imposing sizes of the
Alaskan moose (A. a. gigas) and are...
-
Canary Islands and
Europe to Turkey, the
Caucasus and
north Iran E. c.
buturlini Johansen, HE, 1907 –
Middle East to
northwest China This is an unusual...
-
Turkey to
central Russia and west Siberia,
winters in east
Africa H. o.
buturlini Dementiev, 1941 –
breeds west
Kazakhstan to
northwest China,
winters in...
- sheep,
reindeer (Rangifer tarandus), and
Chukotka moose (Alces
alces buturlini), one of the
largest moose in the
world and the
largest in Eurasia, and...
-
Alces alces: A. a. alces, A. a. pfizenmayeri, A. a. cameloides, A. a.
buturlini, A. a. americana, A. a. andersoni, A. a. gigas, A. a.
shirasi 200–820 kg...
-
Hokkaido (****an) D. m.
hortorum (Brehm, CL, 1831) –
central Europe D. m.
buturlini Hartert, 1912 –
southern Europe D. m.
danfordi (Hargitt, 1883) – Greece...
-
subspecies H. o.
ostralegus Linnaeus, 1758 H. o.
longipes Buturlin, 1910 H. o.
buturlini Dementiev, 1941 H. o.
osculans Swinhoe, 1871 Europe, Asia and northern...
- (Zarudny, 1910).
Breeds only in Iran; it is like R. r.
buturlini, but
slightly darker. R. r.
buturlini (Loudon, 1911).
Breeds in
Eastern Europe, the Caucasus...
- a. americ**** (Eastern moose) A. a.
andersoni (Western moose) A. a.
buturlini (Chukotka elk) A. a.
caucasicus (Caucasian moose)† A. a.
cameloides (Ussuri...
- m.
amurensis (Buturlin, 1908) D. m.
hortorum (Brehm, CL, 1831) D. m.
buturlini Hartert, 1912 D. m.
danfordi (Hargitt, 1883) D. m.
colchicus (Buturlin...