- lakes****s or
depredating the
nests of
northern bobwhites.
Nearly all
cervids are so-called
uniparental species: the young,
known in most
species as...
-
Cervids are one of the most
common wild
herbivores of the world. Of
these moose can grow up to 2.33 m tall and
weigh as much as 820 kg. The
smallest of...
- deer or a
cervid. They are
widespread throughout North and
South America, Europe, and Asia, and are
found in a wide
variety of biomes.
Cervids range in...
-
Cervid alphaherpesvirus 3 (CvHV-3) is a
species of
virus in the
genus Varicellovirus,
subfamily Alphaherpesvirinae,
family Herpesviridae, and
order Herpesvirales...
- to CWD.
Other cervid species,
including caribou, are also
suspected to be
naturally vulnerable to this disease. Many
other non-
cervid mammalian species...
- (and
applied to the word for "branch" or "horn").
Antlers are
unique to
cervids. The
ancestors of deer had
tusks (long
upper canine teeth). In most species...
-
Cervid alphaherpesvirus 2 (CvHV-2) is a
species of
virus in the
genus Varicellovirus,
subfamily Alphaherpesvirinae,
family Herpesviridae, and
order Herpesvirales...
- antelopes, bovines, sheep, and goats. The musk deer
family differs from
cervids, or true deer, by
lacking antlers and
preorbital glands also, possessing...
- (downward-pointing
canine teeth) and its lack of antlers, it is
classified as a
cervid. Yet its
unique anatomical characteristics have
caused it to be classified...
- and
cervids in
forests of
North America and Europe.
Moose exclosures (fenced-off areas) are used to
determine the
ecological impacts of
cervids, allowing...