- exclusively,
herbivorous browsers. The male of the
largest species,
Dromornis stirtoni, is a
contender for the
tallest and
heaviest bird, and
possibly exhibited...
- (Phascolarctos
stirtoni) is an
extinct arboreal marsupial which existed in
Australia during the
Pleistocene epoch.
Phascolarctos stirtoni was
about one-third...
-
Eunectes stirtoni is an
extinct species of
anaconda that
lived during the
Middle Miocene (Laventan) in the area of the present-day
Tatacoa Desert. Fossils...
-
Dromornithids were part of the
Australian megafauna. One species,
Dromornis stirtoni, was 3 m (9 ft 10 in) tall. Only a
single species,
Genyornis newtoni survived...
- The
American barn owl (Tyto furcata) is
usually considered a
subspecies group and
together with the
western barn owl group, the
eastern barn owl group...
- and Scollardius, respectively.
Cimolestes incisus (Marsh) and
Cimolestes stirtoni (Clemens)
remain within the genus.
Fossils of
Cimolestes have been found...
-
Australian folivore,
which was
exceeded in size by the even more
robust P.
stirtoni. The tail of
koalas is
almost absent, an
unusual characteristic for a tree...
- (Peromyscus
stirtoni) is a
species of
rodent in the
family Cricetidae. It is
found in El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Nicaragua. P.
stirtoni is widely...
- 500–2,200 lb)
making it one of the
largest birds ever,
alongside Dromornis stirtoni and
Pachystruthio dmanisensis.
Females of A.
maximus are
suggested to have...
-
certainly carnivorous and a tree-dweller.
Simosthenurus pales Phascolarctos stirtoni (the
giant koala) was
similar in
structure to the
modern koala (P. cinereus)...