- than by sight. It is the only
living member of the
genus Civettictis.
Viverra civetta was the
scientific name
introduced in 1776 by
Johann Christian Daniel...
-
Viverra is a
mammalian genus that was
first named and
described by Carl
Linnaeus in 1758 as
comprising several species including the
large Indian civet...
- Viverridae, Eupleridae, and Nandiniidae. The
African civet,
Civettictis civetta, has
historically been the main
species from
which a
musky scent used in...
- 1111/j.1469-7998.1915.00131.x. Schreber, J. C. D. (1778). "Die
Civette Viverra civetta". Die Säugethiere in
Abbildungen nach der Natur, mit Beschreibungen...
-
Viverra leakeyi, also
known as Leakey's
civet or the
giant civet, is an
extinct species of civet. Its
fossils have been
found in Africa, from Langebaanweg...
-
genus Viverra. It was
estimated that the Civettictis-
Viverra clade diverged from
Viverricula around 16.2 Mya; the
African civet split from
Viverra 12.3...
-
perineal glands,
including the
African civet (Civettictis
civetta),
large Indian civet (
Viverra zibetha), and
small Indian civet (Viverricula indica). Most...
-
derived from the musk deer (Moschus moschiferus) and the
civet cat (
Viverra civetta).
These were the
first natural products shown to have
rings with more...
- hog deer (C. porcinus), wild boar (Sus scrofa),
large Indian civet (
Viverra civetta),
common otter (Lutra lutra), fox[which?],
jungle cat (Felis chaus)...
-
Viverricula indica.
Viverra pallida by John
Edward Gray in 1831 was a pale
civet skin from an
inexplicit location in China.
Viverra bengalensis by Gray...