2004
DOI: 10.22621/cfn.v118i3.19
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Extension de l'aire de distribution connue de la Musaraigne fuligineuse, <em>Sorex fumeus</em>, dans le nord-est du Québec

Abstract: Small and immature gulls foraged more often on drifting salmon eggs than did large and mature gulls, and large and mature gulls foraged more often on salmon carcasses, at streams in Southeast Alaska. These differences may be related to body size via physical strength and dominance status, as well as foraging experience.

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“…In the west, the distribution is southwestward through the southeastern half of Ohio to central Kentucky and central Tennessee to the northeastern corner of Alabama and northern Georgia. In the east, the distribution passes through southern and central Vermont, New Hampshire, and the southernmost tip of Maine, then south through northern and western New Jersey, Pennsylvania, western Maryland, western Virginia, and western North Carolina to the northwestern corner of South Carolina (Hall, 1981;Owen, 1984;Jannett and Oehlenschlager, 1994;Desroches and Picard, 2004;Felix et al, 2009). A single individual collected in 1883 is evidence of an isolated population at Racine, Racine County, Wisconsin (Jackson, 1928); elevational distribution: 209-1,981 m (USNM specimens).…”
Section: Sorex Fumeus Miller 1895mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the west, the distribution is southwestward through the southeastern half of Ohio to central Kentucky and central Tennessee to the northeastern corner of Alabama and northern Georgia. In the east, the distribution passes through southern and central Vermont, New Hampshire, and the southernmost tip of Maine, then south through northern and western New Jersey, Pennsylvania, western Maryland, western Virginia, and western North Carolina to the northwestern corner of South Carolina (Hall, 1981;Owen, 1984;Jannett and Oehlenschlager, 1994;Desroches and Picard, 2004;Felix et al, 2009). A single individual collected in 1883 is evidence of an isolated population at Racine, Racine County, Wisconsin (Jackson, 1928); elevational distribution: 209-1,981 m (USNM specimens).…”
Section: Sorex Fumeus Miller 1895mentioning
confidence: 99%