The Geographical Distribution of Animals: With a Study of the Relations of Living and Extinct Faunas as Elucidating the Past Changes of the Earth's Surface, 2. köideMacmillan and Company, 1876 - 503 pages |
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Page 16
... West Africa ; while Lobodonotus has one species in South America and two in Africa . Lucanida . — The Neotropical species of this family almost all belong to peculiar genera . Those common to other regions are Syndesus , confined to ...
... West Africa ; while Lobodonotus has one species in South America and two in Africa . Lucanida . — The Neotropical species of this family almost all belong to peculiar genera . Those common to other regions are Syndesus , confined to ...
Page 17
... West Africa ; Colobogaster has two in West Africa , one in Java , and one in the Moluccas . The relations of South America and Australia as indicated by these insects has already been sufficiently noticed under the latter region . Γε ...
... West Africa ; Colobogaster has two in West Africa , one in Java , and one in the Moluccas . The relations of South America and Australia as indicated by these insects has already been sufficiently noticed under the latter region . Γε ...
Page 18
... West Africa , and Hammatocerus , which has one in Australia . The Lamiid¿ have 219 genera , and this is the only tropical region in which they do not exceed the Cerambycidae . This number is almost exactly the same as that of the ...
... West Africa , and Hammatocerus , which has one in Australia . The Lamiid¿ have 219 genera , and this is the only tropical region in which they do not exceed the Cerambycidae . This number is almost exactly the same as that of the ...
Page 59
... West Africa , than to that of the Pacific islands . The families and many of the genera are the same , and a certain ... western Mexico , about 70 miles from San Blas . The largest is about 15 miles long by 10 wide . They are of horizon ...
... West Africa , than to that of the Pacific islands . The families and many of the genera are the same , and a certain ... western Mexico , about 70 miles from San Blas . The largest is about 15 miles long by 10 wide . They are of horizon ...
Page 75
... West Africa . Of Lamiid¿ there are 14 genera , 8 of which are Neotropical , 1 common to Central America and Mexico , 1 to the United States and Cuba , while 2 , Proecha and Phidola , are confined to Cuba . Several of the genera are ...
... West Africa . Of Lamiid¿ there are 14 genera , 8 of which are Neotropical , 1 common to Central America and Mexico , 1 to the United States and Cuba , while 2 , Proecha and Phidola , are confined to Cuba . Several of the genera are ...
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Common terms and phrases
9 sp abundant allied Amazon animals Antilles Arctic Asia AUSTRALIAN NEOTROPICAL NEARCTIC Australian region belonging birds Bolivia Borneo Brazil California Canada Celebes Ceylon characteristic Chili coast Columbia confined Costa Rica Cuba Eastern Ecuador Eocene ETHIOPIAN ORIENTAL AUSTRALIAN Ethiopian region extending fauna fossil Fresh-water fishes genera genus Guatemala Guiana Guinea Himalayas India inhabits Jamaica Japan Java Madagascar Malay Mammalia Marine fishes Mexico Miocene Moluccas NEARCTIC PALEARCTIC ETHIOPIAN NEARCTIC PALEARCTIC SUB-REGIONS Nearctic region NEOTROPICAL NEARCTIC PALEARCTIC NEOTROPICAL NEARCTIC SUB-REGIONS Neotropical region northern number of species occur Ocean Old World ORIENTAL AUSTRALIAN NEOTROPICAL ORIENTAL AUSTRALIAN SUB-REGIONS Oriental region ORIENTAL SUB-REGIONS Pacific PALEARCTIC ETHIOPIAN ORIENTAL PALEARCTIC ETHIOPIAN SUB-REGIONS Palearctic region Papuan Islands Paraguay Patagonia peculiar genera Peru Plata Plate Pliocene possesses range remarkable seas single species South America South Europe South Temperate Southern Sub-family Sumatra Tasmania Tropical America Tropical and South tropical regions Venezuela West Africa West Indian islands Zealand
Popular passages
Page 570 - OCEAN. The Ocean, Atmosphere, and Life. Being the Second Series of a Descriptive History of the Life of the Globe.
Page 113 - ... to declare every snake met with to be the most venomous one in their country; and thus travellers often come away with exceedingly erroneous impressions on the subject. The Indian region surpasses every other part of the globe in the number and variety of its...
Page 135 - ... divided in the earliest Eocene, and even in Cretaceous times; while we have the strongest proof that South America was peopled from the Nearctic, and Australia and Africa from the Palaearctic region; hence, the Eastern and Western Hemispheres are the two great branches of the tree of life of our globe. But this division, taken by itself, would obscure the facts — firstly, of the close relation and parallelism of the Nearctic and...
Page 512 - The preceding remarks are all I now venture to offer, on the distinguishing features of the various groups of land-animals as regards their distribution and migrations. They are at best but indications of the various lines of research opened up to us by the study of animals from the geographical point of view, and by looking upon their range in space and time as an important portion of the earth's history. Much work has yet to be done before the materials will exist for a complete treatment of the...
Page 3 - Richness combined with isolation is the predominant feature of Neotropical zoology, and no other region can approach it in the number of its peculiar family and generic types. It has eight families of Mammalia absolutely confined to it, besides several others which are rare elsewhere. These consist of two families of monkeys, Cebidae and...
Page 338 - ... bringing about the extinction of many of the larger species of these wingless birds. The wide distribution of the Struthiones may, as we have already suggested (VoL I., p. 287.), be best explained, by supposing them to represent a very ancient type of bird, developed at a time when the more specialized carnivorous mammalia had not come into existence, and preserved only in those areas which were long free from the incursions of such dangerous enemies.
Page 189 - SLB-EKGIOKS. ia3.*| i regions or the Tropics. They range in fact over the whole of the great continents of the globe, with the one striking exception of Africa, where they are only found on the shores of the Mediterranean which form part of the Palsearctic region. The following is the distribution of the genera. Alces (1 species), the elk or moose, ranges all over Northern Europe and Asia, as far south as East Prussia, the Caucasus, and North China ; and over Arctic America to Maine on the East,...
Page 223 - Europe) during the Tertiary period, we must suppose that it was at a far more remote epoch that the ancestral forms of all the other marsupials entered Australia...
Page 503 - These singular and lowly-organised animals appear to have become almost restricted to the two great Southern lands — South Africa and South America — at an early period ; and, being there free from the competition of higher forms, developed a number of remarkable types often of huge size, of which the Megatherium is one of the best known. The incursion of the highly-organised Ungulates and Carnivora into Africa during the Miocene epoch, probably exterminated most of them in that continent ; but...
Page 512 - ... distribution has to contend against, is the total absence of geographical collections, and the almost total want of complete and comparable local catalogues. Till every wellmarked district, — every archipelago, and every important island, has all its known species of the more important groups of animals catalogued on a uniform plan, and with a uniform nomenclature, a thoroughly satisfactory account of the Geographical Distribution of Animals will not be possible.