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The scientific name of the gray brocket deer comes from Félix de Azara's gouazoubira.Azara was the first to provide a quality description of the small deer in the Americas, and he referred to the red brocket as gouazoupita, while he referred to the gray brocket as gouazoubira, which has been maintained in the current species name, Mazama gouazoubira.
Dwarf brocket. M. chunyi Hershkovitz, 1959: Central Andes mountains: Size: About 70 cm (28 in) long; about 38 cm (15 in) tall at shoulder [27] Habitat: Forest, shrubland, and grassland [28] Diet: Fruit and shrubs [28] VU Unknown [28] Gray brocket. M. gouazoubira (Fischer von Waldheim, 1814)
Gray brocket; L. Little red brocket; M. Mérida brocket; P. Pygmy brocket; R. Red brocket; S. Small red brocket This page was last edited on 22 May 2022, at 07: ...
This image has been assessed under the valued image criteria and is considered the most valued image on Commons within the scope: Mazama gouazoubira (Grey brocket) young female. You can see its nomination here .
Depending on species, brocket deer are small to medium-sized with stout bodies and large ears. The head-and-body length is 60–144 cm (24–57 in), the shoulder height is 35–80 cm (14–31 in), and the typical weight 8–48 kg (18–106 lb), though exceptionally large M. americana specimens have weighed as much as 65 kg (143 lb).
The Cervinae or the Old World deer, are a subfamily of deer.Alternatively, they are known as the plesiometacarpal deer, due to having lost the parts of the second and fifth metacarpal bones closest to the foot (though retaining the parts away from the foot), distinct from the telemetacarpal deer of the Capreolinae (which have instead retained these parts of those metacarpals, while losing the ...
Gray death is a slang term which refers to potent mixtures of synthetic opioids, for example benzimidazole opioids or fentanyl analogues, which were often sold on the street misleadingly as "heroin". However, other substances such as cocaine have also been laced with opioids that resulted in illness and death.
Joseph Gray (6 June 1890 - 1 May 1963) was a Durham-born painter and etcher of landscapes, architectural subjects and battlefield scenes. Some of his most evocative work hangs in the Imperial War Museum and different Regimental Museums throughout Britain.