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This category contains pages listing animals of specific taxa described in the 21st century, that is, in the year 2001 or later. Subcategories This category has the following 3 subcategories, out of 3 total.
Lists of animals described in the 21st century (3 C) 0–9. Animals described in 2001 ... Starfish described in the 21st century (3 C) This page was ...
International Journal of Primatology 21(6):943–962. Cheirogaleus minusculus: Primates Groves 2000 Madagascar Groves, C.P. 2000. The Genus Cheirogaleus: Unrecognized Biodiversity in Dwarf Lemurs. International Journal of Primatology 21(6):943–962. Cheirogaleus ravus: Primates Groves 2000 Madagascar Groves, C.P. 2000.
The BBC World Service also broadcast a version called Animal, Vegetable and Mineral, chaired by Terry Wogan with a panel including Rachael Heyhoe Flint and Michael Flanders. [citation needed] In the movie The 20 Questions Murder Mystery (1950) then members of the team, including Richard Dimbleby and Norman Hackforth, appear. Together with two ...
Evidence for animal culture is often based on studies of feeding behaviors, [8] vocalizations, [4] predator avoidance, [9] mate selection, [10] and migratory routes. [11] An important area of study for animal culture is vocal learning, the ability to make new sounds through imitation. [4] Most species cannot learn to imitate sounds.
Jimmy Craig's They Can Talk comics humorously imagine what animals might say if they could talk. From cats and dogs to birds and raccoons, Craig brings their inner thoughts to life in a funny and ...
Social learning refers to learning that is facilitated by observation of, or interaction with, another animal or its products. [1] Social learning has been observed in a variety of animal taxa , [ 2 ] [ 3 ] such as insects , [ 4 ] fish , [ 5 ] birds , [ 6 ] reptiles , amphibians [ 7 ] and mammals (including primates [ 8 ] ).
Associative learning in animal behaviour is any learning process in which a new response becomes associated with a particular stimulus. [22] The first studies of associative learning were made by the Russian physiologist Ivan Pavlov, who observed that dogs trained to associate food with the ringing of a bell would salivate on hearing the bell. [23]