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Book
Comparative biology and evolutionary relationships of tree shrews
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ISBN: 0306404648 1468410539 1468410512 Year: 1980 Publisher: New York, N.Y.

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Tupai : a field study of Bornean treeshrews
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ISBN: 1597349682 1282355074 9786612355073 0520925041 0520223845 0520222911 9780520925045 0585391580 9780585391588 9780520222915 9780520223844 9781597349680 9781282355071 Year: 2000 Publisher: Berkeley : University of California Press,

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Abstract

Treeshrews suffer from chronic mistaken identity: they are not shrews, and most are not found in trees. These squirrel-sized, brownish mammals with large, dark, lashless eyes were at one time thought to be primates. Even though most scientists now believe them to belong in their own mammalian order, Scandentia, they still are thought to resemble some of the earliest mammals, which lived alongside the dinosaurs. This book describes the results of the first comparative study of the ecology of treeshrews in the wild. Noted tropical mammalogist Louise H. Emmons conducted this pathbreaking study in the rainforests of Borneo as she tracked and observed six species of treeshrews. Emmons meticulously describes their habitat, diet, nesting habits, home range, activity patterns, social behavior, and many other facets of their lives. She also discusses a particularly interesting aspect of treeshrews: their enigmatic parental care system, which is unique among mammals.

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