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22 results on '"SHREWS"'

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1. Diversity of Helminths of Insectivorous Mammals (Mammalia: Eulipothyphla) from Large Forest Protected Areas of the Middle Volga Region (European Russia).

2. The Taiga Shrew (Sorex isodon, Eulipotyphla) in the Northeastern Part of European Russia: Distribution, Habitats, and Abundance.

3. Environmental impact of the North-West taiga ecosystem of Russia on the biological characteristics of small mammals: Blood indices.

4. Seasonal and interannual survivorship in the common shrew: the early bird catches the worm.

5. Seewis hantavirus in common shrew (Sorex araneus) in Sweden.

6. Craniometric Variability of the Common Shrew (Sorex araneus, Eulipotyphla) in the Northeastern Part of European Russia: Effects of Various Factors.

7. Dispersal of Young Common Shrews (Sorex araneus) from Natal Ranges.

8. A Study of Reproduction of the Common Shrew (Sorex araneus) at the Northern Periphery of Its Range.

9. Reproductive Ecology of the Lesser Shrew (Sorex minutus L.) at the Northern Periphery of Its Range.

10. Northern Asian Pliocene–Pleistocene beremendiin shrews (Mammalia, Lipotyphla, Soricidae): a description of material from Russia (Siberia), Kazakhstan, and Mongolia and the paleobiology of Beremendia.

11. The Cyclicity in the Dynamics of Different Populations of the Common Shrew.

12. Neoskrjabinolepis paradoxa n. sp. from shrews on Sakhalin Island, Russia, with an amended diagnosis of Neoskrjabinolepis Spassky, 1947 (Cestoda: Cyclophyllidea: Hymenolepididae), a key, and a review on geographical distribution of the species.

13. [Shrew-borne hantaviruses (Hantaviridae: Orthohantavirus ) in the Far East of Russia].

14. Shrew communities in Eastern Transbaikalia.

15. Seewis Virus: Phylogeography of a Shrew-Borne Hantavirus in Siberia, Russia.

16. Geographic Distribution and Phylogeny of Soricine Shrew-Borne Seewis Virus and Altai Virus in Russia.

17. Population monitoring of small mammals in the kola peninsula over 75 years.

18. Co-circulation of distinct shrew-borne hantaviruses in the far east of Russia.

19. [Epizootic significance of white-toothed shrews in the natural focus of steppe type tularemia in the Stavropol' region].

20. [Features of the parasitic system of Ixodid ticks--Borrelia--small mammals in the Russian Northwest].

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