Cite
Whitish film covering a newborn white shark was not intrauterine material but embryonic epithelium.
MLA
Tomita, Taketeru, et al. “Whitish Film Covering a Newborn White Shark Was Not Intrauterine Material but Embryonic Epithelium.” Environmental Biology of Fishes, vol. 107, no. 6, June 2024, pp. 719–22. EBSCOhost, https://doi.org/10.1007/s10641-024-01560-z.
APA
Tomita, T., Miyamoto, K., Nakamura, M., Murakumo, K., Toda, M., & Sato, K. (2024). Whitish film covering a newborn white shark was not intrauterine material but embryonic epithelium. Environmental Biology of Fishes, 107(6), 719–722. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10641-024-01560-z
Chicago
Tomita, Taketeru, Kei Miyamoto, Masaru Nakamura, Kiyomi Murakumo, Minoru Toda, and Keiichi Sato. 2024. “Whitish Film Covering a Newborn White Shark Was Not Intrauterine Material but Embryonic Epithelium.” Environmental Biology of Fishes 107 (6): 719–22. doi:10.1007/s10641-024-01560-z.