Odobenus rosmarus
Odobenus rosmarus, communi Latinitate recentiori "ros marus piscis",[1] est species mammalium cuius duae subspecies, videlicet O. r. rosmarus et O. r. divergens, in partibus borealibus oceanorum Atlantici et Pacifici aquisque adiacentibus oceani Arctici habitant.
Subphylum : Vertebrata
Classis : Mammalia
Ordo : Carnivora
Superfamilia : Pinnipedia
Familia : Odobenidae
Genus : Odobenus
Brisson, 1762
Species : O. rosmarus
Classis : Mammalia
Ordo : Carnivora
Superfamilia : Pinnipedia
Familia : Odobenidae
Genus : Odobenus
Brisson, 1762
Species : O. rosmarus
Odobenus nomen e vocabulis Graecis ὀδούς et βαίνω compositum est, quasi dentibus progrediens; nam dentibus longe prominentibus haerens odobenus saepe e mari in litus vel in saxa proserpit. Alexander Guagnini saeculo sedecimo odobenum nomine Polonico mors nominat et ut monstrum fabulosum describit.[2]
Notae
recensere- ↑ "Ros marus piscis": Olaus Magnus, vide imaginem nostram.
- ↑ Alexandri Guagnini Moscoviae descriptio in Historiae Ruthenicae scriptoribus, Berolini et Petropoli 1841.
Bibliographia
recensere- James H. Barrett et al., "Ecological globalisation, serial depletion and the medieval trade of walrus rostra." Quaternary Science Reviews 229 (Decembri 2019).
- Karin M. Frei et al., "Was it for walrus? Viking Age settlement and medieval walrus ivory trade in Iceland and Greenland." World Archaeology 47 (2015): 439–66.
- Xénia Keighley et al., "Disappearance of Icelandic walruses coincided with Norse settlement." Molecular Biology and Evolution msz196 (12 Septembris 2019).
- Elizabeth Pierce, "Walrus Hunting and the Ivory Trade in Early Iceland." Archaeologia Islandica 7 (2009): 55–63.
- Bastiaan Star et al., "Ancient DNA reveals the chronology of walrus ivory trade from Norse Greenland." Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 285, no. 1884 (Augusto 2018). alibi.
Nexus externi
recensereVicimedia Communia plura habent quae ad Odobenum rosmarum spectant. |
Situs scientifici: • ITIS • NCBI • Biodiversity • Encyclopedia of Life • IUCN Red List • WoRMS: Marine Species • Fossilworks • INPN France |