sand fox
Appearance
English
[edit]Noun
[edit]sand fox (plural sand foxes)
- Synonym of Rüppell's fox[1][2][3][4][5][6]
- Synonym of pale fox[7][8][9][10][11][12][13]
- Synonym of Tibetan fox[14][15][16][17][18]
- (rare) Synonym of Corsac fox[19][20][21]
Derived terms
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Corbet, G. B. (Gordon Barclay) (1986) A world list of mammalian species[1], →OCLC
- ^ Amr, Zuhair S, Baker, Mohammad Abu, Rifai, Lina (2004) “Mammals of Jordan”, in Denisia[2], volume 14
- ^ Halls, Kelly Milner, 1957- (2005) Wild dogs : past & present[3], →OCLC
- ^ Nowak, Ronald M (2005) Walker's carnivores of the world[4], →OCLC
- ^ Zoologisches Forschungsmuseum Alexander Koenig (2010) Bonn zoological bulletin[5], volume v.64:no.1 (2015), →OCLC
- ^ Russ, Jane (2017) The fox book[6], →OCLC
- ^ Witherby, H. F. (Harry Forbes), 1873-1944 (1902) Bird hunting on the White Nile; a naturalist's experiences in the Soudan[7], →OCLC
- ^ Dorst, Jean, 1924-, Dandelot, Pierre, illus (1970) A field guide to the larger mammals of Africa[8], →OCLC
- ^ D R Rosevear (1974) The carnivores of West Africa[9]
- ^ Ewer, R. F (1985) The carnivores[10]
- ^ Gritzner, Jeffrey A (1988) The West African Sahel : human agency and environmental change[11], →OCLC
- ^ Gittleman, John L (1989) Carnivore behavior, ecology, and evolution[12]
- ^ Chowdhury, N, Aguirre, A. Alonso (2001) Helminths of wildlife[13], →OCLC
- ^ Farrer, Reginald John, 1880-1920 (1922) The rainbow bridge[14], →OCLC
- ^ Schaller, George B (1998) Wildlife of the Tibetan steppe[15], →OCLC
- ^ Howard O. Clark, Darren P. Newman, James D. Murdoch, Jack Tseng, Zhenghuan H. Wang, Richard B. Harris (2008) “Vulpes Ferrilata (Carnivora: Canidae)”, in Mammalian Species[16], volume 821
- ^ Will, Colin (2010) The floorshow at the Mad Yak Café[17], →OCLC
- ^ Hunter, Luke (2011) Carnivores of the world[18], →OCLC
- ^ Journal of Mammalogy 1937-08: Vol 18 Iss 3[19], volume 18, number 3, 1937 August
- ^ Howard O. Clark, James D. Murdoch, Darren P. Newman, Claudio Sillero-Zubiri (2009) “Vulpes corsac (Carnivora: Canidae)”, in Mammalian Species[20], volume 832
- ^ Russ, Jane (2017) The fox book[21], →OCLC