The good, the bad and the ugly: Australian snake taxonomists and a history of the taxonomy of Australia’s venomous snakes - Williams, Wüster, et al. - 2006Williams, D., Wuster, W., Fry, B.G., 2006. The good, the bad and the ugly: Australian snake taxonomists and a history ...
The Bio-Logic of Venom Complexity: A Chemical and Evolutionary Investigation into the Role of Venom Complexity in Two Orders of Venomous Animals PhD Thesis Institute for Molecular Bioscience, The University of Queensland (2013), 10.1017/CBO9781107415324.004 Google Scholar Morgenstern and King, 2013 ...
Kellaway MC. The venoms of some of the small and rare Australian venomous snakes. Med. J. Aust. 1934; 2: 74-8.C. H. Kellaway, `The Venoms of Some of the Small and Rare Australian Venomous Snakes', Medical Journal of Australia, 2 (1934), 74-78, on p. 78. Indeed, for many ...
Like most lizards, geckos are small and nonvenomous even if some of them are surprisingly aggressive for their size. Despite their defense mechanisms and threat displays, they tend to fall prey to huge spiders such as Huntsman, snakes, rats, birds, larger lizards, family dogs, cats, and pred...
× catch a tiger snake by its tail: differential toxicity, co-factor dependence and antivenom efficacy in a procoagulant clade of australian venomous snakes C Lister,K Arbuckle,TNW Jackson,... 被引量: 0发表: 2018年 Clinical implications of convergent procoagulant toxicity and differential antivenom...
This is an instructive lessen, well illustrated by figures, in the identification of the venomous land snakes, and particularly of the six commonest and deadliest species, of Australia, the authors emphasizing the fact that for the proper treatment of snake-bite it is essential that the snake ...
Williams D, Wuster W, Fry BG: The good, the bad and the ugly: Australian snake taxonomists and a history of the taxonomy of Australia's venomous snakes. Toxicon 2006, 48 : 919-930. PubMed Abstract Publisher Full TextWilliams, D., Wuster, W., Fry, B.G., 2006. The good, ...
Despite their fearsome reputation, venomous Australian snakes pose little risk to human health (snakes kill an average of less than three people per year in Australia). Also, snakes confer a substantial benefit by consuming agricultural pests such as rodents. We estimate the magnitude of that ...
Williams FE, Freeman M, Kennedy E. The bacterial flora of the mouth of Australian venomous snakes in captivity. Medical Journal of Australia 1954; 21: 190-3.The bacterial flora of the mouth of Australian venomous snakes in captivity - FE, Freeman, et al. () Citation Context ...[7]. ...
St Pierre, L., S.T.Earl, I.Filippovich, N.Sorokina, P.P.Masci, J.De Jersey, and M.F.Lavin. 2008. "Common evolution of waprin and kunitz-like toxin families in Australian venomous snakes." Cell Mol.Life Sci. 65:4039-4054.