or select from list (show only references with data):
furbringer1903 | FÜRBRINGER, M. (1903) Beiträge zum Kenntnis des Visceralscelets der Selachier. Morph. Jb, 31: |
furbringer1904 | FÜRBRINGER, K. (1904) Beiträge zur Morphologie des Skelettes der Dipnoer, nebst Bemerkungen über Pleuracanthiden, Holocephalen und Squaliden. Med. Naturwiss. Gesell Jena, 4: 423 |
furiness2007 | FURINESS, S. & WILLIAMS, J.I. & NAGASAWA, K. & BURRESON, E.M. (2007) A collection of fish leeches (Hirudinida: Piscicolidae) from Japan and surrounding waters, including redescriptions of three species. Journal of Parasitology, 93 (4): 875-883 |
furlongestrada2014 | FURLONG-ESTRADA, E. & TOVAR-AVILA, J. & RIOS-JARA, E. (2014) Ecological risk assessment of artisanal capture methods on sharks fished at the entrance of the Gulf of California. Hidrobiológica, 24 (2): 83 |
furlongestrada2015 | FURLONG-ESTRADA, E. & TOVAR-AVILA, J. & CARLOS PEREZ-JIMENEZ, J. & RIOS-JARA, E. (2015) Resilience of Sphyrna lewini, Rhizoprionodon longurio, and Carcharhinus falciformis at the entrance to the Gulf of California after three decades of exploitation. Ciencias Marinas, 41 (1): 49 |
furrer2003 | FURRER, H. (2003) Der Monte San Giorgio im Südtessin |
furumitsu2004 | FURUMITSU, K. & YAMAGUCHI, A. (2004) Dasyatis izuensis Nishida and Nakaya 1988, from Ariake Sound, Japan. (in japanese) Report of Japanese Society for Elasmobranch Studies, 40: 41 |
furumitsu2010 | FURUMITSU, K. & ZHANG, J. & YAMAGUCHI, A. (2010) Redescription of a Poorly Known Stingray, Dasyatis laevigata (Chondrichthyes: Dasyatidae), with Notes on Some Biological Aspects in Ariake Sea, Japan. Species Diversity, 15: 139 |
furumitsu2012 | FURUMITSU, K. & KUME, G. & MINEI, Y. & YAMAGUCHI, A. (2012) Reproductive Biology of the Shortspine Spurdog Squalus cf. mitsukurii in the Southwest Waters of Japan. Bulletin of Marine Science, 88 (4): 987 |
furumitsu2012a | FURUMITSU, K. & KUME, G. & YAMAGUCHI, A. (2012) The importance of the innermost area of Ariake Bay, Japan as the nursery ground for elasmobranchs. Abstract - Poster World Congress of Herpetology, Vancouver, Canada, August 8 |
fusaro1980 | FUSARO, C. & ANDERSON, C. (1980) First California record: the scalloped hammerhead shark, Sphyrna lewini, in coastal Santa Barbara waters. California Fish and Game, 66 (2): 121 |
fuss2014 | FUSS, T. & BLECKMANN, H. & SCHLUESSEL, V. (2014) The shark Chiloscyllium griseum can orient using turn responses before and after partial telencephalon ablation. Journal of Comparative Physiology A: Neuroethology, Sensory, Neural, and Behavioral Physiology, 200 (1): 19 |
fuss2014a | FUSS, T. & BLECKMANN, H. & SCHLUESSEL, V. (2014) Visual discrimination abilities in the gray bamboo shark (Chiloscyllium griseum). Zoology, 117 (2): 104 |
fuss2014b | FUSS, T. & BLECKMANN, H. & SCHLUESSEL, V. (2014) The brain creates illusions not just for us: sharks (Chiloscyllium griseum) can "see the magic" as well. Frontiers in Neural Circuits, 8: AR 24 |
fuss2014c | FUSS, T. & BLECKMANN, H. & SCHLUESSEL, V. (2014) Place learning prior to and after telencephalon ablation in bamboo and coral cat sharks (Chiloscyllium griseum and Atelomycterus marmoratus). Journal of Comparative Physiology A: Neuroethology, Sensory, Neural, and Behavioral Physiology, 200 (1): 37 |
fuss2015 | FUSS, T. & SCHLUESSEL, V. (2015) Something worth remembering: visual discrimination in sharks. Animal Cognition, 18 (2): 463 |
fuss2015a | FUSS, T. & SCHLUESSEL, V. (2015) Erratum to: Something worth remembering: visual discrimination in sharks. Animal Cognition, 18 (2): 473 |
fuss2017 | FUSS, T. & RUSSNAK, V. & STEHR, K. & SCHLUESSEL, V. (2017) World in Motion: Perception and Discrimination of Movement in Juvenile Grey Bamboo Sharks (Chiloscyllium griseum). Animal Behavior and Cognition, 4 (3): 223-241 |
fuss2017a | FUSS, T. & SCHLUESSEL, V. (2017) The Ebbinghaus illusion in the gray bamboo shark (Chiloscyllium griseum) in comparison to the teleost damselfish (Chromis chromis). Zoology, 123: 16-29 |
fuss2018 | FUSS, T. & JOHN, L. & SCHLUESSEL, V. (2018) Same or different? Abstract relational concept use in juvenile bamboo sharks and Malawi cichlids. Current Zoology: zoy059 |