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In 1864, German-born British zoologist, Albert Günther (1830-1914), discovered a new species of highly venomous viviparous (giving live birth) sea snakes, thereafter named Günther's sea snake.
In 1864, German-born British zoologist, Albert Günther (1830-1914), discovered a new species of highly venomous viviparous (giving live birth) sea snakes, thereafter named Günther's sea snake.
Günther's sea snake (Microcephalophis cantoris), a rarely seen venomous sea snake with distribution thought to stretch from the Malay Peninsula to Pakistan, has now been recorded from Iranian ...
As remarked by Dr. Albert Günther, in his article on the history of the Remora (“On the History of the Echeneis,” Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist., 1860, ser. 3, vol v., p. 386), “there is scarcely a ...
TEHRAN, Oct. 10 (UPI) --The Günther's sea snake, a rare, venomous species named for herpetologist Albert Günther, has been found 250 miles to the west of its known range, inhabiting waters off ...
Günther's sea snake (Mohsen Rezaie-Atagholipour) The snake is viviparous, meaning it gives birth to live young, and was first discovered in 1864 by a zoologist named Albert Günther.
In the mid-19th century, four species of arapaima were officially recognised but in 1868, Albert Günther, a scientist at the British Museum of Natural History, published an article that suggested ...
In 1876—the same year that the first telephone call was made—the British scientist Albert Günther described a new species of frog from Sri Lanka, but the species, known as the webless shrub ...
In an appendix, Dr. Albert Günther gives a list of the species of reptiles and fishes brought by Mr. Pratt from the Upper Yang-tze-Kiang and the province Sze-chuen, ...
The Sikkim grass lizard was first described in 1888 by German-British zoologist Albert Günther on the basis of a description of grass lizards from Sikkim by Czech paleontologist Ferdinand ...