It seems highly unlikely that the living coelacanth exists only in two small, highly disjunct populations. |
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With this evidence at hand, one might question whether the three disjunct populations warrant classification as species rather than subspecies. |
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Another possibility is that the present disjunct distributions are merely relicts of a former contiguous or near-contiguous distribution. |
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Alternatively, the ancestral species might have been dispersed between these disjunct ranges by migrating animals, such as birds. |
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A disjunct expresses the speaker or writer's attitude to what is being described in the sentence. |
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Species with normally disjunct distributions or widely separated populations may also indicate that more than one taxonomic entity is represented. |
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The basic explanations offered for endangerment are habitat destruction or fragmentation, the impact of non-native animals and plants, and small and disjunct population sizes. |
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Along the precipitous slopes of the upper Yangtze Gorge, dwarf blue sheep and blue sheep occupy disjunct habitats separated by a belt of subtropical forest. |
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To make sure that the extension of the definiens matches that of the definiendum, Beardsley thinks, the second disjunct of the definition is needed. |
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Today, they support patches of rare and disjunct arctic plants, including a species of willow, a goldenrod, and mountain avens. |
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The Westslope Cutthroat Trout has a disjunct distribution on both sides of the Rocky Mountains. |
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In Canada, its range is disjunct and is represented by several populations in southwestern Quebec and southern Ontario. |
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This disjunct has an adverse impact on rights, justice and public accountability. |
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In Canada, its distribution is characterized by disjunct populations in southern Ontario and Quebec. |
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For this reason, geographically isolated, or disjunct, occurrences of even common species are often considered a conservation priority. |
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Appendix A provides a list of disjunct and endemic species from the Great Lakes basin in Ontario. |
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Within the category of distinctiveness or rarity are also disjunct and peripheral populations. |
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The disjunct dotted rhythms of Geselle, woll'n wir instantly capture the men's mincing duplicity. |
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Three small disjunct areas are also present just south of the river. |
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It is a civic hub in what was previously a disjunct part of the city. |
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I also found no disjunct distributions like those that Bell reported. |
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The piece moves so quickly from one disjunct fragment to the next that the resulting work couldn't be thought of as jazz, but only postmodern pastiche. |
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Similar disjunct distributions are known in other species, however, it is unclear in this case if the gap in the distribution is real or an artifact of collecting effort. |
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The species is confined to a few small, increasingly disjunct areas that are subject to intensive agriculture, high human populations and extremely high densities of roads. |
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Origin of the disjunct tetraploid Cardamine amporitana assessed with nuclear and chloroplast DNA sequence data. |
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Atlantic whitefish, believed to have been widespread at one time, restricted to two disjunct drainages by the time of their discovery in 1922, are now limited in distribution to the Petite Rivière. |
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Many of these disjunct species groups share common characteristics that function as preadaptations favoring establishment. |
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Small disjunct resident populations occur in southwesternmost Greenland and western Iceland. |
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Host colonization by foliar endophytes of nongrass hosts, however, is generally nonsystemic, limited, and disjunct. |
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The area is home to disjunct plant species characteristic of this formation, and contains an outstanding example of string fens, which are the only known nesting area for greater yellowlegs in the park. |
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Karttunen's filtering condition for disjunctions removes from the right disjunct any presuppositions that are entailed by a combination of the context and the negation of the left disjunct. |
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The assessment resulted in the designation of Pugnose Shiner as Endangered. This designation was due to a limited, disjunct Canadian distribution. |
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It was pointed out that this disjunct between FFNs and NHPs was not just a matter of semantics or legal definitions, although both factors also impact on NHP research. |
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This last condition is actually part of a larger disjunct for Feinberg, the other half of which allows that the coercer may be bluffing, and thus does not actively do anything to constrain the coercee's options. |
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As you said, non-aboriginal programmers are trying to program for aboriginals, which is a huge disjunct and a huge challenge, and I'm not sure that's not going to deliver the results you're asking for. |
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Several aquatic heteropteran species have seemingly disjunct distributions, with broad distributions in central Mexico and outlier populations in central Arizona. |
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These disjunct populations have been hypothesized to be the result of a grassland corridor that prehistorically connected the Black Belt and the Great Plains. |
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Generally speaking, the ranges of most cryptogams are geographically broader than those of phanerogams, and many more species are widely disjunct over the world. |
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