In the medical evacuation role, the aircraft can transport 24 litters and four medical crew. |
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Evidence suggests that in insular Newfoundland Arctic hares may produce two, perhaps three litters in some years. |
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The gantries can be stowed in two positions so the cabin can be configured for ten crashworthy seats or six litters. |
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In a medical evacuation role the helicopter can carry three medical crew and six litters or stretcher patients. |
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Using chemical glow sticks for tiny lights, they squeeze between patients in litters. |
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Panting, I fleetingly envied a couple being carried on litters like lords, an expensive yet terrifying option. |
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They are apparently social, with young sometimes remaining with the parents while subsequent litters are born and raised. |
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In the medical evacuation role, the aircraft can carry 24 casualties on litters and four medical attendants. |
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A dog breeder will choose dogs with desirable characteristics to parent future litters. |
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Evacuation vehicles must provide adequate room between litters to allow on-board medical crew personnel sufficient room to provide enroute care. |
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Now all we have to do a sort out all the junk mail and usual bumph that litters the hall on these occasions. |
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The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service recently reported that a record 55 red wolf pups have been born in 11 litters in North Carolina this spring. |
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Of the 169 litters born during the study period, 73 failed to produce any offspring to weaning. |
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Females nurse their young, but will also nurse the young of their female relatives in the pride if litters are born close together. |
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And with litters of ten or more per healthy sow, the animals could multiply rapidly. |
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The age of gingival emergence was determined by closely spaced repeated observations of 14 young from three litters. |
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We collected DNA samples from 811 offspring from 45 litters that were collectively sired by 48 males. |
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Females stay with their mothers, forming a group of related animals that co-operate to bring up and feed the latest litters of cubs. |
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In general, females have enough mammae for each young in the largest litters to have his or her own. |
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Each evening Navy corpsmen would carry litters down to the hospital theater so the men could watch a movie. |
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The aircraft provided a stable platform with ample room for around 70 litters and specialist medical teams to carry out life-saving work. |
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I am no dog-breeder, but this seems rather late in the day for thinking of future litters. |
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The ladies rode on palfreys or were drawn on litters, escorted by gentlemen, squires and pages, with trumpeters, drummers and minstrels. |
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She had borne twelve litters in fewer years, barely having time to train one kindle of kittens before the next lot was born. |
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Conception dates of hyena litters were calculated by subtracting the gestation period of 110 days from birthdates. |
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And dusky sharks don't breed until they're 20 to 25 years old, after which small litters typically arrive at 3-year intervals. |
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By 1872 breeders were able to produce litters sufficiently to type to enable them to be registered in the German Kennel Club stud book. |
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The cabin provides accommodation for 11 fully equipped troops or four litters with a medical officer for medical evacuation missions. |
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Between May and September, females can have up to 3 or 4 litters with an average of 2 to 4 young. |
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This means the superbreeder moms have double the number of litters during their lives as compared with the control group moms. |
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Debris that had billowed in great clouds after army jets bombed the village in early May litters the surrounding fields. |
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Curiously, the lizards that did not get the early meal gave birth to larger litters two years later. |
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The loading drum picks up sand and litters together and convoys them on a vertical moving sifter, as wide as the machine, to separate them. |
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There are 2 or 3 different types of bentonite cat litters, but the one we use smells of baby powder, even when already used. |
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Furthermore, two gravid females were taken to a laboratory in Minsk, where they gave litters shortly after capture. |
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Litter sizes from two to seven are known, and the gray four-eyed opossum has at least two litters a year. |
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The company claims its product has a natural composition and is safer for cats that clumping litters made of clay. |
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Small animals like mice tend to have large litters while large animals like elephants normally give birth to only one young at a time. |
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One captive meadow vole had 17 litters during one year, totaling 83 young. |
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If there are very many litters, a sample with the desired number of litters could be selected randomly from those litters. |
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Then we go back tho the group of parents of the litters in our sample, divide them into males and females, and then we test mate them randomly. |
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Full of hope, I had to head to photography the litters of 3 tigresses with their cubs. |
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After registering and loggin in you will be able to publish your litters directly and also place advert for Adults to be rehomed. |
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Older breeding males which have sired multiple litters are often selected for this purpose. |
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Sand and litters are shot upwards and then convoyed onto a second transversal moving sifter, same as the previous one. |
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My litters included most every colour, including cameos, which kept an element of surprise with each litter! |
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In the southern United States, the production of two litters per year by both eastern and western chipmunks is not uncommon. |
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Because most do not breed beyond age 20, female grizzlies will bear no more than four or five litters in a lifetime. |
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Daboia is a live-bearer, and females commonly produce litters of more than 25 neonates. |
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Clutches of eggs and litters of neonates vary widely in reptiles and are species-dependent. |
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Postnatal effects on humerus in 1 adult offspring at 1,000 ppm and in 11 adult offspring from 7 litters at 50,000 ppm. |
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The more they are hunted and the more pressure put on them, the larger their litters are. |
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From this database we pick out the litters that were born during the latest year. |
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After a year, a female is capable of producing three litters of young even in the short arctic summer, but most fail to do so. |
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Female bears have their first young when they are five to seven years old, and typically have litters of one to three cubs. |
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According to Schultz, it normally affects the first litter with high losses, but subsequent litters build up immunity and it is not a problem. |
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They will sometimes move litters of pups from one den to another to escape danger, although at other times they do so for no apparent reason. |
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Contrast this with rodents, many of which reach maturity in a matter of months and can produce litters of several animals more than once a year. |
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Each experimental group was kept for 120 days, which is considered to equal the life span of wood mice under natural conditions and was checked daily for litters. |
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Most of that is the desultory ticky-tacky kind that litters the right side of people's Facebook profiles. |
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Then the 11 sows and their litters can roam throughout each room. |
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Over the 3-year study period, we captured young from 37 litters. |
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They already had produced two litters of kittens before between them both. |
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Individual litters of cubs can have up to four different fathers. |
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Progress became impossible, and the little band of survivors, carrying their injured on litters, struggled into the jungle for relief from the rain. |
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Now that the reality of Millie being in pup has sunk in, we have been considering the possible combinations and permutations of potential litters. |
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However, it is also possible that in years of late snow-melt, pikas may lose litters or reabsorb litters and then breed again in post-partum estrus. |
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Wolves bear relatively large pups in small litters compared to other canid species. |
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However, when food is restricted, females can extend pregnancy by over two weeks, and give birth to litters of normal number and weight. |
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How many litters of any breed did you breed before? |
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It usually gives birth in early summer to litters consisting of five to 10 kits, which become independent at the age of two to three months. |
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The ferret is also more fertile than the polecat, producing two or more litters annually, as opposed to just one. |
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Females are very protective of their young, and have even been known to confront humans approaching too closely to their litters. |
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Litters may consist of three or four young and a female can bear three litters a year, with hares living for up to twelve years. |
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However, cases are known of badgers driving vixens from their dens and destroying their litters without eating them. |
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Females breed once every two or three years, with litters usually being born in late summer to early autumn in the Northern Hemisphere. |
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The Maya did not employ a functional wheel, so all loads were transported on litters, barges, or rolled on logs. |
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Although some breeds regularly throw larger litters of lambs, most produce single or twin lambs. |
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A double file of camels with sumptuous housings moved with dignified and unhasty tread after the litters. |
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All litters to be kept separate with their dam until they have been marked for identification purposes in accordance with the rules laid down by the British Pig Association or their equivalent. |
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Effect of remating interval and diet on the performance of female rabbits and their litters. |
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Two captive-born litters of the Mexican ground squirrel were maintained for a period of 75 days. |
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Until then they will be cared for by volunteers who look after pregnant guide dogs and their litters. |
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He forbade childless women to ride in litters or wear jewellery. |
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Females are able to produce and raise two healthy litters of normal size and weight without significantly changing their own food intake. |
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Anti-Zionist graffiti litters the Haredim's bastions in Jerusalem. |
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Boars castrated as adults which have fathered litters may not be used. |
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It liquefies litters by hydrolysing the organic compounds. |
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The gestation period is only 21 days, and litters can number up to 14, although seven is common. |
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Reduced viability of the young was observed at this dose level as well as a single occurrence of cleft palate and two occurrences of anasarca in two different litters. |
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My current stud cat Calicoon Sherman has sired about 40 litters himself. |
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Polyandrous litters survived well in both solitary and communal nests, but monandrous ones survived significantly more in communal nests than in solitary ones. |
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Booth and his colleagues examined dozens of litters of wild-caught copperheads and cottonmouths. |
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Live trapping was successful in terms of trap ability of small mammals, and could allow assessment of life history changes such as number of litters, growth rates, survival rates and other demographic variables. |
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After two litters, she was retired as a pet and hunting dog. |
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The brown rat can breed throughout the year if conditions are suitable, with a female producing up to five litters a year. |
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For each animal that has been relocated or exterminated, nature will make sure the territory is replenished, with gestating females having bigger litters. |
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Cogin managed to find two litters of blood to transfuse to the deeply anaemic woman but it was not enough to compensate the immense loss of blood. |
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Since we cannot tell the likeliness of foundation cats for certain recessives, we might have to produce many, many inbred litters to find out more about a new line. |
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Despite their utility in research, litters produced by polyembryony lack the advantages conferred by either asexual or sexual reproduction. |
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Rodent litter sizes also vary and females with smaller litters spend more time in the nest than those with larger litters. |
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Angel sharks, like many other sharks, are ovoviviparous, and give live birth to litters of up to thirteen pups. |
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Development is ovoviviparous and litters of up to 50 pups have been reported. |
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The average litter size consists of four to six kits, though litters of up to 13 kits have occurred. |
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Though foxes are largely monogamous, DNA evidence from one population indicated large levels of polygyny, incest and mixed paternity litters. |
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At Tikal, where a great quantity of graffiti has been recorded, the subject matter includes drawings of temples, people, deities, animals, banners, litters, and thrones. |
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Older and larger females within a population tend to give birth to larger litters The size of a litter also depends on factors such as geographic location and food supply. |
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In his first experiment, Ehret removedpups from the litters of 44 female mice and placed the youngsters along a running board that extended across a central nest. |
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Nine-banded armadillos exhibit obligate polyembryony, whereby they produce litters of genetically identical quadruplets by repeated twinning of a single fertilized egg. |
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Somatic cells that were cultured for periods of eight and twenty-two days were fused with enucleated oocytes to produce the embryos that developed into the two litters. |
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Before railways became widespread long journeys were undertaken in palankeens, litters carried by men who were changed at intervals like relays of horses. |
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Stoats are not monogamous, with litters often being of mixed paternity. |
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Large litters are typical in areas where fox mortality is high. |
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