Wilder, Burt Green
4 publications
| Wilder, Burt Green (detail) | |
| 1875 | On a foetal manatee and cetacean, with remarks on the affinities and ancestry of the Sirenia. Amer. Jour. Sci. (3)10: 105-114. Pl. 8. —Describes the "smallest foetal sirenian on record", a T. inunguis from Peru 55 mm long (105-106, 108-109, 112-114), and reviews ideas on sir. affinities (107-113); concludes they are ungulates. See also Wilder (1908). |
| Wilder, Burt Green (detail) | |
| 1905 | Notes and queries as to: (a) the cerebral commissures of the elephant shrew Macroscelides; (b) brain and heart of a manatee, and what is believed to be the smallest known sirenian fetus; (c) the brains of various fishes, including the rare Japanese shark, Mitsukurina; (d) the swallowing of a young alligator by a frog. Science (n.s.) 21: 268-269. —Refers to the same fetus described by Wilder (1875). |
| Wilder, Burt Green (detail) | |
| 1907 | [Manatee embryo.] Amer. Naturalist 41(490): 663. Oct. 1907. —P. 663 (in "Scientific Exhibits at the Seventh International Zoological Congress"): {{"Professor Wilder showed the 'smallest known embryo of the manatee,' - a specimen approximately an inch and a half long."}} See also Wilder (1908). |
| Wilder, Burt Green (detail) | |
| 1908 | The length of the smallest known sirenian fetus; gyre preferred to "convolution". Science (n.s.) 27(699): 825. May 22, 1908. —Corrects the statement in Wilder (1907); the fetus was actually 53 mm or about 2-1/8 inches long, having shrunk about 2 mm since the report in Wilder (1875). |
Bibliography and Index of the Sirenia and Desmostylia 