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result(s) for
"Fenton, Corinne"
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Queenie : one elephant's story
by
Fenton, Corinne
,
Gouldthorpe, Peter, ill
in
Royal Melbourne Zoological Gardens Juvenile literature.
,
Royal Melbourne Zoological Gardens.
,
Elephants Juvenile literature.
2013
The true and tragic story of one of the most famous elephants of all time: Queenie, the gentle Indian elephant. Evoking a time when elephants were giving rides in zoos all around the world, the true story of Queenie follows her from her birth in an Indian jungle to Australia's Melbourne Zoo, where she lived for more than forty years.
Bob the Railway Dog : the true story of an adventurous dog
by
Fenton, Corinne, author
,
McLean, Andrew, 1946- illustrator
in
Dogs Australia South Australia History 1851-1901 Juvenile literature.
,
Railroads Australia South Australia History 1851-1901 Juvenile literature.
,
Dogs South Australia Juvenile literature.
2016
Bob the Railway Dog was everyone's friend in the early days of the Australian railroad. Based on a real dog who rode the rails in the late nineteenth century.
Marked seasonal variation in the wild mouse gut microbiota
2015
Recent studies have provided an unprecedented view of the microbial communities colonizing captive mice; yet the host and environmental factors that shape the rodent gut microbiota in their natural habitat remain largely unexplored. Here, we present results from a 2-year 16 S ribosomal RNA gene sequencing-based survey of wild wood mice (
Apodemus sylvaticus
) in two nearby woodlands. Similar to other mammals, wild mice were colonized by 10 bacterial phyla and dominated by the Firmicutes, Bacteroidetes and Proteobacteria. Within the Firmicutes, the
Lactobacillus
genus was most abundant. Putative bacterial pathogens were widespread and often abundant members of the wild mouse gut microbiota. Among a suite of extrinsic (environmental) and intrinsic (host-related) factors examined, seasonal changes dominated in driving qualitative and quantitative differences in the gut microbiota. In both years examined, we observed a strong seasonal shift in gut microbial community structure, potentially due to the transition from an insect- to a seed-based diet. This involved decreased levels of
Lactobacillus
, and increased levels of
Alistipes
(Bacteroidetes phylum) and
Helicobacter
. We also detected more subtle but statistically significant associations between the gut microbiota and biogeography, sex, reproductive status and co-colonization with enteric nematodes. These results suggest that environmental factors have a major role in shaping temporal variations in microbial community structure within natural populations.
Journal Article