runny-nosed - significado y definición. Qué es runny-nosed
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Qué (quién) es runny-nosed - definición

GENUS OF MAMMALS
Crimson-nosed rat; Chaco Crimson-nosed Rat; Large-lipped Crimson-nosed Rat; Torres' Crimson-nosed Rat; Torres crimson-nosed rat; Torres Crimson-nosed Rat; Crimson nosed rat

Saussure's long-nosed bat         
The Saussure's long-nosed bats or Mexican long-nosed bats form the genus Leptonycteris within the leaf-nosed bat family Phyllostomidae. Like all members of the family, they are native to the Americas.
Leaf-nosed bat         
  • Basic leaf-nosed bat body layout
FAMILY OF MAMMALS
Phyllostomidae; American leaf-nosed bat; Leaf nosed bat; Leafnosed bat; Leaf-nosed Bat; Bat, leaf nosed; American Leaf-Nosed Bat; Phyllostomatidae; Leaf-nosed bats; Phyllostomid
The New World leaf-nosed bats (Phyllostomidae) are found from southern North America to South America, specifically from the Southwest United States to northern Argentina. They are ecologically the most varied and diverse family within the order Chiroptera.
Entiminae         
  • Variation on development of elytral shoulders in entimine weevils.
  • Head of ''[[Compsus auricephalus]]'' indicating mandibular scar.
  • ''[[Pseudoedophrys hilleri]]''
SUBFAMILY OF INSECTS
Broad-nosed weevils; Broad-nosed Weevils; Broad-nosed Weevil; Broad-nosed weevil
The Entiminae are a large subfamily in the weevil family Curculionidae, containing most of the short-nosed weevils, including such genera as Entimus, Otiorhynchus, Phyllobius, Sitona, and Pachyrrhynchus. In comparison with their stunning diversity, only a few of these weevils are notorious pests of major economic importance.

Wikipedia

Bibimys

Bibimys is a genus of new world rats. Commonly known as the crimson-nosed rats, there are three species:

  • Bibimys chacoensis - Chaco crimson-nosed rat - found in north-east Argentina and Paraguay
  • Bibimys labiosus - Large-lipped crimson-nosed rat - south-east Brazil
  • Bibimys torresi - Torres's crimson-nosed rat - central Argentina

A extinct species Bibimys massoiai is known from Quaternary remains in northeastern Brazil.

Presently, species of Bibimys are found in Argentina, Brazil and Paraguay.

As with most of the species in the South American Sigmodontinae, Bibimys has been arranged as a genus based mainly on morphological differences from the other living genera. Bibimys belongs to the tribe Scapteromyini, first informally described by P. Hershkovitz in 1966 and formally introduced later by E. Massoia in 1979. The scapteromyines are a small sigmodontine tribe, consisting of the three genera: Bibimys, Kunsia and Scapteromys. Many of the species have been described from badly preserved specimens.

One of the greatest challenges lying with sigmodontine systematics is that there is much confusion and disagreement amongst authors regarding the relationship between their tribes. There are some disagreements regarding the validity of the scapteromyines and of Bibimys as a genus. In a broad phylogenetic study, Smith and Patton found that the scapteromyine genera Kunsia and Scapteromys formed a clade closely related to the Akodontini. In another study, D´Elia, Pardiñas and Myers have provisionally retained three species of Bibimys. Given the inadequacies of sample size and geographic representation, however, they acknowledged that morphological, karyotypic, and genetic evidence for their separation is unpersuasive.

Ejemplos de uso de runny-nosed
1. September 23 2005 1':13 Some are cradling emaciated, runny–nosed babies; all are barefoot and dressed in tattered clothes that barely cover their sinewy bodies.
2. Is a mother‘s drive to relieve the symptoms of her coughing, runny–nosed toddler so great that doing nothing isn‘t an option?
3. A Sudanese boy hold his malnourished cousin as he waits for medical assistance at a health clinic run by Medicine Sans Frontieres (MSF) in Akuem village in southern Sudan September 11, 2005. (Reuters). Some are cradling emaciated, runny–nosed babies; all are barefoot and dressed in tattered clothes that barely cover their sinewy bodies.
4. "Sometimes I look at Massachusetts and all the people who took a chance on a runny–nosed kid from Chicago, and who exposed him to all the opportunities it had, and I think: If they can do that for me, how come we can‘t do that for all the kids?" he says.