Top 10 similar words or synonyms for krutzsch

boiani    0.836307

mustelin    0.825818

deshmane    0.822115

vanselow    0.819169

yachechko    0.817352

buluwela    0.816251

kreidberg    0.811360

liggitt    0.810565

bougueleret    0.810472

yuspa    0.809304

Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for krutzsch

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List of Nepenthes species Fossil pollen of various provenance, much of it originally described under the form taxon "Droseridites", has been tentatively assigned to "Nepenthes" by several authors. The following three species were transferred to the genus "Nepenthes" by Wilfried Krutzsch in 1985.
Droseridites Pollen of a number of species originally described under the genus "Droseridites" has been tentatively assigned to "Nepenthes". In 1985, Wilfried Krutzsch transferred three species of the ""D. echinosporus" group", creating the new combinations "Nepenthes echinatus", "N. echinosporus", and "N. major". However, at more than 40 µm in diameter, the tetrads of "D. major" are larger than those of any known extant "Nepenthes", and within the lower range of extant "Drosera" tetrads. Pollen from the Kerguelen Islands originally described as "D. spinosus" has also been interpreted as belonging to "Nepenthes".
William A. Wimsatt Wimsatt made many research trips to Central and South America and the Caribbean Islands, but his most desired research trips were to the tropics of Mexico. In 1962, he spent a year working with Dr. Bernardo Villa at the University of Mexico after receiving a Guggenheim Fellowship. He spent three sabbatical leaves at the University of Arizona College of Medicine working with Dr. Philip Krutzsch, who shared similar research interests. He was a widely acclaimed as editor of the series Biology of Bats. His expertise was on the functional morphology of placentae. A look at his publications reveals his ability to use novel approaches in diverse areas of reproductive biology (e.g., embryology, placentation, and fetal membranes), ecological physiology, hibernation, and the integumentary, urinary, and digestive systems. This broad background served him well as an Associate Editor of The American Journal of Anatomy from 1974 until shortly before his death.
Southwestern myotis The southwestern myotis is a member of the order Chiroptera and the family Vespertilionidae. Discovered in 1955 by Baker and Stains, the Southwestern myotis was originally believed to be a member of the "Myotis evotis" species. Both bats live in the same region and occupy similar niches. Later that same year Hoffmeister and Krutzsch identified the mysterious bat as "Myotis evotis apache", a new subspecies of the "Myotis evotis" species. "Myotis evotis apache" was changed to "Myotis evotis auriculus" in 1959 by Hall and Kelson. In 1960 it was determined that the Southwestern myotis ("Myotis auriculus") was, in fact, not a member of the "M. evotis" species but a member of the "M. keenii" species. This determination was made by a scientist named Findley. It wasn’t until 1969 that "M. auriculus" was recognized as an independent species by scientists Genoways and Jones. "M. auriculus" and "M. evotis" exhibit different jaw shapes. Particularly in regions where both bats are present. "M. auriculus" has a larger and weaker jaw than "M. evotis. M. auriculus" also has a much larger skull than "M. evotis."