Believing it to be a type of opossum, naturalist George Harris wrote the first published description of the Tasmanian devil in 1807, naming it Didelphis ursina,[7] due to its bearlike characteristics such as the round ear.[8] He had earlier made a presentation on the topic at the Zoological Society of London.[9] However, that particular binomial name had been given to the common wombat (later reclassified as Vombatus ursinus) by George Shaw in
@wojtylak: Przecież to ma być dzikie zwierzę, które pewnie zostanie wypuszczone na wolność po osiągnięciu odpowiedniego wieku. Po co go uczyć takich rzeczy?
Komentarze (67)
najlepsze
Komentarz usunięty przez moderatora