A good one!
"/Molecular phylogenetic analyses indicate extensive morphological
convergence between the "yeti" and primates/"
Michel C. Milinkovitch; Aldagisa Caccone and George Amato
Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
Volume 31, Issue 1, April 2004, Pages 1--3
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ympev.2004.01.009
Cheers!
Lhano
--
Dr. Marcos G. Lhano
Prof. Adjunto III, Ecologia Animal
Centro de Ciências Agrárias, Ambientais e Biológicas - CCAAB
Universidade Federal do Recôncavo da Bahia - UFRB
Caixa Postal 177, CEP 44380-970
Cruz das Almas - Bahia, Brazil
Email: mar...@ufrb.edu.br / lh...@fcien.edu.uy
http://www.ufrb.edu.br/leti
On 24/03/2015 14:31, David Inouye wrote:
Here's one of them. I used to use this in ecology classes.
Sheldon, R. W., and S. R. Kerr. 1972. The population density of
Monsters in Loch Ness. Limnology and Oceanography 17:746-798.
I think there was one about resource partitioning among fast food
restaurants that was published in the Bulletin of the ESA about 30
years ago but I don't have the citation.
David Inouye
At 11:00 AM 3/24/2015, you wrote:
I'm looking for funny articles published and a few come to mind that I
can't remember citations for so I thought I'd ask here. I don't really
want to page through J. Irreproducable Results or Worm Runner's Digest
but
there are a few I'm hoping someone can help me with (vice vis pdfs)
In either the late 70's or 80's there was a note in Nature that comprised
the poem and reviewers comments on Shelley's *"Ozymandias*"
Then at about the same time someone published a paper in Limn. & Ocean.
estimating the biomass of the Loch Ness monster.
And also at some point someone published a satirical paper on "if no one
heard it, did the tree in the forest really fall?"
Of course any other humorous gems would be appreciated.
Please remember the list doesn't allow attachments, so please respond
to my
university email.
TIA, g2