199 lines
21 KiB
XML
199 lines
21 KiB
XML
<document ID-DOI="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6448815" ID-ISBN="978-84-16728-19-0" ID-Zenodo-Dep="6448815" approvalRequired="392" approvalRequired_for_illustrations="1" approvalRequired_for_matCits="49" approvalRequired_for_taxonomicNames="120" approvalRequired_for_treatments="222" checkinTime="1635825784914" checkinUser="conny" docAuthor="Don E. Wilson & Russell A. Mittermeier" docDate="2019" docId="03AD87FAFFF5F61889633869FD4CFE61" docLanguage="en" docName="hbmw_9_Pteropodidae_16.pdf.imf" docOrigin="Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 9 Bats, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions" docTitle="Aproteles bulmerae Menzies 1977" docType="treatment" docVersion="3" lastPageNumber="108" masterDocId="FF94FF82FFC4F62A891E341CFFA5FF9B" masterDocTitle="Pteropodidae" masterLastPageNumber="162" masterPageNumber="16" pageNumber="107" updateTime="1656519960238" updateUser="diego">
|
||
<mods:mods xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
|
||
<mods:titleInfo>
|
||
<mods:title>Pteropodidae</mods:title>
|
||
</mods:titleInfo>
|
||
<mods:name type="personal">
|
||
<mods:role>
|
||
<mods:roleTerm>Author</mods:roleTerm>
|
||
</mods:role>
|
||
<mods:namePart>Don E. Wilson</mods:namePart>
|
||
</mods:name>
|
||
<mods:name type="personal">
|
||
<mods:role>
|
||
<mods:roleTerm>Author</mods:roleTerm>
|
||
</mods:role>
|
||
<mods:namePart>Russell A. Mittermeier</mods:namePart>
|
||
</mods:name>
|
||
<mods:typeOfResource>text</mods:typeOfResource>
|
||
<mods:relatedItem type="host">
|
||
<mods:originInfo>
|
||
<mods:dateIssued>2019</mods:dateIssued>
|
||
<mods:dateOther type="pubDate">2019-10-31</mods:dateOther>
|
||
<mods:publisher>Lynx Edicions</mods:publisher>
|
||
<mods:place>
|
||
<mods:placeTerm>Barcelona</mods:placeTerm>
|
||
</mods:place>
|
||
</mods:originInfo>
|
||
<mods:titleInfo>
|
||
<mods:title>Handbook of the Mammals of the World – Volume 9 Bats</mods:title>
|
||
</mods:titleInfo>
|
||
<mods:part>
|
||
<mods:extent unit="page">
|
||
<mods:start>16</mods:start>
|
||
<mods:end>162</mods:end>
|
||
</mods:extent>
|
||
</mods:part>
|
||
</mods:relatedItem>
|
||
<mods:classification>book chapter</mods:classification>
|
||
<mods:identifier type="DOI">http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6448815</mods:identifier>
|
||
<mods:identifier type="ISBN">978-84-16728-19-0</mods:identifier>
|
||
<mods:identifier type="Zenodo-Dep">6448815</mods:identifier>
|
||
</mods:mods>
|
||
<treatment ID-DOI="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6448983" ID-Zenodo-Dep="6448983" LSID="urn:lsid:plazi:treatment:03AD87FAFFF5F61889633869FD4CFE61" httpUri="http://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AD87FAFFF5F61889633869FD4CFE61" lastPageId="50" lastPageNumber="108" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">
|
||
<subSubSection box="[125,183,3189,3231]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107" type="multiple">
|
||
<paragraph blockId="49.[123,1028,3185,3273]" box="[125,183,3189,3231]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">
|
||
<heading box="[125,183,3189,3231]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">
|
||
<figureCitation box="[125,183,3189,3231]" captionStart="Plate 5: Pteropodidae" captionStartId="45.[123,153,3243,3268]" captionTargetBox="[12,2751,17,3662]" captionTargetPageId="44" captionText="73. Lesser Long-tongued Blossom Bat (Macroglossus minimus), 74. Greater Long-tongued Blossom Bat (Macroglossus sobrinus), 75. Southern Blossom Bat (Syconycteris australis), 76. Halmaheran Blossom Bat (Syconycteris carolinae), 77. Moss-forest Blossom Bat (Syconycteris hobbit), 78. Manado Fruit Bat (Boneia bidens), 79. Sulawesi Harpy Fruit Bat (Harpyionycteris celebensis), 80. Philippine Harpy Fruit Bat (Harpyionycteris whitehead), 81. Bulmer’s Fruit Bat (Aproteles bulmerae), 82. Lesser Naked-backed Fruit Bat (Dobsonia minor), 83. Moluccan Naked-backed Fruit Bat (Dobsonia moluccensis), 84. Western Naked-backed Fruit Bat (Dobsonia peronu), 86. Panniet Naked-backed Fruit Bat (Dobsonia pannietensis), 87. Philippine Naked-backed Fruit Bat (Dobsonia chapmani), 88. Biak Naked-backed Fruit Bat (Dobsonia emersa), 89. Sulawesi Naked-backed Fruit Bat (Dobsonia exoleta), 90. Greenish Naked-backed Fruit Bat (Dobsonia viridis), 91. Beaufort’s Naked-backed Fruit Bat (Dobsonia beauforti), 92. Halmahera Naked-backed Fruit Bat (Dobsonia crenulata), 93. Solomons Naked-backed Fruit Bat (Dobsonia inermis), 94. New Britain Naked-backed Fruit Bat (Dobsonia praedatrix)" figureDoi="http://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6448853" httpUri="https://zenodo.org/record/6448853/files/figure.png" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">81.</figureCitation>
|
||
</heading>
|
||
</paragraph>
|
||
</subSubSection>
|
||
<subSubSection box="[199,582,3189,3231]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107" type="vernacular_names">
|
||
<paragraph blockId="49.[123,1028,3185,3273]" box="[199,582,3189,3231]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">
|
||
<heading box="[199,582,3189,3231]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">
|
||
<vernacularName box="[199,582,3189,3231]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">Bulmer’s Fruit Bat</vernacularName>
|
||
</heading>
|
||
</paragraph>
|
||
</subSubSection>
|
||
<subSubSection box="[631,977,3185,3231]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107" type="nomenclature">
|
||
<paragraph blockId="49.[123,1028,3185,3273]" box="[631,977,3185,3231]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">
|
||
<heading box="[631,977,3185,3231]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">
|
||
<taxonomicName authorityName="Menzies" authorityYear="1977" box="[631,977,3185,3231]" class="Mammalia" family="Pteropodidae" genus="Aproteles" kingdom="Animalia" order="Chiroptera" pageId="49" pageNumber="107" phylum="Chordata" rank="species" species="bulmerae">
|
||
<emphasis box="[631,977,3185,3231]" italics="true" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">Aproteles bulmerae</emphasis>
|
||
</taxonomicName>
|
||
</heading>
|
||
</paragraph>
|
||
</subSubSection>
|
||
<subSubSection box="[124,1028,3249,3270]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107" type="vernacular_names">
|
||
<paragraph blockId="49.[123,1028,3185,3273]" box="[124,1028,3249,3270]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">
|
||
<heading box="[124,1028,3249,3270]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">
|
||
<emphasis bold="true" box="[124,200,3249,3270]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">French:</emphasis>
|
||
<vernacularName box="[210,421,3249,3270]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">Roussette de Bulmer</vernacularName>
|
||
/
|
||
<emphasis bold="true" box="[442,532,3249,3270]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">German:</emphasis>
|
||
<vernacularName box="[542,710,3249,3270]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">Bulmer-Flughund</vernacularName>
|
||
/
|
||
<emphasis bold="true" box="[731,823,3249,3270]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">Spanish:</emphasis>
|
||
<vernacularName box="[831,1028,3249,3270]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">Aprotelo de Bulmer</vernacularName>
|
||
</heading>
|
||
</paragraph>
|
||
</subSubSection>
|
||
<subSubSection pageId="49" pageNumber="107" type="reference_group">
|
||
<paragraph blockId="49.[122,1329,3316,3475]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">
|
||
<emphasis bold="true" box="[123,276,3316,3349]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">Taxonomy.</emphasis>
|
||
<taxonomicName authority="Menzies, 1977" authorityName="Menzies" authorityYear="1977" box="[286,714,3316,3349]" class="Mammalia" family="Pteropodidae" genus="Aproteles" kingdom="Animalia" order="Chiroptera" pageId="49" pageNumber="107" phylum="Chordata" rank="species" species="bulmerae">
|
||
Aproteles bulmerae Menzies,
|
||
<quantity box="[650,714,3316,3349]" metricMagnitude="6" metricUnit="m" metricValue="1.9771999999999998" pageId="49" pageNumber="107" unit="km" value="1977.2">1977</quantity>
|
||
</taxonomicName>
|
||
,
|
||
<materialsCitation pageId="49" pageNumber="107">
|
||
2 km south-east of Chuave Government Station,
|
||
<quantity box="[199,298,3355,3388]" metricMagnitude="3" metricUnit="m" metricValue="1.53" pageId="49" pageNumber="107" unit="m" value="1530.0">1530 m</quantity>
|
||
,
|
||
<collectingRegion box="[314,558,3355,3388]" country="Papua New Guinea" name="Chimbu" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">Chimbu Province</collectingRegion>
|
||
,
|
||
<collectingCountry box="[573,839,3355,3388]" name="Papua New Guinea" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">Papua New Guinea</collectingCountry>
|
||
.
|
||
</materialsCitation>
|
||
</paragraph>
|
||
</subSubSection>
|
||
<subSubSection pageId="49" pageNumber="107" type="discussion">
|
||
<paragraph blockId="49.[122,1329,3316,3475]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">
|
||
<taxonomicName authorityName="Menzies" authorityYear="1977" box="[124,351,3395,3428]" class="Mammalia" family="Pteropodidae" genus="Aproteles" kingdom="Animalia" order="Chiroptera" pageId="49" pageNumber="107" phylum="Chordata" rank="species" species="bulmerae">Aproteles bulmerae</taxonomicName>
|
||
was first discovered as fossils in 9000-12,000-year-old deposits, and it was subsequently found alive at three othersites. Monotypic.
|
||
</paragraph>
|
||
</subSubSection>
|
||
<subSubSection pageId="49" pageNumber="107" type="distribution">
|
||
<caption inLine="true" pageId="49" pageNumber="107" targetBox="[741,745,481,506]" targetPageId="50">
|
||
<paragraph blockId="49.[2012,2605,281,703]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">
|
||
<emphasis bold="true" box="[2012,2184,281,310]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">Distribution.</emphasis>
|
||
C
|
||
<collectingCountry box="[2248,2534,281,310]" name="Papua New Guinea" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">Papua New Guinea</collectingCountry>
|
||
Mts (four localities in Western and
|
||
<collectingRegion country="Papua New Guinea" name="Eastern Highlands" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">Eastern Highlands</collectingRegion>
|
||
provinces).
|
||
</paragraph>
|
||
</caption>
|
||
</subSubSection>
|
||
<subSubSection pageId="49" pageNumber="107" type="description">
|
||
<paragraph blockId="49.[2012,2605,281,703]" lastBlockId="49.[1398,2608,710,3467]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">
|
||
<emphasis bold="true" box="[2012,2255,394,427]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">Descriptive notes.</emphasis>
|
||
Head-body
|
||
<quantity box="[2434,2540,394,427]" metricMagnitude="-1" metricUnit="m" metricValue="2.48" pageId="49" pageNumber="107" unit="mm" value="248.0">248 mm</quantity>
|
||
,tail
|
||
<quantity box="[2013,2163,438,467]" metricMagnitude="-2" metricUnit="m" metricValue="3.1" metricValueMax="3.2" metricValueMin="3.0" pageId="49" pageNumber="107" unit="mm" value="31.0" valueMax="32.0" valueMin="30.0">30-32 mm</quantity>
|
||
, ear
|
||
<quantity box="[2240,2342,438,467]" metricMagnitude="-2" metricUnit="m" metricValue="3.7" pageId="49" pageNumber="107" unit="mm" value="37.0">37 mm</quantity>
|
||
, hindfoot
|
||
<quantity box="[2496,2597,438,467]" metricMagnitude="-2" metricUnit="m" metricValue="3.1" pageId="49" pageNumber="107" unit="mm" value="31.0">31 mm</quantity>
|
||
, forearm 165; weight
|
||
<quantity box="[2302,2377,473,506]" metricMagnitude="-1" metricUnit="kg" metricValue="6.0" pageId="49" pageNumber="107" unit="g" value="600.0">600 g</quantity>
|
||
. Head is robust; muzzle is long and stout; nostrils are large, shortly tubular, smooth, and diverging; and lips are papillose. Eyes are moderately large; irises are brown. Ears are long and narrow and attenuated at tips. Head has no glandular areas; pelage is dark brown and short; pelage on nape and anterior dorsum is lighter brown and silky; posterior mantle is whitish, with dense brown margin right below scapular area where furry dorsum is interrupted by naked patagia, but rump is densely covered with brown hair; tail is short; uropatagium is reduced in center and more ample on sides of legs; calcar is relatively long; and hindfeet are large. Ventral side is densely covered entirely in fine brown hair. Wing membranes are thick and blackish, originate on spine where left and right wings meet giving impression of bare back, and inserted on second toes; forearm and tibia are naked; index claw is present; and all claws in hand and feet are brown (paler even whitish in young). Skull is large, with slight basicranial deflection; premaxillae are thin and arcuate, lacking any sign of alveoli; rostrum is long and relatively thin and continues on flat forehead; alveolar line is slightly arched; zygomatic root is above upper alveolar line; zygoma is relatively thick and strongly arched from its anterior root; orbit is moderately large and oriented slightly forward; and braincase is long and relatively low, with occiput directed somewhat ventrally. Dorsally, point of nasals is flared laterally; rostrum is conical; paranasal recesses are moderately inflated, barely reaching large postorbital foramen; postorbital process is strong and posteriorly directed; postorbital constriction is very obvious; temporal lines are joined anteriorly in sharp sagittal crest; and braincase is oval, ending posteriorly in obvious nuchalcrest. Ventrally, palate is flat; tooth rows diverge posteriorly; post-dental palate is relatively short, converging posteriorly; and ear bones very small. There are 14 palatal ridges; first five are arched, undivided, and smooth; and the rest are divided medially, becoming strongly denticulate caudally. Dental formulais 10/0, C 1/1, P 2/3, M 2/3 (x2) = 24—lowest tooth count of all species of
|
||
<taxonomicName authorityName="Gray" authorityYear="1821" box="[1810,1999,1578,1611]" class="Mammalia" family="Pteropodidae" kingdom="Animalia" order="Chiroptera" pageId="49" pageNumber="107" phylum="Chordata" rank="family">Pteropodidae</taxonomicName>
|
||
. Dentition is generally weak; dental pieces lack enamel and appear tinged with orange; main cusps are round; and there are no additional cusps, cingula, or ledges. Upper dentition has permanent incisors (single pair of tiny deciduous incisors present); canines are long and slender and slanted forward; P' is absent; posterior cheekteeth have single labial cusp, decreasing in height caudally, and main cusps and occlusal outline are broadly rounded; and M? is small and more triangular. Lower dentition has no incisors; small low C, is close medially; P| is simple, rounded cone; posterior cheekteeth are as tall as canines and decrease in height posteriorly, with rounded cusps and occlusal outline approaching circular; and M,is peg-like.
|
||
</paragraph>
|
||
</subSubSection>
|
||
<subSubSection pageId="49" pageNumber="107" type="biology_ecology">
|
||
<paragraph blockId="49.[1398,2608,710,3467]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">
|
||
<emphasis bold="true" box="[1399,1511,1934,1967]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">Habitat.</emphasis>
|
||
Montane forests in rugged limestone karst, specifically the Central Range lowland, hill, and mossy montane rainforests, at elevations of
|
||
<quantity box="[2216,2387,1978,2007]" metricMagnitude="3" metricUnit="m" metricValue="1.45" metricValueMax="2.4" metricValueMin="0.5" pageId="49" pageNumber="107" unit="m" value="1450.0" valueMax="2400.0" valueMin="500.0">500-2400 m</quantity>
|
||
. Bulmer’s Fruit Bats roost in large caves and “dolines” (sinkholes).
|
||
</paragraph>
|
||
</subSubSection>
|
||
<subSubSection pageId="49" pageNumber="107" type="food_feeding">
|
||
<paragraph blockId="49.[1398,2608,710,3467]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">
|
||
<emphasis bold="true" box="[1399,1658,2052,2085]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">Food and Feeding.</emphasis>
|
||
Bulmer’s Fruit Bat is frugivorous. Relatively weak dentition suggests consumption of soft fruit; it has been observed eating caulicarpous figs (
|
||
<taxonomicName box="[2461,2597,2092,2125]" class="Magnoliopsida" family="Moraceae" genus="Ficus" kingdom="Plantae" order="Rosales" pageId="49" pageNumber="107" phylum="Tracheophyta" rank="species" species="undetermined">Ficus spp.</taxonomicName>
|
||
,
|
||
<taxonomicName box="[1400,1542,2136,2165]" class="Magnoliopsida" family="Moraceae" kingdom="Plantae" order="Rosales" pageId="49" pageNumber="107" phylum="Tracheophyta" rank="family">Moraceae</taxonomicName>
|
||
).
|
||
</paragraph>
|
||
</subSubSection>
|
||
<subSubSection pageId="49" pageNumber="107" type="breeding">
|
||
<paragraph blockId="49.[1398,2608,710,3467]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">
|
||
<emphasis bold="true" box="[1399,1532,2171,2204]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">Breeding.</emphasis>
|
||
Bulmer’s Fruit Bat is probably seasonally monoestrous, with births recorded in April. Females carry their single young for a few weeks when they forage. Females achieve adult size by their second year and apparently start breeding during their third year oflife.
|
||
</paragraph>
|
||
</subSubSection>
|
||
<subSubSection pageId="49" pageNumber="107" type="activity">
|
||
<paragraph blockId="49.[1398,2608,710,3467]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">
|
||
<emphasis bold="true" box="[1398,1637,2329,2362]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">Activity patterns.</emphasis>
|
||
Bulmer’s Fruit Bats roost in large caves and leave roosts at 18:00 19:00 h; when disturbed, they delay emergence from roosts. They emerge and start circling the roost for 5-10 minutes, emitting a birdlike call, before leaving to unknown feeding areas; they return to roosts minutes before 06:00 h.
|
||
</paragraph>
|
||
</subSubSection>
|
||
<subSubSection pageId="49" pageNumber="107" type="biology_ecology">
|
||
<paragraph blockId="49.[1398,2608,710,3467]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">
|
||
<emphasis bold="true" box="[1400,2096,2487,2520]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">Movements, Home range and Social organization.</emphasis>
|
||
Bulmer’s Fruit Bat is highly gregarious, with a colony (today collapsed) of thousands of bats on record: the Luplupwintem colony is located in a large doline with a 300-m vertical shaft excavated in a limestone plateau (locally called “Fininterr”) near Hindenburg Wall that rises
|
||
<quantity box="[2279,2361,2609,2638]" metricMagnitude="2" metricUnit="m" metricValue="4.0" pageId="49" pageNumber="107" unit="m" value="400.0">400 m</quantity>
|
||
above the level of a rich montane forest. The large cavern at the base of shaft is the roost of Bulmer’s Fruit Bats. Some estimates indicate that they fly more than
|
||
<quantity box="[2147,2232,2684,2717]" metricMagnitude="4" metricUnit="m" metricValue="3.0" pageId="49" pageNumber="107" unit="km" value="30.0">30 km</quantity>
|
||
each night to find fruiting trees. Wingbeats produce a “pok-pok” sound like that of the Moluccan Naked-backed Fruit Bat (
|
||
<taxonomicName baseAuthorityName="Quoy & Gaimard" baseAuthorityYear="1830" box="[1540,1816,2767,2796]" class="Mammalia" family="Pteropodidae" genus="Dobsonia" kingdom="Animalia" order="Chiroptera" pageId="49" pageNumber="107" phylum="Chordata" rank="species" species="moluccensis">Dobsonia moluccensis</taxonomicName>
|
||
). It is known to roost with
|
||
<taxonomicName box="[2176,2292,2767,2796]" class="Mammalia" family="Pteropodidae" genus="Dobsonia" kingdom="Animalia" order="Chiroptera" pageId="49" pageNumber="107" phylum="Chordata" rank="genus">Dobsonia</taxonomicName>
|
||
bats in some localities.
|
||
</paragraph>
|
||
</subSubSection>
|
||
<subSubSection lastPageId="50" lastPageNumber="108" pageId="49" pageNumber="107" type="conservation">
|
||
<paragraph blockId="49.[1398,2608,710,3467]" lastBlockId="50.[166,1373,280,510]" lastPageId="50" lastPageNumber="108" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">
|
||
<emphasis bold="true" box="[1400,1758,2803,2836]" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">Status and Conservation.</emphasis>
|
||
Classified as Critically Endangered on The IUCN Red Lust. Bulmer’s Fruit Bat is one of the rarest bats in the World. It is considered a Pleistocene holdover, and populations have been decreasing ever since. The
|
||
<collectingCountry box="[2332,2605,2881,2914]" name="Papua New Guinea" pageId="49" pageNumber="107">Papua New Guinea</collectingCountry>
|
||
highlands might representits last retreat. Heavy human hunting is the main cause of its decline, and it is now on the brink of extinction. Extant individuals are known from only three localities, all in almost inaccessible limestone areas surrounded by pristine montane forests. It is highly vulnerable to hunting due to its dependence on caves and its gregariousness. Introduction of shotguns probably led to the collapse of the main colony in Luplupwintem Cave that was protected by local tribesmen for generations and still numbered in the thousands in the early 1970s. The colony collapsed when shotgun hunters, equipped to be able to descend to the cave, raided the colonykilling thousands of bats in 1975-1977. Bulmer’s Fruit Bat is recorded from a few, widely separate localities (one is a fossil site), some of which are in Crater Mountain Wildlife Management Area, where there is local community awareness about conservation; however, this area is not effectively protected due to local conflicts. At a wider scale, Bulmer’s Fruit Bat is not distinguished from the Moluccan Naked-backed Fruit Bat by local people, and thus there is considerable difficulty in establishing a conservation program. The single known roost with living Bulmer’s Fruit Bats might have less than 200 individuals. It is possible that new colonies are yet to be discovered in highlands of
|
||
<collectingCountry box="[206,477,355,388]" name="Papua New Guinea" pageId="50" pageNumber="108">Papua New Guinea</collectingCountry>
|
||
and Western New
|
||
<collectingCountry box="[747,850,355,388]" name="Guinea-Bissau" pageId="50" pageNumber="108">Guinea</collectingCountry>
|
||
, given that extensive suitable habitat remains available with relatively low human population pressure.
|
||
</paragraph>
|
||
</subSubSection>
|
||
<subSubSection pageId="50" pageNumber="108" type="bibRefCitation_list">
|
||
<paragraph blockId="50.[166,1373,280,510]" pageId="50" pageNumber="108">
|
||
<emphasis bold="true" box="[168,320,442,467]" pageId="50" pageNumber="108">Bibliography.</emphasis>
|
||
Aplin et al. (2016), Bonaccorso (1998), Flannery (1995b), Flannery & Seri (1993), Hyndman & Menzies (1980), Menzies (1977), Wright et al. (1995).
|
||
</paragraph>
|
||
</subSubSection>
|
||
</treatment>
|
||
</document> |