Contributions to Zoology, 78 (2) – 2009Nobuyuki Yamaguchi; Andrew C. Kitchener; Carlos A. Driscoll; David W. Macdonald: Divided infraorbital foramen in the lion (Panthera leo): its implications for colonisation history, population bottlenecks, and conservation of the Asian lion (P. l. persica)

To refer to this article use this url: http://dpc.uba.uva.nl/ctz/vol78/nr02/art04

Appendix

Appendix 1


List of examined lion and tiger specimens that have divided infraorbital foramina, extinct North African Barbary lion specimens, and Lidian lion specimens. Specimens are kept in Natural History Museum, London, UK (London), National Museums Scotland, Edinburgh, UK (Edinburgh), Natural History Museum, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK (Oxford), Royal College of Surgeons, London, UK (RCS), National Museum of Natural History, Paris, France (Paris), Zoological Museum, Strasbourg, France (Strasbourg), Zoological Museum, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands (Amsterdam), National Museum of Natural History, Leiden, The Netherlands (Leiden), Swedish Museum of Natural History, Stockholm, Sweden (Stockholm), and Museum of Natural History, Berlin, Germany (Berlin), Senckenberg Research Institute and Natural History Museum, Frankfurt am Main, Germany (Frankfurt), American Museum of Natural History, New York, USA (New York), Field Museum, Chicago, USA (Chicago), and Bombay Natural History Society, Mumbai, India (Mumbai). The position, either left (L) or right (R), of trifuricated (3), bifurcated (2), or undivided normal (1) foramen is also indicated.