Figure

Wed, 2020-03-18 13:36 -- hwadmin
Summary: 
A King Brown Snake that slithered from a nest hummock on 1 May 2016, the morning after Murphy and Barr discovered that the eggs had been plundered. It was later identified by analysis of DNA left on the shell fragments to be the likely culprit. Photo by Steve Murphy.
Type: 
Figure
Sub Component: 
Normal
Slug: 
F154
Highwire: Type: 
fragment
Highwire: Parent: 
HighWire: Journal/Corpus Code: 
csirobk
Highwire: pisa_id: 
csirobk;9781486302994/1/BK07356_ch24/F154
Highwire: pisa_master: 
csirobk;9781486302994/1/BK07356_ch24/F154
HighWire: Atom Path: 
/csirobk/9781486302994/9781486302994/SEC31/F154.atom
Highwire: cpath: 
/content/9781486302994/9781486302994/SEC31/F154
Image - Large: 
Highwire: cpathalias: 
/content/csirobk/9781486302994/9781486302994/SEC31/F154
Image - Medium: 
Highwire: Variants: 
expansion
Image - Small: 
Highwire: State: 
Released
Contributors: 
<atom:author xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" xmlns:hwp="http://schema.highwire.org/Journal" xmlns:nlm="http://schema.highwire.org/NLM/Journal" hwp:inherited="yes" nlm:contrib-type="author"><atom:name>Penny Olsen</atom:name><nlm:name name-style="western" hwp:sortable="Olsen Penny"><nlm:surname>Olsen</nlm:surname><nlm:given-names>Penny</nlm:given-names></nlm:name></atom:author>
Last load event: 
Wednesday, March 18, 2020 - 13:38