The rest of the collective names seem to be just as made up. Unless there is a competing name, "starship" is it.
Sort of like Mort Walkter's Lexicon of Comicana. It was satire, but since it provided names for things that didn't have names, his neologisms have been accepted. https://www.amazon.com/Lexicon-Comicana-Mort-Walker/dp/059508902X
Zihlman et al 2008 (not 2007 as I wrongfully cited earlier).
> Are the horizontal lines the width of shoulders, waist and hips viewed facing the chimp?
Yes, I believe so. The upper horizontal line is the proximal measure, the middle one the medial, and the bottom one is the distal measure. Have a look at Appendix, Table A2.
BTW, you can also look at the citations inside the papers to find more relevant papers.
But I am in no means an expert, so maybe someone more knowledgeable can help you further.
My vote would be for pig. [This set from Prague looks pretty similar](https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/A-rare-severe-enamel-defect-on-an-upper-pig-molar-(-Teegen-Kysel%C3%BD/b22539705b693e17b2056e9fcf97569332f1c97f). not exactly, but domestic animals can have some odd variations as a result of domestication. In the first image here you can see similar little side bulbs as well.
I am certainly not sure enough to say definitively what it is, but of the options pig seems the most likely.
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https://www.coursera.org/course/animalbehav
try an online course.
If you want a 'fun' book im not sure what to offer, but there are plenty of very wordy textbooks out there that exist mostly for students to use. They are very expensive and will probably make you fall asleep.
Just go to a library and look for animal behaviour books if there is a zoological section. If you have a science library nearby, that is where i would look first. Otherwise any library would do.
textbooks i would recommend for relatively accurate information
Animal behaviour (Pearson).
An introduction to behavioural ecology. (Wiley-Blackwell).
Behavioural ecology: an evolutionary approach (Blackwells).
An introduction to animal behaviour (Cambridge University Press).
Useful authors:
Konrad Lorenz
Bernd Heinrich
Marc Bekoff
Jane Gooddall
Frans De Waal
Joan Roughgarden
Bruce Bagemihl
David L. Mech
Robert M. Sapolsky
Temple Grandin
You can find most stuff on https://libgen.is/ as well.
You probs have some delicious smelling toe fungus. They don't have noses but they can still smell.
I personally love this little book that mostly features invertebrates that you can get for very cheap secondhand (that's what I did)!
Maybe "Invertebrates" by Brusca et. al (2016, https://www.amazon.com/Invertebrates-Richard-C-Brusca/dp/1605353752) is the book that you are looking for.
How about a bottle of this: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Laphroaig-Islay-Single-Scotch-Whisky/dp/B001GLG7C2
I dont know how thats actually pronounced but as far as I'm concerned its La Frog whisky
Perfect
😂
https://www.amazon.com/Campbell-Biology-11th-Lisa-Urry/dp/0134093410
Its this, but an older version is totally fine and probably cheaper. Mine was from 2005. This is a big book but its just such a solid intro and super good foundation. Its a real fun read.
Read this book. It's broader than just zoology, and also includes some of the evolutionary theory which underpins everything. It's also exceptionally well written.
This one is pretty solid. It's small but has good coverage. We issue or recommend these to students at the university at which I teach.
This book pretty much covers first year animal physiology extensively, it came in handly around exam time and was recommended by my lecturer.