Image from the Biodiversity Heritage Library.
Contributed by Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, University of California, Berkeley.
| www.biodiversitylibrary.org
Transcription
P.A.Kelly
1988
Journal
June 27 (cont)
left liver, heart and kidney for a possible
post doctoral project on population genetic
structure. The large ♀ (#187) is possibly
the sire of ?1670's two litters (of two) - all
five of which I previously sacrificed for
tissues, skins and partial skeletons.
Jane Kidd [illegible] (Field Assistant, Woodpecker Project)
also gave me a jaw ♀ (Cat# 189, 94g) she found
on the lane near the 2nd Crossing (ie between
Hws 121 and 205). Had one large warble on it's
flanks but I couldn't find any injuries. The
lungs looked as if they had small white
bodies/growths (???) however. It was too
decomposed to make a study skin or to take
tissues.
Ray Callaway? (UC Santa Barbara, Ph.D. on
Oak Physiology) and his dog Toke
came up Maderone Canyon
around 7:30pm with me in search of zone
fogs he heard earlier in the afternoon.
We went all the way up as far as the fence
but didn't see anything until we were
coming back down and Toke "pointed" a
pair of large black pigs foraging under
some oaks over the chaparral-covered ridge
N.E. of the Hastings Cabin. Ray stayed back
with Toke and I crawled to within about
100 yds. I waited for one of the pigs to
come into the open. When one did I aimed