Matches in Ubergraph for { ?s <http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/UBPROP_0000008> ?o ?g. }
- UBERON_0035568 UBPROP_0000008 "Lateral in Squalimorphi due to lateral movements of neurons during pretectal development[ISBN:0471888893]" @default.
- UBERON_0035612 UBPROP_0000008 "unossified in dinosaurs[http://palaeos.com/vertebrates/bones/braincase/ethmoid.html]" @default.
- UBERON_0035776 UBPROP_0000008 "tested for and found to be present in pig, sika deer, domestic sheep, horse, cat, fox, racoon dog, marten, rat, rabbit, crab-eating macaque, japanese macaque and human[PMID:2802184]" @default.
- UBERON_0035884 UBPROP_0000008 "present in mouse [PMID:21538817]" @default.
- UBERON_0035884 UBPROP_0000008 "transient in humans" @default.
- UBERON_0035922 UBPROP_0000008 "The culmen lobule (lobules IV/V) is a single structure in humans, but it is divided by the intraculminate fissure in many rodents. In some mouse strains such as SLJ/J, the intraculminate fissure is absent, in some strains such as DBA/2J it is present, and other strains (C57BL/10J and BALB/cJ) exhibit considerable variablility (PMID: 1953602).[MP]" @default.
- UBERON_0036144 UBPROP_0000008 "horses exhibit Flehmen response but do not have an incisive duct communication between the nasal and the oral cavity because they do not breathe through their mouths, instead, the VNOs connect to the nasal passages by the nasopalatine duct" @default.
- UBERON_0036151 UBPROP_0000008 "horses, pigs" @default.
- UBERON_0036152 UBPROP_0000008 "common to ungulates such as cows, deer, goat, and giraffes" @default.
- UBERON_0036153 UBPROP_0000008 "characteristic of carnivores" @default.
- UBERON_0036154 UBPROP_0000008 "seen in numerous groups -- humans, mice, insectivores, rabbits, rats, and monkeys" @default.
- UBERON_0036161 UBPROP_0000008 "Horses, swine, ruminants" @default.
- UBERON_0036162 UBPROP_0000008 "dogs, cats" @default.
- UBERON_0036163 UBPROP_0000008 "humans, rodents" @default.
- UBERON_4200121 UBPROP_0000008 "Homologous to mammalian gracilis [ISBN:0073040584]" @default.
- UBERON_8410003 UBPROP_0000008 "Temporal stages still need to be fully researched across species." @default.
- UBPROP_0000106 UBPROP_0000008 "In the early tetrapods, every vertebra bore a pair of ribs, although those on the thoracic vertebrae are typically the longest. In most subsequent forms, many of these early ribs have been lost, and in living amphibians and reptiles, there is great variation in rib structure and number. For example, turtles have only eight pairs of ribs, which are developed into a bony or cartilagenous carapace and plastron, while snakes have numerous ribs running along the full length of their trunk. Frogs typically have no ribs, aside from a sacral pair, which form part of the pelvis. Mammals usually also only have distinct ribs on the thoracic vertebra, although fixed cervical ribs are also present in monotremes. In marsupials and placental mammals, the cervical and lumbar ribs are found only as tiny remnants fused to the vertebrae, where they are referred to as transverse processes. In general, the structure and number of the true ribs in humans is similar to that in other mammals. Unlike reptiles, caudal ribs are never found in mammals." @default.