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| Teaching Since: | Apr 2017 |
| Last Sign in: | 327 Weeks Ago, 5 Days Ago |
| Questions Answered: | 12843 |
| Tutorials Posted: | 12834 |
MBA, Ph.D in Management
Harvard university
Feb-1997 - Aug-2003
Professor
Strayer University
Jan-2007 - Present
Your answer for #5 doesn’t include any features that
are unique to seals. If you Google "synapomorphy
pinniped”, you’ll probably get better information. For #6, my gut feeling tells me that this is unlikely, so
I’d look it up. You need to make sure your references
support it. You have many, many misspellings. Every one of
them either counts off a point, or if it's a taxon name, it makes the name wrong. I'm puzzled by the middle column of #7. You find it
interesting that there are three subspecies? Curtis Clark, PhD http://wwwcppedu/~icclark
Professor Emeritus +1 909 869 4140
Biological Sciences
Cal Poly Pomona, Pomona CA 91768 From: Hyeon Jo Sent: Wednesday, May 24, 2017 5:59 AM To: Curtis Clark <icclark@cpp.edu>
Subject: Re: B|0123- Taxon Analysis check Professor Clark,
Could you check my taxon analysis project please? Thank you From: Hyeon Jo
Sent: Tuesday. Mav 23.2017 2:06:47 PM
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