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1 ing, predation, cognition and seafinding (in turtles).
2 ayered, lissencephalic cortices, such as the turtle.
3 e oxygen species (ROS) upon reoxygenation in turtles.
4  diversity and compositions in phage-treated turtles.
5 tive abundance of oceanic-stage juvenile sea turtles.
6 sions associated with Salmonella are rare in turtles.
7 and fatal tumor disease of endangered marine turtles.
8 eing restricted mostly to parrots and marine turtles.
9 ths, sharing some features with those of sea turtles.
10 ignificant stress for wildlife including sea turtles.
11 lings, respectively, for hawksbill and green turtles.
12 pinal cord components based on evidence from turtles.
13 anole lizards, snapping turtles, and painted turtles.
14 ting the hypothesis of diapsid affinities of turtles.
15 and infection on the reproductive success of turtles.
16 oxacin) in clinically healthy, captive green turtles.
17 ted with shell lesions in freshwater aquatic turtles.
18 fection has not yet been reported in aquatic turtles.
19  bacterial flora in gut-related dysbiosis of turtles.
20 significantly higher than that in loggerhead turtles (16.7%).
21 compared the results with those for normoxic turtles (25 degrees C) and mouse hearts exposed to 30 mi
22 ngestion ratio of artificial debris in green turtles (61.8%) was significantly higher than that in lo
23        With successful conservation efforts, turtle abundance will increase, leading to more meadows
24 y of gaseous embolism (GE) and DCS in marine turtles after incidental capture in trawl gear, and to p
25 molluscs, odonates, amphibians, crayfish and turtles alongside key features within and between catchm
26 cine to wildlife conservation, including sea turtles, amphibians and Tasmanian devils.
27  included life history stage, species of sea turtle and date of stranding observation as possible add
28 cies of birds, 15 species of arthropods, one turtle and one salamander.
29 etween annualized mean growth rates of green turtles and both sea surface temperatures (SST) in the W
30 reds of neurons in lumbar spinal circuits of turtles and establish the neuronal fraction that operate
31 nces in the life histories between Floridian turtles and Hawaiian turtles, may partly explain the dif
32 pe determines nesting success and fitness in turtles and is a critical consideration for nesting area
33 d with succinate accumulation in both anoxic turtles and ischemic mouse hearts.
34 trahippocampal axon collaterals, relative to turtles and lizards.
35 factory landscape for foraging marine birds, turtles and mammals.
36 ferating cells were found only in the CMZ of turtles and not in the eyes of anoles and snakes.
37 on, but alongside the presence of loggerhead turtles and other endangered marine megafauna in the Moz
38 eeding sites [1], but the details of how sea turtles and other taxa navigate during these migrations
39 water flight stroke, essentially the same as turtles and penguins.
40                                              Turtles and tortoises (chelonians) have been integral co
41         Here, we examine survival threats to turtles and tortoises and discuss the interventions that
42 ciated with various marine animals including turtles and whales, with the exception of Anelasma these
43               We review marine fish, mammal, turtle, and seabird responses to climate change and disc
44 ch as archaea, bacteria, viruses, mangroves, turtles, and ocean acidification; (3) physical and chemi
45 nakes, queen snakes, anole lizards, snapping turtles, and painted turtles.
46                                              Turtle ant soldiers (genus Cephalotes), an iconic exampl
47 inal glia, glucagonergic neurons, and CMZ of turtles appear to be most similar to those of fish, amph
48  the pattern of organization observed in the turtle/archosaur lineage, which includes crocodilians an
49 Transitional fossils informing the origin of turtles are among the most sought-after discoveries in p
50                       Oceanic life-stage sea turtles are at the highest risk of debris ingestion, and
51                                        Green turtles are endangered marine herbivorous hindgut fermen
52                                        These turtles are normally immediately released without any un
53                                  Debilitated turtles are often rehabilitated in turtle hospitals.
54                                          Sea turtles are primarily visual predators, with the ability
55 t risk of debris ingestion, and olive ridley turtles are the most at-risk species.
56 on, whereas tumored and nontumored Floridian turtles are uniformly seropositive.
57 use a model higher vertebrate, the green sea turtle, as its life history is fundamentally affected by
58                                       All 20 turtles assessed by ultrasound and/or post-mortem examin
59 llomatosis (FP) is a tumor disease of marine turtles associated with chelonid herpesvirus 5 (ChHV5),
60 tly (P < 0.05) reduced in antibiotic-treated turtles at day 15 and throughout the trial.
61                                           In turtles, ATP and ADP decreased to new steady-state level
62 in hair cells from the frog sacculus and the turtle basilar papilla.
63 gumes, black soybean (Glycine max) and black turtle bean (Phaseolus vulgaris), belonging to two diffe
64 against alpha-amylase; Fraction V from black turtle bean was the most potent (IC50: 0.25mug/mL) again
65 st alpha-glucosidase; Fraction IV from black turtle bean was the most powerful (IC50: 76mug/mL) again
66  difficult because, despite thousands of sea turtles being satellite tracked across hundreds of studi
67  detected in blood samples from neonate male turtles but not females and can be used as a sex-specifi
68 p. are frequently shed by wildlife including turtles, but S. enterica subsp. enterica serovar Typhimu
69  factors associated with gas embolism in sea turtles captured in trawls and gillnets.
70 annel also hosts large numbers of loggerhead turtles Caretta caretta.
71                           The loggerhead sea turtle (Caretta caretta) faces multiple conservation cha
72 s at different temporal scales on loggerhead turtle (Caretta caretta) hatchling production at sevente
73 n an eight-year survey of the loggerhead sea turtle (Caretta caretta) population nesting in Cabo Verd
74 ater turtle (Trachemys scripta) and a marine turtle (Caretta caretta) via analysis of small blood sam
75 ng data for individual female loggerhead sea turtles (Caretta caretta) observed on Bald Head Island,
76 umeri from juvenile North Pacific loggerhead turtles (Caretta caretta), animals that undergo long mig
77 es of juvenile recruitment in loggerhead sea turtles (Caretta caretta), but without a clear understan
78   The enigma is epitomized by loggerhead sea turtles (Caretta caretta), which leave their home beache
79 l (mt) DNA sequences from 150 immature green turtles caught during surveys carried out in 2015-2016,
80 putative M-current candidates suggested that turtle CD afferents express KCNQ3, KCNQ4, and ERG1-3 pot
81 ve intranuclear inclusions in cultured green turtle cells, which is indicative of active lytic replic
82              The cryptic 'lost years' of sea turtles challenge conservation efforts due to unknown mo
83 8 type specimens of Australasian side-necked turtles (Chelidae).
84 atric loggerhead (Caretta caretta) and green turtle (Chelonia mydas) at a key rookery in the Mediterr
85  that the seasonal availability of green sea turtle (Chelonia mydas) nests is the cause for the high
86 her differential recovery of Caribbean green turtle (Chelonia mydas) rookeries influenced population
87                                        Green turtles (Chelonia mydas) are marine megaherbivores that
88 me that dugongs (Dugong dugon) and green sea turtles (Chelonia mydas) assist seagrass dispersal.
89 cific mAbs, in this study we show that green turtles (Chelonia mydas) have a 5.7S 120-kDa IgY compris
90 e health status of largely herbivorous green turtles (Chelonia mydas) in the 2 years following the he
91  problem by recording unique tracks of green turtles (Chelonia mydas) migrating long distances in the
92 l turtles (Eretmochelys imbricata) and green turtles (Chelonia mydas) nesting in the Chagos Archipela
93 on, or Management Unit (MU), origin of green turtles (Chelonia mydas) present at Yadua Island and Mak
94 ed when it resembles the food items of green turtles (Chelonia mydas).
95  from throughout the West Atlantic for green turtles, Chelonia mydas, which are long-lived, highly mi
96 re present in the prenatal cortex of lizard, turtle, chicken, and dove.
97 lays a role in the navigation of the painted turtle (Chrysemys picta) within a model of environmental
98  the trans-continentally distributed painted turtle (Chrysemys picta).
99 e novel experiments exposing eggs of Painted Turtles (Chrysemys picta) to replicated profiles recorde
100 rvival decline with adult age in the painted turtle, Chrysemys picta, based on data spanning >20 y fr
101 ucture in ribs and gastralia approaching the turtle condition and (2) evidence for a predominantly am
102 r to eyes of chickens, the retinal margin in turtles contains accumulations of GLP1/glucagonergic neu
103 cluding fish and amniotes (lizards, tuatara, turtles, crocodylians, rodents).
104 ficant negative relationship between size of turtle (curved carapace length) and number/mass of plast
105     We quantified O. margoi association with turtles' delta(15)N and delta(13)C stable isotopes to id
106 ng these data, we calculate estimates of sea turtle density (km(-2)) in nearshore waters.
107 he world's largest reptile - the leatherback turtle Dermochelys coriacea - conducts flexible foraging
108                                  Frequently, turtles did not home to small islands with pinpoint accu
109                       However, because green turtles dig deeper nests than loggerheads (0.76 m vs. 0.
110 t candidate navigational models to show that turtles do not reorient at fine scales (e.g., daily), bu
111  reed warblers (Acrocephalus scirpaceus) and turtle doves (Streptopelia turtur), caught in Israel whi
112 eed warblers and nidopallium caudolateral in turtle doves.
113 uced targeted Acinetobacter in phage-treated turtles during the therapy.
114                                       In the turtle, efferent-mediated fast excitation arises in CD a
115 tested the InvestEGGator, a 3D-printed decoy turtle egg embedded with a GPS-GSM transmitter (Suppleme
116                                          Sea turtle eggs are heavily influenced by the environment in
117  the snakes consuming lizard eggs when green turtle eggs are not available.
118              Illegally collected clutches of turtle eggs containing a decoy transmitter enabled us to
119 ts to uncover trade routes of trafficked sea turtle eggs, we developed and field-tested the InvestEGG
120 erate hatch-year trajectories for loggerhead turtles emanating from Japan over six decades (1950-2010
121                                 However, sea turtle embryos are limited in their capacity to remain i
122 ggerhead and 6 green turtles, respectively), turtles encountered 46 artificial debris and ingested 23
123 e of the critically endangered hawksbill sea turtle (Eretmochelys imbricata), as well as five species
124 ations for hatchling sex ratios of hawksbill turtles (Eretmochelys imbricata) and green turtles (Chel
125 sil material of the oldest hypothesized stem turtle, Eunotosaurus africanus [12] (260 mya) [13, 14] f
126 skull of opossum, alligator, and leatherback turtle evolved in independent ways mirrored in different
127 pite strong genomic evidence indicating that turtles evolved from within the diapsid radiation (which
128 ted for in trawl fisheries not equipped with turtle excluder devices.
129 in hearts from cold-acclimated (5 degrees C) turtles exposed to 9 days anoxia and compared the result
130                                 Although sea turtles face significant pressure from human activities,
131 3.4 g, gut; 39.8 +/- 51.2 g) than loggerhead turtles (feces; 1.6 +/- 3.7 g, gut; 9.7 +/- 15.0 g).
132 ultures (rafts) consisting of ChHV5-positive turtle fibroblasts in collagen rafts seeded with turtle
133 ivorous leech best known as a vector for sea turtle fibropapilloma virus.
134 idence to date, from naturally migrating sea turtles, for an ability to reorient in the open ocean, b
135 SVZ in the dorsal ventricular ridge (DVR) of turtle forebrain and in the cortices of chicken and dove
136                   Unlike any other tetrapod, turtles form their dorsal bony shell (carapace) not from
137 d in all extant and extinct species of crown turtles found to date and is synaptomorphic of the order
138                                   Loggerhead turtles frequently fed on gelatinous prey (78/84), howev
139  between green turtles from Hawaii and green turtles from Florida might have led to the emergence of
140                                              Turtles from Florida were uniformly seropositive to ChHV
141  between green turtles from Hawaii and green turtles from Florida, we rejected the cross-reactivity o
142                                              Turtles from Hawaii actively shedding ChHV5 were more se
143 ehavioral or other differences between green turtles from Hawaii and green turtles from Florida might
144 serological responses to ChHV5 between green turtles from Hawaii and green turtles from Florida, we r
145                              In contrast, in turtles from Hawaii, we detected strong antibody reactiv
146 t the two foraging grounds are used by green turtles from the American Samoa MU (72%, Credible Interv
147 sheries and 44 live or freshly dead stranded turtles from the west coast of North and Central America
148             In the chicken as well as in the turtle (from data in the literature), the earliest postm
149 lts can be used to predict the number of sea turtles globally at risk of debris ingestion.
150 rtant cause of mortality in threatened green turtles globally.
151 esvirus 5 [ChHV5]) that affects mainly green turtles globally.
152 d in these systems, but the effects of green turtle grazing on seagrass ecosystem carbon dynamics hav
153 butions based on ocean drifter data with sea turtle habitat maps to predict exposure levels to plasti
154 /127) of pelagic and 47% (21/44) of stranded turtles had renal granulomas associated with S. Typhimur
155 r dataset, the largest ever compiled for sea turtles, has 9690 growth increments from 30 sites from B
156 nism - a biological means used by extant sea turtle hatchlings to elevate metabolic and growth rates
157 at may be travelled by migrating leatherback turtles have greatly complicated conservation efforts fo
158 erest because two carnivorous species of sea turtles-hawksbills, Eretmochelys imbricata, and loggerhe
159 d low succinate accumulation likely protects turtle hearts from anoxia/reoxygenation injury and sugge
160 me structure, (ii) its closest relative is a turtle herpesvirus, (iii) it contains interleukin-10 and
161 bilitated turtles are often rehabilitated in turtle hospitals.
162  GW larvae in 234 fish, two reptiles and two turtles; however, seven GW larvae were recovered from 4
163 m of forward swimming in spinal, immobilized turtles if the tap occurred during the swim hip extensor
164 s known from embryological studies in extant turtles, important steps in this evolutionary sequence h
165 sickness (DCS) was first diagnosed in marine turtles in 2014.
166 -borne video cameras on loggerhead and green turtles in addition to feces and gut contents analyses f
167      Artificial debris appeared in all green turtles in feces (25/25) and gut contents (10/10), and g
168                       While the strains from turtles in Florida apparently spread independently of tu
169 e broad applicability of our findings to sea turtles in general.
170 may lead to local extinctions of leatherback turtles in some areas but survival in others by 2100.
171                                              Turtles in the eastern Mediterranean displayed strong di
172 etic particles could be isolated from marine turtle ingesta.
173  (25/25) and gut contents (10/10), and green turtles ingested more debris (feces; 15.8 +/- 33.4 g, gu
174  a possible unifying explanation for why sea turtles interact with marine plastic.
175 oriality likely facilitated movement of stem turtles into aquatic environments early in the groups' e
176 derstand how the hatchling production of sea turtles is influenced by local climate and how potential
177                                The origin of turtles is one of the most long-lasting debates in evolu
178          We propose that the skull of modern turtles is the result of a complex process of progressiv
179 ly-mobile, wide-ranging species, such as sea turtles, is challenging.
180 ces of large animals, such as whales and sea turtles, is well known.
181 le fibroblasts in collagen rafts seeded with turtle keratinocytes and (ii) keratinocyte maturation in
182                                 Olive ridley turtle (Lepidochelys olivacea) eggs from eight clutches
183  127 apparently healthy pelagic olive ridley turtles (Lepidochelys olivacea) that died from drowning
184  during a mass-nesting event of olive ridley turtles (Lepidochelys olivacea).
185 s, neopterygian bony fishes, lissamphibians, turtles, lepidosaurs, crocodilomorphs, and mammals.
186 f activity space was evident for several sea turtles, long-term impacts on space-use and body conditi
187 human lungs but is not found in alligator or turtle lungs, suggesting it arose during the evolution o
188 d on gelatinous prey (78/84), however, green turtles mainly fed marine algae (156/210), and partly co
189 on sizes across lineages of snakes, lizards, turtles, mammals, birds, salamanders and frogs in this r
190  calculations indicate that up to 52% of sea turtles may have ingested debris.
191 ories between Floridian turtles and Hawaiian turtles, may partly explain the differential dynamics of
192 detection of endangered species, Malayan box turtle (MBT) (Cuora amboinensis).
193                                          Sea turtles memorize the magnetic coordinates of their natal
194                         Upon hatching, young turtles migrate offshore and are rarely observed until t
195 itical for a more accurate estimation of sea turtle mortality rates resulting from different fisherie
196                        We show that Hawaiian turtles mount antibodies to ChHV5 mainly in response to
197 nriched in the fetal ovary in rainbow trout, turtle, mouse, goat, and human.
198 ing reproductive information for a subset of turtles (n = 513), we estimated hatchling yields associa
199                            On average, green turtles nested at higher elevations than loggerheads (1.
200  depths and in beach zones representative of turtle nesting sites.
201  we estimated a loss of 67.3% for loggerhead turtle nests and 59.1% for green turtle nests.
202 ociation between the spatial distribution of turtle nests and subtle changes in Earth's magnetic fiel
203  loggerhead turtle nests and 59.1% for green turtle nests.
204 unlike for other taxa, such as birds and sea turtles, no small-scale orientation assay has so far bee
205  resident coastal aggregation of leatherback turtles not only presents a unique opportunity for conse
206 ew technique used to identify sex in neonate turtles of two TSD species, a freshwater turtle (Trachem
207 a risk analysis for plastic ingestion by sea turtles on a global scale.
208 ne of the best preserved juvenile fossil sea turtles on record.
209  domain gene, Dmrt1, in Chinese soft-shelled turtle Pelodiscus sinensis (P. sinensis), which exhibits
210  458 and a high-end estimate of 2086 +/- 803 turtles per km(-2).
211  ranging from worms and insects to birds and turtles perform impressive journeys using the magnetic f
212 tuna and billfishes, sharks and rays, marine turtles, pinnipeds, cetaceans, sirenians, flying seabird
213 decreases and the long-term survival of this turtle population is threatened.
214                                              Turtle populations are declining rapidly due to habitat
215    The regions of highest risk to global sea turtle populations are off of the east coasts of the USA
216 with global warming, the feminization of TSD turtle populations could accelerate, facilitating extinc
217 cost-effective population assessments of sea turtle populations in coastal marine ecosystems.
218                        Dugongs and green sea turtle populations within this region can disperse >500,
219 fishing gear is a major global threat to sea turtle populations.
220 r in the observed decadal variability of sea turtle populations.
221 e common ancestor of Eunotosaurus and modern turtles possessed a body plan significantly influenced b
222 e recorded from CD afferents innervating the turtle posterior crista during electrical stimulation of
223 mages collected during six transects for sea turtle presence, resulting in 682 certain detections.
224 ondition, while in contrast, large, infected turtles produced greater clutch sizes and larger offspri
225  conservation programs, bans on the trade of turtle products, and reductions in bycatch.
226 t of the oldest fully shelled, Triassic stem-turtle Proganochelys, to evaluate the role of force dist
227 ical seagrass seeds by dugongs and green sea turtles provides a large-scale mechanism that enhances c
228                           To investigate how turtles react to artificial debris under natural conditi
229 mals died on-board, and 3 of 15 (20%) active turtles released with satellite tags died within 6 days.
230 l to the closed, anapsid condition of modern turtles remains elusive.
231 nd 52.5 hours from 10 loggerhead and 6 green turtles, respectively), turtles encountered 46 artificia
232               Pfaller et al. report that sea turtles respond to odors from biofouled plastic debris w
233                                              Turtles responded to manipulation of the local ultraviol
234 resident, seagrass-associated megafauna (sea turtles) revealed severe habitat degradation after the e
235 years at a globally important loggerhead sea turtle rookery-the Cape Verde Islands-we show the effect
236 individuals from all seven species of marine turtle, sampled from three ocean basins (Atlantic [ATL]:
237  the timing of (i.e., reset) cat walking and turtle scratching rhythms; in addition, reflex responses
238 as been shown previously for cat walking and turtle scratching.
239 be modified during cat and human walking and turtle scratching.
240 ce from studies of cat and human walking and turtle scratching.
241                                              Turtles seemed to confuse solo drifting debris with thei
242 atly enhances our ability to measure neonate turtle sex ratios at population levels across nesting si
243              A major question is whether the turtle shell evolved in the context of a terrestrial or
244                                          The turtle shell is a complex structure that currently serve
245 , are proposed for these fungi isolated from turtle shell lesions.
246 l materials (fish scales, arthropod cuticle, turtle shell) to endoskeletal materials (bone, shark car
247        The dorsal and ventral aspects of the turtle shell, the carapace and the plastron, are develop
248 e the complex three-dimensional structure of turtle skin.
249 test existing hypotheses on the evolution of turtle skull architecture.
250 evealing a stratified arrangement resembling turtle soft eggshell.
251 ous declines in productivity among three sea turtle species across a trophic spectrum provide strong
252                                          Sea turtle species in the genus Lepidochelys exhibit an unus
253        After hatching, juveniles of most sea turtle species undertake long migrations across ocean ba
254 m satellite tracking dataset for several sea turtle species, combined with capture-mark-recapture dat
255 dependent sex determination, present in most turtle species, is a mechanism that uses temperature to
256 ng the impact of climate change on imperiled turtle species.
257 cific to the date of the stranding study and turtle species.
258 se features are widely distributed along the turtle stem and into the crown clade, indicating the com
259 le hypothesis of fenestral closure along the turtle stem.
260 the presence of synthetic particles in every turtle subjected to investigation (n = 102) which includ
261                             To determine how turtles survive prolonged anoxia, we measured ~80 metabo
262                      In contrast, freshwater turtles survive weeks of anoxia at low temperatures with
263 gy may have played an important role in stem turtles surviving the Permian/Triassic extinction event.
264  and succinate/fumarate ratios were lower in turtle than in mouse heart, limiting the driving force f
265 nd post-release mortality of bycaught marine turtles that has until now been unaccounted for in trawl
266                     Thus, we suggest that in turtles, the sternal morphogenesis is prevented in the v
267 ated to result in 50% mortality in by-caught turtles throughout the year.
268 fate in the ventral mesenchyme has permitted turtles to develop their order-specific ventral morpholo
269 harles Darwin marveled at the ability of sea turtles to find isolated island breeding sites [1], but
270 ronal markers in the vestibular periphery of turtle, to use these markers to understand how efferent
271  domain gene, Dmrt1, in the red-eared slider turtle Trachemys scripta (T. scripta), which exhibits TS
272 any reptiles, including the red-eared slider turtle Trachemys scripta elegans (T. scripta), sex is de
273 n an ex vivo brain preparation from the pond turtle Trachemys scripta elegans, an intraexonic splicin
274 e dorsal neural tube-derived melanoblasts in turtle Trachemys scripta is regulated by similar mechani
275 patterning of plastron bones in a cryptodire turtle Trachemys scripta We show that plastron developme
276 aches, we also identified a claustrum in the turtle Trachemys scripta, a distant reptilian relative o
277 ate turtles of two TSD species, a freshwater turtle (Trachemys scripta) and a marine turtle (Caretta
278  carapace-spinal cord preparation from adult turtles (Trachemys scripta elegans).
279 ar firing in spinal motoneurons of red-eared turtles (Trachemys scripta elegans, either sex) evoked b
280 p's ridley (Lepidochelys kempii) wild-caught turtles, tracking their movements via satellite telemetr
281 rifter trajectories were uncharacteristic of turtle trajectories.
282 r in development, during the second phase of turtle trunk neural crest emigration.
283 ion from previous laboratory work [4-6] that turtles use a true navigation system in the open ocean,
284 re, we used dual patch-clamp recordings from turtle vestibular hair cells and their afferent neurons
285 t synapses present in central regions of the turtle vestibular semicircular canal epithelia.
286 eural activity with microelectrode arrays in turtle visual cortex while visually stimulating the reti
287 fference in ingestion rates between stranded turtles vs. those caught as bycatch from fishing activit
288 py on the gut bacterial communities of green turtles was evaluated.
289 e bacterial microbiota of antibiotic-treated turtles was largely due to an increase in abundance of G
290 erpreted as aquatic, a terrestrial origin of turtles was proposed based on evidence of fossorial adap
291  carapace-spinal cord preparation from adult turtles, we demonstrate that irregular firing and high-c
292 s and gut contents collected from loggerhead turtles were 35.7% (10/28) and 84.6% (11/13), respective
293 umulative total of 1091 certain and probable turtles were detected in the collected imagery.
294                          Twenty-eight marine turtles were examined on-board fishing vessels.
295 debris with their diet, and omnivorous green turtles were more attracted by artificial debris.
296 areas, affecting many species, including sea turtles which depend on these habitats for egg incubatio
297 inferred transformation between an ancestral turtle with an open, diapsid skull to the closed, anapsi
298 mpare efferent neuronal labeling patterns in turtle with two other amniotes using some of the same ma
299                                           In turtles with TSD, quantifying primary sex ratios is chal
300 ngs of pyramidal neurons in visual cortex of turtles with unknown genders.

 
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