At the end of last year, China had 163 pandas in captivity and an estimated 1,590 in the wild. |
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Through an elaborate maze of nets suspended by floats, fish are channelled into captivity. |
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If Amber does make a full recovery she will spend the rest of her life in captivity for her own protection. |
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Falcated Teals are hardy birds and bread fairly easily in captivity. They are primarily aquatic feeders, but do occasionally dive for food. |
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Shortly after his release from captivity, he contemplates his pique at being served cold soup. |
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The first time wild dog puppies delivered in captivity in the Park, was in 2001 January, when the mother delivered four pups. |
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The sad fate of the German prisoners of war held in Soviet captivity is generally known in the Federal Republic. |
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Most animals' basic needs can be met in captivity if conditions are sufficiently favourable. |
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Thousands of the partridges, a native bird of Spain, are being bred in captivity and then released into the wild in Scotland. |
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For many of the young bucks in their scarlet tunics, what starts as a great imperial adventure ends in either a squalid death or captivity. |
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Although no hybridization between those species has been noted in the wild, Amazona species are known to hybridize in captivity. |
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In China, these deer are now bred in captivity so that their musk can be harvested. |
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She talks of her confrontational attitude toward them during the early days of her captivity. |
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Some Australian bird species or parrot species will breed quite happily here in captivity. |
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So it was a group of four that finally made it to where humans had been keeping boobooks in captivity. |
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In captivity, the tigers were generally thought to be slothful, sluggish and boring and did not entertain their viewers. |
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The maintenance of species in captivity in zoos, aquaria, and botanic gardens is sometimes called ex situ conservation. |
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In the meantime, the bear that savaged Mitch also makes a return and is taken into captivity, bringing back another ghost from Einar's past. |
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Female cowbirds were held in captivity and released at the end of the breeding season. |
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While in captivity, they are very vocal, uttering high-pitched whines and howls, rasping growls. |
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Millions of the 5 million or so who returned alive from German captivity were sentenced to labour camps. |
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Zookeepers run enrichment programmes to mimic the natural behaviour of the animals in the wild and to stimulate them in captivity. |
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She was moved to see a news ticker counting off her 140th day of captivity. |
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Safari World's general manager insists that all his apes were acquired through the proper channels, or bred in captivity. |
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Conversely, it is well known that cracids can hybridize very easily in captivity, though natural hybridization has not been reported in the wild. |
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The Oregon Zoo developed husbandry techniques to breed pygmy rabbits in captivity. |
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Many of this species in captivity have been hybridised with the Satyr tragopan, since the females look so similar. |
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Were the families of those who did not survive captivity fairly compensated? |
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She will survive her many wounds and, we hope, mend from the trauma of her captivity. |
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But he was implicated in the Ridolfi plot in 1571, spent more years in captivity, and in the later 1570s lived in quiet retirement. |
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Those first few months of captivity, for the most part, passed the quickest. |
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Snakes that are housed together in captivity sometimes have little altercations over food. |
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He would occasionally fidget around in his chair restless from his captivity. |
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One of the greatest challenges for hatchery managers is to control the spread of fungus on fish held in captivity, particularly during autumn. |
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But they all hoped he would appear at any moment, complete with a host of angels at his back, and deliver them from their captivity. |
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I want to free the word contemplative from its captivity in Buddhist and Trappist monasteries and reclaim it for people like ourselves. |
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We need to be looked after, pampered, and allowed to breed in captivity with nubile young women. |
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However, it is so sad to know she will spend her life in captivity in the zoo, and especially sad since mangabeys are so rare in the wild. |
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When all you could remember was captivity, freedom didn't hold that much appeal. |
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He was released by kidnappers in Beirut after over three years in captivity. |
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Luckily it had jettisoned its bomb load and the crew baled out to safety and captivity. |
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The three cubs pictured above are believed to be the first set of polar bear triplets born in captivity. |
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A New Caledonian crow in captivity learned how to bend a piece of straight wire into a hook to probe for food. |
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The wild-eyed soldier rushed out like an animal released from captivity, and leaned along the railing, starting to laugh with uncontrollable joy. |
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They also take some beetle larvae and bees, and in captivity giant anteaters accept some fruit. |
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Because it is not pumpkin growing season, we'd grow it in captivity, of course, with special sunlamps in a green house. |
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Thousands more trout, sea bass, sea bream and cod that lived and died in captivity were also eaten. |
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The behaviour of animals in captivity was explained, as the students listened in rapt attention. |
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The birds have been bred in captivity and will be fitted with radio tags to monitor their survival. |
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What an opportunity to proclaim real liberty to those in physical captivity and spiritual bondage! |
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Most of the information available on the cusimanse derives from observation in captivity, and very few field studies have been conducted. |
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Most of the information known about the cusimanse has been gathered from data of animals in captivity. |
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While some of the animals are kept in zoos, the Sumatran rhino is difficult to breed in captivity. |
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Many zorilla families have been kept together in captivity, where mutual grooming appears common. |
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When kept alive in captivity for a short time at home I observed him to have an interesting feining posture. |
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The major had been in captivity for two months after being captured along with a team of Indian peacekeepers. |
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I had malaria 46 times during captivity, although luckily not while I was in the cage. |
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Zoo animals languish away in captivity, showing us nothing of their true natural behavior. |
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The French withdrew, taking the pope with them as a prisoner, and he died in French captivity. |
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Freedom, in short, is a subjective concept that can mean either liberation or lifelong captivity. |
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The urine is likely to be obtained from foxes kept in captivity or those that have been shot by gamekeepers to protect their stock. |
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As a former prisoner of war who was tortured while in captivity, he knows better than anyone else the costs and benefits of such behavior. |
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Later in 1945, when in captivity, he spoke about the shooting to fellow prisoners. |
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I met Brian just six months after he came out of captivity, and I was struck by how unsettled he seemed. |
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After three and a half years in captivity, only one-third of the prisoners were still alive. |
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A quarter of all Asian elephants are held in captivity, including 9-15 per cent of the total population of the Sumatran subspecies. |
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This hatchling is just one of hundreds of its kind that have been incubated and raised in captivity for release into North America's wetlands. |
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Mary, once famed for her thick, auburn hair, had gone nearly bald during her years in captivity. |
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In captivity, the hawk-headed parrot has a life span comparable to most other medium size parrots. |
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The tamarin is the first primate bred in captivity with the goal of reintroducing it into the wild. |
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These crestless firebacks are also very striking birds but are not very common in captivity. |
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His brothers could never quite agree on his ransom price, so Ferdinand withered away in captivity. |
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But fortunately, Peter gets hold of a rope and uses it as a noose with which to muzzle the wolf and take him into captivity. |
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In the meantime, they were not unkind to him, and their greatest offense was his captivity. |
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Some may be based on birds in captivity in Europe that were unintentionally overfed, and fattened up beyond what would occur in nature. |
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This was the first time in 112 years that a Sumatran rhinoceros successfully reproduced in captivity. |
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Although they are now rare in the wild, Temminck's tragopans breed very well in captivity. |
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According to Xinhua, China's state news agency, this year more pandas have already been born in captivity than in any other year on record. |
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Former inmates lead you through prison cells and tell you powerful stories about the routines and punishments they endured during their captivity. |
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Like a Jack in the Box just sprung from coiled captivity, he begins rambling excitedly. |
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The Taliban contacts who provided the letters say they did reach Bergdahl in captivity. |
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Through persistence and ingenuity Wille is able to free himself from his captivity and then finds shelter with Anni, a young, sturdy and independent Lapp peasant. |
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One of his positions was that of prosector for the London Zoo, which meant that he had to dissect and preserve any zoo animals that died in captivity. |
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This is the first kudu ever held in captivity at Queen's Park. |
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Since it's very time consuming and inefficient to catch them in the wild, scientists rear the biocontrol agents in captivity on their host insect. |
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During his captivity Ai paced so incessantly that by the time he got out, after 81 days, he had lost an estimated 26 pounds. |
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Biologists live-captured dozens of owls, kestrels, hawks and peregrine falcons, which might have fed on poisoned rats, and temporarily held them in captivity. |
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This date marks the 200th Anniversary to the very day when the rebel leader ended his resistance and walked through the gates of Humewood and into captivity. |
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Those wishing to breed the baraband parakeet in captivity should house pairs separately in long, spacious aviaries so they don't become overly fat. |
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The cheetahs are kept in enclosures and are used for pairing, also with animals bred in captivity, as a further way of promoting their numbers and their gene pool. |
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Previous experience showed that some male pied flycatchers sing in captivity during the part of the breeding season when free-living birds are pairing. |
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Rothfels reminds us of the troubling questions about animal captivity. |
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Animal keepers have long recognized that some species, such as ring-tailed lemurs and snow leopards, adapt better to captivity than other species do. |
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Patas, talapoins, and mangabeys are also found in captivity with some frequency, and patas are also called hussar, military, or mustached monkeys by some exhibitors. |
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Among the New Mexicans were a Ute raised in captivity by New Mexicans and a New Mexican raised in captivity among the Utes until his family were able to ransom him. |
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Their captivity was a pretty big story for a while, but then came September, and the inferno of Lower Manhattan. |
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Dragging them from their wide open spaces into captivity is akin to the American scandal of driving Comanches and other Plains Indians onto reservations. |
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I did more research and I read that mourning doves can live up to seventeen years in captivity, but I'm sure they have to be active to be healthy. |
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This event should be observed by all the descendants of former bondmen and bondwomen, as we call to mind the beginning of our captivity and bondage in this country. |
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Typically, girls and women are lured into captivity by promises of jobs in child care, waitressing, fashion, or entertainment. |
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The Crane Working Group sends in a member to seize one of the eggs, to be kept in an incubator and hatched in captivity for release at a later stage. |
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The oldest Indian Ocean bottlenose dolphin to be born and raised in captivity, 35-year-old Dolly was last seen mating with Domino in September last year. |
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Beyond the question of caring for these exotic creatures was the issue of whether anything of value to natural history could be learned by studying animals in captivity. |
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The domestic guinea pig, Cavia porcellus, now found worldwide in captivity, has been bred for meat for more than three thousand years in South America. |
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During his literal captivity as a prisoner of war in Kentucky, he becomes figuratively captivated by her sophistries, which are explicitly coded as American. |
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The Soviet Union was inundated with foreign evangelists and missionaries commanding technological resources unimaginable to a church just emerging from captivity. |
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The thing is Robyn we've got the numbers here and as you said it's quite a large proportion if you like of Wild African dogs in captivity in Australia. |
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Even if they have been reared from a young age in captivity, news reports abound with animal attacks. |
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The next three days of captivity are described over three chapters. |
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The pope was taken prisoner and kept in polite captivity for nine months. |
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Since Australian funnel-web spiders can live for more than five years in captivity, a small group of these spiders yields plenty of toxins for King's chemical analysis. |
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Keep in mind that animals are also often traumatized by captivity and display bizarre behavior untypical of their kind unless treated with respect and dignity. |
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The first rex cat born in captivity, a cream male subsequently named Kallibunker, arrived with a retinue of four straight-hair littermates on July 21, 1950, in Bodmin Moor. |
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She would spend her days under her husband's captivity wondering how to escape with her daughter. |
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Even when bred in captivity, Leahy said breeding facilities are often horrendous, resembling factory farming. |
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But the general circumstances of her capture and captivity have been known and widely reported for more than a year now. |
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The center had seemingly proven wrong people who contend that rescued eaglets can only survive in captivity. |
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It came as a joyous daybreak to end the long night of captivity. |
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The influence of eyestalk ablation on the reproduction of the freshwater Macrobrachium acanthurus shrimp in captivity. |
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The most common pinniped species kept in captivity is the California sea lion as it is abundant and easy to train. |
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Other species popularly kept in captivity include the grey seal and harbor seal. |
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Whales and dolphins have been kept in captivity for use in education, research and entertainment since the 19th century. |
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A captive Amazon river dolphin housed at Acuario de Valencia is the only trained river dolphin in captivity. |
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Sea otters can do well in captivity, and are featured in over 40 public aquariums and zoos. |
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The oldest manatee in captivity was Snooty, at the South Florida Museum's Parker Manatee Aquarium in Bradenton, Florida. |
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Fish farming can enclose the entire breeding cycle of the fish, with fish being bred in captivity. |
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Some fish prove difficult to breed in captivity and can be caught in the wild as juveniles and brought into captivity to increase their weight. |
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With scientific progress more species are being made to breed in captivity. |
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As of 2006, 30 belugas were in Canada and 28 in the United States, and 42 deaths in captivity had been reported up to that time. |
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The success of belugas turned attention to maintaining their relative, the narwhal, in captivity. |
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However, in repeated attempts in the 1960s and 1970s, all narwhals kept in captivity died within months. |
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One stranded humpback whale calf was kept in captivity for rehabilitation, but died days later. |
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Flamingos are capable flyers and flamingos in captivity often require wing clipping to prevent escape. |
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By 22 August, all German forces west of the Allied lines were dead or in captivity. |
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In captivity, wildebeest have lived beyond 20 years old, and impalas have reached their late teens. |
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Rats are known to burrow extensively, both in the wild and in captivity, if given access to a suitable substrate. |
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In captivity, their longevity can be as long as 15 years, though in the wild they typically do not survive past 5 years of age. |
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When in captivity, moles will eat a wide variety of food items including liver, mice, mealworms, shrews and maggots. |
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Deer have long been bred in captivity as ornaments for parks, but only in the case of reindeer has thorough domestication succeeded. |
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The average lifespan is 15 to 18 years in captivity, although one case is recorded as living 25 years and 5 months. |
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All of the subspecies are present in captivity, but a lack of suitable habitats and government efforts prevent their reintroduction. |
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Young birds also give a true song, especially in captivity, a warbling similar to that of the European greenfinch. |
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Snakes bred in captivity tend to make better pets and are considered preferable to wild caught specimens. |
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Common toads can live for many years and have survived for fifty years in captivity. |
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The English became familiar with captivity narratives written by Barbary pirates' prisoners and ransomed captives, as so many people were taken. |
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And since so many of the slaves died in captivity, he developed a plan while in the Province of Cicao on Hispaniola. |
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Raised entirely in captivity, Snooty was never to be released into the wild. |
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Studies in bird behaviour include the use of tamed and trained birds in captivity. |
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Critically endangered species such as the California condor have had to be captured and bred in captivity. |
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In captivity, some individuals are claimed to have lived for over a century. |
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Hundreds if not thousands of bottlenose dolphins live in captivity across the world, though exact numbers are hard to determine. |
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However, reindeer were not bred in captivity, though they were tamed for milking as well as for use as draught animals or beasts of burden. |
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She was captured by the Romans while pregnant, so her son Thumelicus, grew up in Roman captivity. |
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Once in captivity and out of their natural habitat, many pets die or fail to reproduce. |
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At the start of the 20th century there were over 700,000 birds in captivity. |
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There are an estimated 90,000 individuals of Giraffa in the wild, with 1,144 currently in captivity. |
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The largest crocodile in captivity, known locally as Lolong, was captured in the southern island of Mindanao. |
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They were captured there by the Portuguese and held in captivity for five years. |
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Only four of the 86 survivors escaped their captivity, the others having been either killed or starved to death. |
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The earliest recorded birth of polar bears in captivity was on 11 October 2011 in the Toronto Zoo. |
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Peregrine falcons have been successfully bred in captivity, both for falconry and for release back into the wild. |
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Many were weak and starved when they surrendered and 4,250 died in captivity. |
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But this episode taught us quite a bit, and we will one day learn more once we are able to hold another vaginoid in captivity. |
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There are also fewer than ten pilot whales, Amazon river dolphins, Risso's dolphins, spinner dolphins, or tucuxi in captivity. |
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Nancy had started in on how sad it was about all dear old Mother Nature's children that were in captivity. |
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Hematology of the red-capped parrot and vinaceous Amazon parrot in captivity. |
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In the 1970s, scientists removed the goats and raised tortoise babies in captivity, slowly repopulating the island. |
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They scavenge if necessary, and are known to resort to cannibalism in captivity. |
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Though mason bees are nonstinging and easy to rear in captivity, they are creatures of habit and will only pollinate from April until June. |
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A TEN-week-old baby elephant born in captivity thanks to artificial insemination was blessed at a Midland zoo. |
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Compared to many other species, however, dolphin behavior has been studied extensively, both in captivity and in the wild. |
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Dr Fleay was the first to breed platypus in captivity, and many of his discoveries are still used today at wildlife parks around Australia. |
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Currently, there are only about 75 pygmy slow lorises in North American zoos and aquariums and fewer than 200 in captivity worldwide. |
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A Persian onager was born this month in Virginia, one of he few onagers to be born in captivity or in Iran, where they are endangered. |
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Chitals breed fast even in captivity and so the deer population in the zoos and other parks has been growing rapidly. |
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Analysis of its teeth suggest that prior to its death it had spent a significant amount of time in captivity. |
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It also includes a guide to keeping octopi in captivity and 32 pages of color photos. |
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To decolonize preaching is to imagine a human community shaped by discourses of love and freedom, rather than dominance and captivity. |
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He rejected the offer, stating in essence, that the Union could afford to leave their men in captivity, the Confederacy could not. |
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Shin eventually escaped North Korean captivity while in Vienna. |
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In captivity the aoudad seems to like water and to enjoy taking a bath. The diet consists of grass, herbaceous plants, and stunted bushes. |
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Arctic hare do not survive well in captivity, living only a year and a half at most. |
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He says that the men are often highly motivated to fight for the women because of an extreme fear of losing them to captivity. |
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In Boron's Joseph d'Arimathe, Joseph is imprisoned much as in the Acts, but it is the Grail that sustains him during his captivity. |
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During his short captivity within France, Saint Patrick learned about French monasticism. |
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Patrick writes in The Confession that the time he spent in captivity was critical to his spiritual development. |
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After six years of captivity he heard a voice telling him that he would soon go home, and then that his ship was ready. |
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During his time in captivity Saint Patrick became fluent in the Irish language and culture. |
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On his way back to Britain Saint Patrick was captured again and spent 60 days in captivity in Tours, France. |
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He left again in 1194 and battled Philip for five years, attempting to regain the lands seized during his captivity. |
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Richard died in captivity early the next year, probably murdered, bringing an end to the main Plantagenet line. |
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Most of his life as king was spent on Crusade, in captivity, or actively defending his lands in France. |
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After his release from German captivity Richard showed some regret for his earlier conduct, but he was not reunited with his wife. |
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Edward remained in captivity until March, and even after his release he was kept under strict surveillance. |
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Yet, the French never invaded England and France's King John II died in captivity in England. |
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Charles briefly escaped captivity in 1647, made a secret alliance with the Scots, and incited fresh Royalist rebellions. |
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When kept in captivity in warm, humid conditions, the fur may turn a pale shade of green due to algae growing inside the guard hairs. |
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When Richard returned from captivity in Austria in May 1194, he summoned a fleet of 100 ships and an army to the port. |
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In 1798, Napoleon Bonaparte's General Louis Alexandre Berthier invaded Italy, imprisoning Pope Pius VI, who died in captivity. |
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They were agriculturalists, raising animals in captivity as well as growing crops. |
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Many Romans were taken into captivity, and did not regain their freedom until Theoderic ransomed them three years later. |
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In the process, the Goths seized enormous booty and took thousands into captivity. |
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Bottlenose dolphins are the most common, as they are relatively easy to train, have a long lifespan in captivity and have a friendly appearance. |
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In repeated attempts in the 1960s and 1970s, narwhals kept in captivity died within months. |
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While Lynch suffers from amnesia due to her injuries, Lynch herself has denied any mistreatment whilst in captivity. |
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Pelicans live for 15 to 25 years in the wild, although one reached an age of 54 years in captivity. |
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The nene is a handsome bird that almost became extinct in the wild but was reintroduced successfully from ones bred in captivity. |
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Henry's eldest son, Edward, escaped from captivity to defeat de Montfort at the Battle of Evesham the following year and freed his father. |
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They are largely resistant to tularemia, but are reputed to suffer from canine distemper in captivity. |
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The European pine marten has lived to 18 years in captivity, but in the wild a lifespan of eight to ten years is more typical. |
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Wild boar can thrive in captivity, though piglets grow slowly and poorly without their mothers. |
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Once the hostage was in captivity, the debtor had ten days to pay the debt to have the hostage released. |
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The king was then taken to London and died later in captivity at Pontefract Castle. |
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In Jarman's version, Edward finally escapes captivity, following the tradition in the Fieschi letter. |
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Puffins in captivity have been known to breed as early as three years of age. |
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Unlike the stoat and least weasel, the European polecat is easy to breed in captivity. |
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Grey seals have proved amenable to life in captivity and are commonly found zoo animals around their native range, particularly in Europe. |
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At least one grey seal, probably escaped from captivity, has been observed in the Black Sea near the coasts of Ukraine. |
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In captivity, dolphins seemingly enter a fully asleep state where both eyes are closed and there is no response to mild external stimuli. |
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Orcas, the largest species of dolphin, have been involved in fatal attacks on humans in captivity. |
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Tilikum's behaviour sparked the production of the documentary Blackfish, which focuses on the consequences of keeping orcas in captivity. |
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Porpoises are sometimes kept in captivity and trained to perform tricks, but breeding success has been poor. |
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Porpoises, as opposed to their dolphin counterparts, generally do not thrive in captivity, and are very difficult to maintain. |
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Ninety four in total have been in captivity in Japan, eleven in China, and at least two in Indonesia. |
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This breeding success proved that porpoises can be successfully bred in captivity, and this could open up new conservation options. |
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Small numbers of Dall's porpoises have been kept in captivity in both the United States and Japan. |
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They are also popular to hobbyists who want to breed marine species in captivity. |
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Other than at SeaWorld, at least 90 common dolphins are known to have been captured from the wild and kept in captivity. |
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Because of their size and need to migrate, gray whales have rarely been held in captivity, and then only for brief periods of time. |
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They are commonly kept in captivity and are even sometimes trained to perform tricks and tasks. |
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Seals have been kept in captivity since at least Ancient Rome and their trainability was noted by Pliny the Elder. |
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The city-state's wildlife reserves say that they ensure their animals in captivity have habitats as close to that of the wild as part of their conservation efforts. |
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Red deer live over 20 years in captivity and in the wild they live 10 to 13 years, though some subspecies with less predation pressure average 15 years. |
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Beluga whales were the first whales to be kept in captivity. |
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Fantastic The aquarium at London Zoo breeds 26 species in captivity including eight species of Mexican pupfish and ten livebearers, five of which are now extinct in the wild. |
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Bottlenose dolphins are the most common species of dolphin kept in dolphinariums as they are relatively easy to train and have a long lifespan in captivity. |
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Nomukhan, after returning from captivity in the Golden Horde, expressed resentment that Zhenjin had been made heir apparent, but he was banished to the north. |
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Before the end of 1175 Rhodri had escaped from captivity and gathered sufficient support to be able to drive Dafydd from Anglesey and across the River Conwy. |
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The young cranes that Putin helped direct had been born in captivity and raised by a conservation project located on the banks of the Siberian Ob River. |
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Common ostriches in captivity have lived to 62 years and 7 months. |
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There were three attempts to keep minke whales in captivity in Japan. |
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In captivity, plains zebras have been crossed with mountain zebras. |
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After he has spent seven years in captivity on Ogygia, the island of Calypso, she falls deeply in love with him, even though he has consistently spurned her advances. |
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Although several other species are known to live in captivity for up to 20 years, their greatest recorded ages are underestimates because the birds can outlive their rings. |
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Peregrine falcon recovery teams breed the species in captivity. |
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His captivity in Austria, and the heavy ransom he paid for his liberty. |
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Dolphins are sometimes kept in captivity and trained to perform tricks. |
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This mating was later repeated in captivity, producing a hybrid calf. |
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Aquariums have tried housing other species of whales in captivity. |
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Organizations such as World Animal Protection and the Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society campaign against the practice of keeping them in captivity. |
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Once the slaves set foot in the castle, they could spend up to three months in captivity under these dreadful conditions before being shipped off to the New World. |
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Bury suggests that Wicklow was also the port through which Patrick made his escape after his six years captivity, though offers only circumstantial evidence to support this. |
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The median life span for a rhesus monkey in captivity is about 27 years, but some can reach age 40, says study coauthor Julie Mattison, a physiologist at the aging institute. |
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After six years, Saint Patrick escaped captivity after hearing a voice urging him to travel to a distant port where a ship would be waiting to take him back to Britain. |
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There have been attempts to keep baleen whales in captivity. |
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There he encountered Geronimo de Aguilar, a Spanish Franciscan priest who had survived a shipwreck followed by a period in captivity with the Maya, before escaping. |
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Lack of births in captivity is mainly due the fact that there were few breeding attempts, many were actually kept in isolation and those who were not were often not mature. |
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They were later found and returned to captivity from the Gulf of Mexico. |
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With few exceptions, most hybrid antelope occur only in captivity. |
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Despite his complaints, the conditions of his captivity were not severe. |
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He maintained an attitude of superiority throughout his captivity. |
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Anecdotally, some individuals in captivity have been noted to have preferences for food fish types, although it is not clear if taste mediates this preference. |
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In 1364, John II died in London, while still in honourable captivity. |
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After a couple of years in captivity in Mexico he returned to Spain where King Carlos V named him adelantado with to explore and colonize Florida. |
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Hybrids with Risso's dolphin occur both in the wild and in captivity. |
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It is possibly a cougar or black leopard which was released after a law was passed in 1976 making it illegal for them to be kept in captivity outside zoos. |
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Captured common dolphins are said to be difficult to keep in captivity. |
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The killer whale's intelligence, trainability, striking appearance, playfulness in captivity and sheer size have made it a popular exhibit at aquaria and aquatic theme parks. |
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The Gesta includes other fantastical tales about Hereward's prowess, including disguising himself as a potter to spy on the king and escaping from captivity. |
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He is thought to have starved to death in captivity on or around 14 February 1400, although there is some question over the date and manner of his death. |
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It may be necessary to reorganize some species of animals into new populations, some in captivity, some in the wild, with the animals being managed as a whole as a megazoo. |
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Attempts have been made to keep the striped dolphin in captivity, but most have failed, with the exception of a few captured in Japan for the Taiji Whale Museum. |
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Risso's dolphins have successfully been taken into captivity in Japan and the United States, although not with the regularity of bottlenose dolphins or orcas. |
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During Atahualpa's captivity, the Spanish, although greatly outnumbered, forced him to order his generals to back down by threatening to kill him if he did not. |
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Unlike the brown bear, polar bears in captivity are rarely overweight or particularly large, possibly as a reaction to the warm conditions of most zoos. |
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These squirrels can live to be 20 years old in captivity, but in the wild live much shorter lives due to predation and the challenges of their habitat. |
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The Portuguese Cortes refused to approve the return of Ceuta in exchange for the Infante Ferdinand who remained in captivity until his death six years later. |
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Holding the Zhengtong Emperor in captivity was a useless bargaining chip for the Oirats as long as another sat on his throne, so they released him back into Ming China. |
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Five condors had been free-flying initially and were then brought into captivity for medical treatment for various reasons including lead exposure, microtrash, or injury. |
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Some organizations, such as the Humane Society of the United States and World Animal Protection, object to keeping pinnipeds and other marine mammals in captivity. |
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He revoked grants from customs and of lands made during his captivity, undermining the position of those who had gained in his absence, particularly the Albany Stewarts. |
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Although David spent long periods in exile or captivity, he managed to resist English attempts to annex his kingdom, and left the monarchy in a strong position. |
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