This template is used to generate a citation to any part of the 3rd edition of Lemurs of Madagascar (LoM3), illustrated by Stephen D. Nash and written by Russell Mittermeier, et al.
((LoM3
|pages=
|page=
))
|
|
In an article that uses only one individual page references to LoM3, use only the page parameter as follow:
((LoM3 | page = 23))
This yields:
Mittermeier, R.A.; Louis, E.E.; Richardson, M.; Schwitzer, C.; et al. (2010). Lemurs of Madagascar. Illustrated by S.D. Nash (3rd ed.). Conservation International. p. 23. ISBN 978-1-934151-23-5. OCLC 670545286.
In an article that references a page range within LoM3, such as an entire section on the Ring-tailed Lemur, use only the pages parameter as follow:
((LoM3 | pages = 368–375))
This yields:
Mittermeier, R.A.; Louis, E.E.; Richardson, M.; Schwitzer, C.; et al. (2010). Lemurs of Madagascar. Illustrated by S.D. Nash (3rd ed.). Conservation International. pp. 368–375. ISBN 978-1-934151-23-5. OCLC 670545286.
In a large article that uses many individual page references to LoM3, such as the article Lemur, do not use the page or pages parameter, but instead use short author-date citation in a footnotes and the harv parameter to allow linking from footnote to the full reference. This is done by using this template in conjunction with either ((LoM3 Sfn)) or ((LoM3 Harvnb)). The two are very similar, although the advantage of using ((LoM3 Sfn)) over ((LoM3 Harvnb)) is that no reference tags are needed, and multiple Sfn templates using the same page/location tags will automatically be consolidated in the references section.
Markup | Result |
---|---|
At least 17 giant lemurs used to live
on Madagascar.((LoM3 Sfn | page = 22)) There
were also 3 kinds of giant eagles and 8 kinds
of elephant bird on the island up until
recently.((LoM3 Sfn | page = 22))
The introduced tree ''Leucaena leucocephala''
causes hair loss in ring-tailed
lemurs.((LoM3 Sfn | pages = 368–375))
First documented by sailors before the 17th
century, intensive studies of lemur behavior
did not begin until the
1960s.((LoM3 Sfn | loc = chapter 4))
== Notes ==
((reflist))
== References ==
* ((LoM3 | harv))
|
At least 17 giant lemurs used to live on Madagascar.[1] There were also 3 kinds of giant eagles and 8 kinds of elephant bird on the island up until recently.[1]
The introduced tree Leucaena leucocephala causes hair loss in ring-tailed lemurs.[2] First documented by sailors before the 17th century, intensive studies of lemur behavior did not begin until the 1960s.[3]
|
At least 17 giant lemurs used to live
on Madagascar.<ref name=LoM_p22>((LoM3 Harvnb
| page = 22))</ref> There were also 3 kinds
of giant eagles and 8 kinds of elephant bird
on the island up until recently.<ref name=LoM_p22/>
The introduced tree ''Leucaena leucocephala''
causes hair loss in ring-tailed
lemurs.<ref>((LoM3 Harvnb | pages = 368–375))</ref>
First documented by sailors before the 17th
century, intensive studies of lemur behavior
did not begin until the
1960s.<ref name=LoM3_Ch4>((LoM3 Harvnb |
loc = chapter 4))</ref>
== Notes ==
((reflist))
== References ==
* ((LoM3))
|
At least 17 giant lemurs used to live on Madagascar.[1] There were also 3 kinds of giant eagles and 8 kinds of elephant bird on the island up until recently.[1]
The introduced tree Leucaena leucocephala causes hair loss in ring-tailed lemurs.[2] First documented by sailors before the 17th century, intensive studies of lemur behavior did not begin until the 1960s.[3]
|