“…It was in agreement with Getty et al, (1930) in ox, Grossman (1960) in camel, Mills (2003) in cattle, Dyce (2006) in ox, Frandson et al, (2006) in cattle, Budras et al, (2009) in horse and Akers and Denbow (2013) in ruminants, but in contradiction to the findings of Leach (1946) in cat, Sebastiani and Fishbeck (2005) in cat and Hussain (2010) in goat. But contradictory to the findings of Duzler et al, (2006) in avian species, Tomar et al, (2011) in Pariah Kite, Satyamoorthy et al, (2012) in Spot-billed pelican, Dewangan et al, (2014) in pigeon, John et al, (2014) in pigeon, crow and owl, Jayachitra et al, (2015) in emu, turkey and duck, John et al, (2015) in red wattled lap-wing, Sreeranjini et al, (2015) in male Green-winged Macaw, Pathak et al, (2017) in peacock and turkey and Wani et al, (2017) in Common Moorhen. Sebastiani and Fishbeck (2005) reported that the sternum of cat was slim and elongated.…”