fauna Term referring collectively to all animals in an area. The zoological counterpart of flora.
Fauna: A certain species of animals occurring in a particular region or period. Fertilization: Fusion of female and male haploid gametes to form a diploid zygote from which a new individual develops.
Meiofauna: Animals whose shortest dimension is less than 0.5 mm but greater than or equal to 0.1 mm.
fauna All of the animals present in a given region. feather stars See crinoids. fecundity The physical ability to reproduce.
Mayr bird fauna The Australian bird Petroica multicolor Reproductive isolation occurs in populations of Drosophila subject to population bottlenecking [edit] Parapatric ...
The Modern fauna includes fish, bivalves, gastropods and crabs. These were barely affected by the Permian extinction. The Modern fauna subsequently increased to over 600 marine families at present.
Terrestrial faunas of the early Triassic were dominated by therapsids, evolutionary offshoots of the by-then extinct "sail-backs". These therapsids divided into two groups: herbivores and carnivores.
Fascia Fatal Familial Insomnia (FFI) Fats[nutritional requirement] [molecular structures] [with trans fatty acids] [omega-3] FaunaAnimal life.
To me there are three, and these are, one, superposition of geological strata giving us an order through time, and two, faunal succession, ...
food web - diagrammatic representation of how flora and fauna in an ecosystem are interrelated by denoting which species provide sustenance to which species forest - a large tract of land covered with trees and underbrush (Webster) ...
Hierarchy of life , Origin of life , Life on Earth , Eukaryota (Plants/Flora, Animals/Fauna, Fungi, Protista) , Prokaryote (Archaea, Bacteria) , Virus , Evolutionary history of life , Biology Category , Portal ...
As one approaches polar regions one finds larger and larger populations of fewer and fewer species. Flora and fauna vary depending on climate, altitude, soils and the presence of other species.
Ethnobiology - a study of the past and present human interactions with the environment, for instance the use of diverse flora and fauna by indigenous societies ...
Potential environmental impacts, including: unintended transfer of transgenes through cross-pollination, unknown effects on other organisms (e.g., soil microbes), and loss of flora and fauna biodiversity ...
Fauna: the animal life of a given area. A list of all species of animals found in a given area Flora: the plant life of a given area. A list of all species of plants found in a given area., often listing diagnostic features.
See also: Organ, Animal, Plant, Animals, Trans
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