نتایج جستجو برای: decomposing feathers

تعداد نتایج: 9893  

Journal: :The Journal of animal ecology 2012
A P Møller J M Peralta-Sánchez J T Nielsen E López-Hernández J J Soler

1. Predators often prey on individuals that are sick or otherwise weakened. Although previous studies have shown higher abundance of parasites in prey, whether prey have elevated loads of micro-organisms remains to be determined. 2. We quantified the abundance of bacteria and fungi on feathers of woodpigeons Columba palumbus L., jays Garrulus glandarius L. and blackbirds Turdus merula L. that e...

Journal: :Marine pollution bulletin 2014
Robb S A Kaler Leah A Kenney Alexander L Bond Collin A Eagles-Smith

Mercury (Hg) is a toxic element distributed globally through atmospheric transport. Agattu Island, located in the western Aleutian Islands, Alaska, has no history of point-sources of Hg contamination. We provide baseline levels of total mercury (THg) concentrations in breast feathers of three birds that breed on the island. Geometric mean THg concentrations in feathers of fork-tailed storm-petr...

Journal: :Environmental Health Perspectives 2000
V McGovern

1 1i 1T 1 F"" What happens when an industry's by-product turns out to be as valuable as its primary products? The poultry industry may be about to find out. Scientists are exploring new methods for turning the industry's excess fluff into products ranging from notepaper to auto body parts to high-quality animal feed, saving trees and replacing man-made materials in the process. The National Chi...

Journal: :Current Biology 2017
Lida Xing Ryan C. McKellar Xing Xu Gang Li Ming Bai W. Scott Persons Tetsuto Miyashita Michael J. Benton Jianping Zhang Alexander P. Wolfe Qiru Yi Kuowei Tseng Hao Ran Philip J. Currie

In his correspondence, Markus Lambertz [1] raises some concerns about the phylogenetic placement and feather development of DIP-V-15103, the amber-entombed tail section that we recently reported [2] as fragmentary remains of a non-pygostylian coelurosaur (likely within the basal part of Coelurosauria). We here would like to respond to these concerns.

2015
Sara Pedro José C. Xavier Sílvia Tavares Phil N. Trathan Norman Ratcliffe Vitor H. Paiva Renata Medeiros Eduarda Pereira Miguel A. Pardal Sébastien Descamps

Feathers have been widely used to assess mercury contamination in birds as they reflect metal concentrations accumulated between successive moult periods: they are also easy to sample and have minimum impact on the study birds. Moult is considered the major pathway for mercury excretion in seabirds. Penguins are widely believed to undergo a complete, annual moult during which they do not feed. ...

Journal: :The Journal of experimental biology 2011
Chad M Eliason Matthew D Shawkey

Honest advertisement models posit that sexually selected traits are costly to produce, maintain or otherwise bear. Brightly coloured feathers are thought to be classic examples of these models, but evidence for a cost in feathers not coloured by carotenoid pigments is scarce. Unlike pigment-based colours, iridescent feather colours are produced by light scattering in modified feather barbules t...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2014
Bodo D Wilts Kristel Michielsen Hans De Raedt Doekele G Stavenga

Birds-of-paradise are nature's prime examples of the evolution of color by sexual selection. Their brilliant, structurally colored feathers play a principal role in mating displays. The structural coloration of both the occipital and breast feathers of the bird-of-paradise Lawes' parotia is produced by melanin rodlets arranged in layers, together acting as interference reflectors. Light reflect...

Journal: :Cell 2014
Cheng-Ming Chuong Ramray Bhat Randall B. Widelitz Mina J. Bissell

Ectodermal appendages such as feathers, hair, mammary glands, salivary glands, and sweat glands form branches, allowing much-increased surface for functional differentiation and secretion. Here, the principles of branching morphogenesis are exemplified by the mammary gland and feathers.

Journal: :Methods in Ecology and Evolution 2014

2016
Graham Askew

Suzanne: Indeed, there are other species of birds related to peacocks that use feather vibrations in a very similar way during mating displays, including the Great Argus and a variety of Peacock Pheasants. Some birds species have feathers that make sounds due to vibrations driven by the passage of air over the feathers during flight,while others drive the vibrations using specially adapted feat...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید