Refine
Has Fulltext
- yes (44)
Is part of the Bibliography
- yes (44)
Year of publication
Document Type
- Journal article (44) (remove)
Keywords
- Zoologie (5)
- Biologie (4)
- Frosch (2)
- Amazonia (1)
- Ant-plant interactions ; Herbivory Macaranga ; Mutualism ; Myrmecophytes (1)
- Araneae (1)
- Bialowieza (1)
- Biene (1)
- Bienenwolf (1)
- Estivation (1)
- European beech (1)
- Extrembiotop (1)
- Hyperolius viridiflavus (1)
- Karyotype; chromosome banding; Desertellio elongatus; Crustacea; Isopoda; Oniscidea (1)
- Käfer (1)
- Lamto Reserve (1)
- Megaponera analis (1)
- Monogamie (1)
- Nitrogen metabolism (1)
- Osmoregulation (1)
- Savanna (1)
- Skorpion (1)
- Verhaltensökologie (1)
- West Africa (1)
- ant communities (1)
- bark beetles (1)
- bees (1)
- burned savanna (1)
- canopy fogging (1)
- chemische Familienabzeichen (1)
- communities (1)
- community composition (1)
- community structure (1)
- connectance (1)
- decay (1)
- diversity (1)
- ecology (1)
- european beech forests (1)
- forest (1)
- forest disturbance (1)
- forest management (1)
- functional diversity (1)
- gradient (1)
- guild constancy (1)
- individuelles Kennen (1)
- insecticidal knockdown (1)
- land use (1)
- land-use intensity (1)
- lridophores (1)
- management (1)
- modularity (1)
- mutualism (1)
- norway spruce (1)
- number of interactions (1)
- pristine forests (1)
- rare (1)
- recolonization (1)
- relative abundance (1)
- rescue behavior (1)
- rural domain (1)
- savanna woodland (1)
- seasonality (1)
- soil macrofauna (1)
- species composition (1)
- species richness (1)
- species richness estimation (1)
- substrate quality (1)
- temperate forests (1)
- trinervitermes (1)
- true diversity (1)
- woody plant richness (1)
Institute
- Theodor-Boveri-Institut für Biowissenschaften (44) (remove)
No abstract available
No abstract available
No abstract available
Vogelzwerge des Waldes
(1964)
No abstract available
No abstract available
Vögel am Roten Meer
(1965)
No abstract available
No abstract available
No abstract available
No abstract available
1. Scorpions can orient menotactically to horizontal air currents (Fig. 1). 2. Changing the wind velocity from 0,05-0,1 m/sec to 3--5 m/sec has no influence on the menotactic angle kept by an anemomenotactic oriented scorpion (Fig. 2). 3. The receptors percieving the direction of air currents are the trichobothria. 4. Orientation to horizon landmarks, anemomenotactic and astromenotactic orientation does not exclude each other but complete themthelves mutually: a) A scorpion orienting to horizon landmarks learns the corresponding anemomenotactic and astromenotactic angle (Fig. 4). b) While orienting anemomenotactically (which is normally the main means of orientation when landmarks are absent) they continously learn new astromenotactical angles (Fig. 5), thus compensating for the movement of the moon or sun which can not be compensated otherwise. c) Short calms and short changes of wind direction can be overcome by astrotaxis.