Definition & Betydelse | Engelska ordet GENUS'
GENUS'
Definition av GENUS'
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Exempel på hur man kan använda GENUS' i en mening
- Five skulls, one molar, and one skeleton with a skull are known; the last is the genus' most complete specimen.
- While most Mycobacterium species are non-pathogenic, the genus' characteristic complex cell wall contributes to evasion from host defenses.
- However the characters preserved are inconclusive regarding the genus' taxonomic affinity; it can at best be placed in the scalidophoran total group, since it is currently impossible to ally it with the Priapulids or other scalidophora.
- Orthoceras was formerly thought to have had a worldwide distribution due to the genus' use as a wastebasket taxon for numerous species of conical-shelled nautiloids throughout the Paleozoic and Triassic.
- The classification of Salvia has long been based on the genus' unusual pollination and stamen structure, which was presumed to have evolved only once.
- One of the genus' most notable attributes are the large "fangs" at the front of the upper and lower jaws and on the palatine bones, leading to its misleading nickname among fossil hunters and paleoichthyologists, "the saber-toothed herring".
- Hailed by the Chinese, among other cultures as shown by the genus' Latinate scientific name Panax as a panacea, the most potent and therefore most demanded type of ginseng, Panax quinquefolius, grew in Manchuria and the Appalachian Mountains.
- A study on the genus' premolar intercuspid notches indicated Chasmaporthetes was likely hypercarnivorous rather than durophagous as its modern cousins (excluding the aardwolf) are.
- In 1907, John Bell Hatcher redescribed the teeth of Dysganus, and found that the genus' teeth were composed of those from Hadrosaurs and Ceratopsids making it a chimera and nomen dubium.
- Drosera pedicellaris is part of the large group of the so-called "pygmy sundews", which form the genus' section Bryastrum.
- The generic name, Lampropeltis, is derived from Greek Lampros, meaning "shiny", and pelta, meaning "shield", likely in reference to the genus' smooth and shiny dorsal scales.
- As indicated by analysis of mt and nDNA sequences and calibrated with geological data, this genus' ancestors probably diverged from those of Mitu, their closest living relatives, in the Tortonian (early Late Miocene), some 8–7.
- Results of a morphometric analysis of the pelages of 57 clouded leopards sampled throughout the genus' wide geographical range indicated that the two morphological groups differ primarily in the size of their cloud markings.
- The genus' name, Aktiogavialis, is derived from the Greek words aktios (river) and gavialis (gavial).
- The generic name, Lampropeltis, is derived from Greek Lampros, meaning "shiny", and pelta, meaning "shield", likely in reference to the genus' smooth and shiny dorsal scales.
- Laytonia is an extinct genus of prehistoric halosaur that lived in deep water off the North American Pacific Coast from the Zemorrian Epoch (comprising either the latest Oligocene or lower Miocene) until during the Upper Miocene subepoch, when tectonic uplift effectively destroyed the genus' habitat by making the deep water too shallow.
- The name refers to the genus' describer, entomologist Yutaka Yoshiyasu of Kyoto Prefectural University.
- Like many other genuses in the family Tachinidae and Tachininae, it's diet mainly consisted of either nuts and fruit, and in large groups feeding on dead animal carcasses before the genus' extinction in New Zealand.
- Elops species use estuarine areas and hypersaline lagoons; changes in the quality of these habitats may affect this genus' population dynamics.
- It has been assigned either to the family Cochliodontidae or an indeterminate position within the subclass Holocephali, although in 1984 researcher Rainer Zangerl insisted that nothing is known of the genus' classification and that it may be unrelated to holocephalans.
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