Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Mermithergate> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 50 of
50
with 100 triples per page.
- Mermithergate abstract "A mermithergate is an ant worker that has a changed appearance as a result of a Enoplia nematode infection. The word was coined by William M. Wheeler in 1910. It is a combination of the nematode genus Mermis, for which Wheeler first described the phenomenon, and ergate, which means ant worker. Infected females (queens) are called mermithogynes.Up to five percent of some populations of Cephalotes atratus suffer from an infection by the tetradonematid nematode Myrmeconema neotropicum. It causes the ant's abdomen to turn from black to bright red, strikingly resembling a red berry. In addition, the ant now holds it up most of the time, and it is easily ripped off. Birds easily mistake these for real fruit and pick them, while they avoid eating normal ants. The nematodes pass through the bird's digestive system as eggs without harming it. The circle closes when C. atratus workers feed on the bird droppings, thus getting infected.".
- Mermithergate thumbnail Camponotus.punctulatus.mermithergate.-.wheeler.svg?width=300.
- Mermithergate wikiPageExternalLink 10493.pdf.
- Mermithergate wikiPageExternalLink 10564.pdf.
- Mermithergate wikiPageExternalLink 3398.pdf.
- Mermithergate wikiPageExternalLink 3407.pdf.
- Mermithergate wikiPageExternalLink nematode.htm.
- Mermithergate wikiPageID "15320273".
- Mermithergate wikiPageLength "2598".
- Mermithergate wikiPageOutDegree "18".
- Mermithergate wikiPageRevisionID "621394678".
- Mermithergate wikiPageWikiLink Abdomen.
- Mermithergate wikiPageWikiLink Ant.
- Mermithergate wikiPageWikiLink Category:Ants.
- Mermithergate wikiPageWikiLink Category:Enoplia.
- Mermithergate wikiPageWikiLink Category:Parasitism.
- Mermithergate wikiPageWikiLink Cephalotes.
- Mermithergate wikiPageWikiLink Cephalotes_atratus.
- Mermithergate wikiPageWikiLink Enoplia.
- Mermithergate wikiPageWikiLink Ergate.
- Mermithergate wikiPageWikiLink Honeypot_ant.
- Mermithergate wikiPageWikiLink Infection.
- Mermithergate wikiPageWikiLink Mermis.
- Mermithergate wikiPageWikiLink Mermithogyne.
- Mermithergate wikiPageWikiLink Myrmeconema_neotropicum.
- Mermithergate wikiPageWikiLink Psyche_(entomological_journal).
- Mermithergate wikiPageWikiLink Psyche_(entomology_journal).
- Mermithergate wikiPageWikiLink Tetradonematidae.
- Mermithergate wikiPageWikiLink William_Morton_Wheeler.
- Mermithergate wikiPageWikiLink File:Camponotus.punctulatus.mermithergate.-.wheeler.svg.
- Mermithergate wikiPageWikiLink File:Pheidole.dentata.parasitized.-.wheeler.svg.
- Mermithergate wikiPageWikiLinkText "Mermithergate".
- Mermithergate wikiPageWikiLinkText "mermithergate".
- Mermithergate hasPhotoCollection Mermithergate.
- Mermithergate wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Ant-stub.
- Mermithergate wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Aut.
- Mermithergate wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Mermithergate subject Category:Ants.
- Mermithergate subject Category:Enoplia.
- Mermithergate subject Category:Parasitism.
- Mermithergate hypernym Worker.
- Mermithergate type Person.
- Mermithergate comment "A mermithergate is an ant worker that has a changed appearance as a result of a Enoplia nematode infection. The word was coined by William M. Wheeler in 1910. It is a combination of the nematode genus Mermis, for which Wheeler first described the phenomenon, and ergate, which means ant worker. Infected females (queens) are called mermithogynes.Up to five percent of some populations of Cephalotes atratus suffer from an infection by the tetradonematid nematode Myrmeconema neotropicum.".
- Mermithergate label "Mermithergate".
- Mermithergate sameAs m.03m4t_g.
- Mermithergate sameAs Q17130675.
- Mermithergate sameAs Q17130675.
- Mermithergate wasDerivedFrom Mermithergate?oldid=621394678.
- Mermithergate depiction Camponotus.punctulatus.mermithergate.-.wheeler.svg.
- Mermithergate isPrimaryTopicOf Mermithergate.