Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tectus_niloticus> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 58 of
58
with 100 triples per page.
- Tectus_niloticus abstract "Tectus niloticus, common name the commercial top shell, is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Tegulidae.This species is a very large (up to 15 cm) Indo-Pacific top shell, which has a very thick inner layer of nacre. This species is commercially exploited to make mother of pearl buttons, mother of pearl beads, pendants and so on. In 2006, for example, the sole commercial export of the Wallis and Futuna Islands was 19 tons of "Trochus" shells, valued at US$122,000.".
- Tectus_niloticus thumbnail Tectus_niloticus_01.JPG?width=300.
- Tectus_niloticus wikiPageExternalLink Shell_1608.shtml.
- Tectus_niloticus wikiPageID "27042995".
- Tectus_niloticus wikiPageLength "11094".
- Tectus_niloticus wikiPageOutDegree "22".
- Tectus_niloticus wikiPageRevisionID "634677208".
- Tectus_niloticus wikiPageWikiLink Aperture_(mollusc).
- Tectus_niloticus wikiPageWikiLink Apex_(mollusc).
- Tectus_niloticus wikiPageWikiLink Body_whorl.
- Tectus_niloticus wikiPageWikiLink Carl_Linnaeus.
- Tectus_niloticus wikiPageWikiLink Category:Tectus.
- Tectus_niloticus wikiPageWikiLink Columella_(gastropod).
- Tectus_niloticus wikiPageWikiLink Family_(biology).
- Tectus_niloticus wikiPageWikiLink Gastropod.
- Tectus_niloticus wikiPageWikiLink Gastropod_shell.
- Tectus_niloticus wikiPageWikiLink Gastropoda.
- Tectus_niloticus wikiPageWikiLink Indo-Pacific.
- Tectus_niloticus wikiPageWikiLink Indo-Pacific_Ocean.
- Tectus_niloticus wikiPageWikiLink Mollusca.
- Tectus_niloticus wikiPageWikiLink Mollusk.
- Tectus_niloticus wikiPageWikiLink Nacre.
- Tectus_niloticus wikiPageWikiLink Operculum_(gastropod).
- Tectus_niloticus wikiPageWikiLink Sea_snail.
- Tectus_niloticus wikiPageWikiLink Species.
- Tectus_niloticus wikiPageWikiLink Spire_(mollusc).
- Tectus_niloticus wikiPageWikiLink Suture_(anatomy).
- Tectus_niloticus wikiPageWikiLink Tegulidae.
- Tectus_niloticus wikiPageWikiLink Ton.
- Tectus_niloticus wikiPageWikiLink Wallis_and_Futuna.
- Tectus_niloticus wikiPageWikiLink Whorl_(mollusc).
- Tectus_niloticus wikiPageWikiLinkText "Tectus niloticus".
- Tectus_niloticus wikiPageWikiLinkText "trochus".
- Tectus_niloticus hasPhotoCollection Tectus_niloticus.
- Tectus_niloticus imageCaption "Five views of a shell of Tectus niloticus".
- Tectus_niloticus synonyms "* Trochus flammeus (Röding, 1798) * Trochus maximus (Koch in Philippi, 1844) * Trochus niloticus (Linnaeus, 1767) * Trochus zebra (Perry, G., 1811)".
- Tectus_niloticus taxon "Tectus niloticus".
- Tectus_niloticus wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Commons_category.
- Tectus_niloticus wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Tectus_niloticus wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Speciesbox.
- Tectus_niloticus wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Use_dmy_dates.
- Tectus_niloticus subject Category:Tectus.
- Tectus_niloticus hypernym Snail.
- Tectus_niloticus type Article.
- Tectus_niloticus type Mollusca.
- Tectus_niloticus type Article.
- Tectus_niloticus comment "Tectus niloticus, common name the commercial top shell, is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Tegulidae.This species is a very large (up to 15 cm) Indo-Pacific top shell, which has a very thick inner layer of nacre. This species is commercially exploited to make mother of pearl buttons, mother of pearl beads, pendants and so on. In 2006, for example, the sole commercial export of the Wallis and Futuna Islands was 19 tons of "Trochus" shells, valued at US$122,000.".
- Tectus_niloticus label "Tectus niloticus".
- Tectus_niloticus sameAs Tectus_niloticus.
- Tectus_niloticus sameAs Tectus_niloticus.
- Tectus_niloticus sameAs m.0bs1vrf.
- Tectus_niloticus sameAs Ốc_đụn_cái.
- Tectus_niloticus sameAs Q7692876.
- Tectus_niloticus sameAs Q7692876.
- Tectus_niloticus sameAs 牛蹄钟螺.
- Tectus_niloticus wasDerivedFrom Tectus_niloticus?oldid=634677208.
- Tectus_niloticus depiction Tectus_niloticus_01.JPG.
- Tectus_niloticus isPrimaryTopicOf Tectus_niloticus.