Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ape> ?p ?o }
- Ape abstract "Apes (Hominoidea) are a branch of Old World tailless anthropoid catarrhine primates native to Africa and Southeast Asia. They are distinguished from other primates by a wider degree of freedom of motion at the shoulder joint as evolved by the influence of brachiation. There are two extant branches of the superfamily Hominoidea: the gibbons, or lesser apes; and the hominids, or great apes.The family Hylobatidae, the lesser apes, include four genera and a total of sixteen species of gibbon, including the lar gibbon and the siamang, all native to Asia. They are highly arboreal and bipedal on the ground. They have lighter bodies and smaller social groups than great apes.The family Hominidae, known collectively as the great apes, include orangutans, gorillas, chimpanzees, and humans; alternatively, this family clade is also known as the hominids. There are seven extant species of great apes: two in the orangutans (genus Pongo), two in the gorillas (genus Gorilla), two in the chimpanzees (genus Pan), and a single extant species, Homo sapiens, of modern humans (genus Homo).Members of the superfamily Hominoidae are called hominoids—which term is not to be confused with hominids, the family of great apes; or with the hominins, the tribe of humans also known as the human clade; or with other very similar terms of primate taxa. (Compare terminology of primate names.)Recent evidence has changed our understanding of the relationships between the hominoids, especially regarding the human lineage; and the traditionally used terms have become somewhat confused. Competing approaches re methodology and terminology are found among current scientific sources. See below, History of hominoid taxonomy and see Primate: Historical and modern terminology for discussions of the changes in scientific classification and terminology regarding hominoids.Some and, recently, all, hominoids are also called \"apes\", but the term is used broadly and has several different senses within both popular and scientific settings. \"Ape\" has been used as a synonym for \"monkey\" or for naming any primate with a humanlike appearance, particularly those without a tail. Thus the Barbary macaque, a kind of monkey, is popularly called the \"Barbary ape\". Biologists have traditionally used the term \"ape\" to mean a member of the superfamily Hominoidea other than humans, but more recently to mean all members of Hominoidea. So \"ape\"—not to be confused with \"great ape\"—now becomes another word for hominoid including humans.Except for gorillas and humans, hominoids are agile climbers of trees. Their diet is best described as frugivorous and folivorous, consisting mainly of fruit, nuts, seeds, including grass seeds, leaves, and in some cases other animals, either hunted or scavenged, or (solely in the case of the humans) farmed—along with anything else available and easily digested.Most non-human hominoids are rare or endangered. The chief threat to most of the endangered species is loss of tropical rainforest habitat, though some populations are further imperiled by hunting for bushmeat. The great apes of Africa are also facing threat from the Ebola virus. Currently considered to be the greatest threat to survival of African apes, Ebola is responsible for the death of at least one third of the species since 1990.".
- Ape thumbnail Orang_Utan,_Semenggok_Forest_Reserve,_Sarawak,_Borneo,_Malaysia.JPG?width=300.
- Ape wikiPageExternalLink pmidlookup?view=long&pmid=10995486.
- Ape wikiPageID "229914".
- Ape wikiPageLength "38055".
- Ape wikiPageOutDegree "213".
- Ape wikiPageRevisionID "707777921".
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink 10th_edition_of_Systema_Naturae.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Africa.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Afropithecus.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Agile_gibbon.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Animal_culture.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Animal_language.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Ape.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Arboreal_locomotion.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Asia.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Ball_and_socket_joint.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Barbary_macaque.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Bernard_Germain_de_Lacépède.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Bipedalism.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Birutė_Galdikas.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Black_crested_gibbon.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Bonobo.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Bornean_orangutan.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Bornean_white-bearded_gibbon.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Brachiation.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Bunopithecus.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Bushmeat.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Carl_Linnaeus.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Catarrhini.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Category:Apes.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Category:Extant_Chattian_first_appearances.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Celebes_crested_macaque.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Charles_Darwin.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Chimpanzee.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Chimpanzee–human_last_common_ancestor.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Chororapithecus.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Christoph_Theodor_Aeby.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Clade.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Cladistics.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Cladogram.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Common_chimpanzee.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Cusp_(anatomy).
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Dawn_of_Humanity.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Dian_Fossey.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Eastern_black_crested_gibbon.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Eastern_gorilla.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Eastern_hoolock_gibbon.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Ebola_virus.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Ebola_virus_disease.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Encyclopædia_Britannica_Eleventh_Edition.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Endangered_species.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Family_(biology).
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Folivore.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Frugivore.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Genus.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Georges_Cuvier.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Gibbon.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Gibbons.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Gibraltar.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Gorilla.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Great_Ape_Project.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Hainan_black_crested_gibbon.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Hominidae.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Homininae.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Hominini.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Homo.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Hoolock_gibbon.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Human.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Human_evolutionary_genetics.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Hylobates.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Imitation.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Insight.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Jane_Goodall.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Johann_Friedrich_Blumenbach.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Johann_Georg_Gmelin.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink John_Edward_Gray.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Klosss_gibbon.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Lar_gibbon.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink List_of_fictional_primates.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink List_of_individual_primates.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink List_of_primates_by_population.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Macaque.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Molar_(tooth).
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Molecular_biology.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Monkey.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Monophyly.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Mxc3xbcllers_Bornean_gibbon.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink New_World_monkey.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Nomascus.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Northern_white-cheeked_gibbon.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Old_World.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Old_World_monkey.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Orangutan.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Order_(biology).
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Outgroup_(cladistics).
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Paraphyly.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Pig-tailed_langur.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Pileated_gibbon.
- Ape wikiPageWikiLink Pliobates.