Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Biological_recording> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 27 of
27
with 100 triples per page.
- Biological_recording abstract "Biological recording is the scientific study of the distribution of living organisms, biological records describe the presence, abundance, associations and changes, both in time and space, of wildlife. There has been a long tradition of biological recording in the United Kingdom dating back to John Ray (1627-1705), Robert Plot (1640–1696) and their contemporaries.".
- Biological_recording wikiPageExternalLink www.alerc.org.uk.
- Biological_recording wikiPageExternalLink www.brc.ac.uk.
- Biological_recording wikiPageExternalLink www.nfbr.org.uk.
- Biological_recording wikiPageID "45525757".
- Biological_recording wikiPageLength "3369".
- Biological_recording wikiPageOutDegree "10".
- Biological_recording wikiPageRevisionID "649674975".
- Biological_recording wikiPageWikiLink Biological_Records_Centre.
- Biological_recording wikiPageWikiLink Category:Biodiversity.
- Biological_recording wikiPageWikiLink Centre_for_Ecology_and_Hydrology.
- Biological_recording wikiPageWikiLink John_Ray.
- Biological_recording wikiPageWikiLink Moth_trap.
- Biological_recording wikiPageWikiLink National_Biodiversity_Network.
- Biological_recording wikiPageWikiLink Pitfall_trap.
- Biological_recording wikiPageWikiLink Robert_Plot.
- Biological_recording wikiPageWikiLink United_Kingdom.
- Biological_recording wikiPageWikiLinkText "Biological recording".
- Biological_recording wikiPageWikiLinkText "biological recording".
- Biological_recording subject Category:Biodiversity.
- Biological_recording hypernym Study.
- Biological_recording type Book.
- Biological_recording comment "Biological recording is the scientific study of the distribution of living organisms, biological records describe the presence, abundance, associations and changes, both in time and space, of wildlife. There has been a long tradition of biological recording in the United Kingdom dating back to John Ray (1627-1705), Robert Plot (1640–1696) and their contemporaries.".
- Biological_recording label "Biological recording".
- Biological_recording sameAs m.012z24c1.
- Biological_recording wasDerivedFrom Biological_recording?oldid=649674975.
- Biological_recording isPrimaryTopicOf Biological_recording.