Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q3243093> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 46 of
46
with 100 triples per page.
- Q3243093 subject Q6511158.
- Q3243093 subject Q6910673.
- Q3243093 subject Q7138885.
- Q3243093 subject Q7144653.
- Q3243093 subject Q7210473.
- Q3243093 abstract "Dominance in ethology is an "individual's preferential access to resources over another." Dominance in the context of biology and anthropology is the state of having high social status relative to one or more other individuals, who react submissively to dominant individuals. This enables the dominant individual to obtain access to resources such as food or potential mates at the expense of the submissive individual, without active aggression. The absence or reduction of aggression means unnecessary energy expenditure and the risk of injury are reduced for both. The opposite of dominance is submissiveness.Dominance may be a purely dyadic relationship, i.e. individual A is dominant over individual B, but this has no implications for whether either of these is dominant over a third individual C. Alternatively, dominance may be hierarchical, with a transitive relationship, so that if A dominates B and B dominates C, A always dominates C. This is called a linear dominance hierarchy. Some animal societies have despots, i.e. a single dominant individual with little or no hierarchical structure amongst the rest of the group. Horses use coalitions so that affiliated pairs in a herd have an accumulative dominance to displace a third horse that normally out-ranks both of them on an individual basis.".
- Q3243093 thumbnail Wolves_Kill.jpg?width=300.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q1005215.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q1265170.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q1438403.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q155953.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q1571795.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q175614.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q179352.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q189970.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q191797.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q23404.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q23465.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q2431958.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q252583.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q27066.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q276290.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q331710.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q396568.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q420.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q488415.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q5288255.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q618018.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q64861.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q6511158.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q6910673.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q7138885.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q7144653.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q7155.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q7210473.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q7391.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q778384.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q780.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q787.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q901711.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q917215.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q966474.
- Q3243093 wikiPageWikiLink Q984728.
- Q3243093 comment "Dominance in ethology is an "individual's preferential access to resources over another." Dominance in the context of biology and anthropology is the state of having high social status relative to one or more other individuals, who react submissively to dominant individuals. This enables the dominant individual to obtain access to resources such as food or potential mates at the expense of the submissive individual, without active aggression.".
- Q3243093 label "Dominance (ethology)".
- Q3243093 depiction Wolves_Kill.jpg.