Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q5090479> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 21 of
21
with 100 triples per page.
- Q5090479 subject Q8357565.
- Q5090479 subject Q9623901.
- Q5090479 abstract "Chemical mimicry is a type of biological mimicry. A chemical mimic dupes an operator (e.g. a predator) by showing an adaptive chemical resemblance to an object of its environment and as a consequence receives selective advantage. Note, that a chemical mimic can always be detected as an interesting entity to the operator, while organisms showing chemical crypsis (resemblance of the background) cannot be detected as discrete entity by an operator. Chemical masquerade should also be distinguished from chemical mimicry. It is the resemblance of an uninteresting object that can be detected by the operator (e.g. resemblance of a stick or leave in a visual context). Chemical mimicry may be used in combination with mimicry in other sensory modes (e.g. visual, auditory, tactile) or by itself. This sort of mimicry is less obvious to humans and thus has not received as much attention from researchers as other forms (like visual mimicry) have. Examples include spiders mimicking sex pheromones of moths in order to catch them, plant mimicry of insect alarm pheromones which stops them from attacking the plant, or insects that exploit social insect societies by duping workers to be nestmates.".
- Q5090479 thumbnail Ophrys_lutea_(flower).jpg?width=300.
- Q5090479 wikiPageWikiLink Q1324911.
- Q5090479 wikiPageWikiLink Q134624.
- Q5090479 wikiPageWikiLink Q167377.
- Q5090479 wikiPageWikiLink Q1889167.
- Q5090479 wikiPageWikiLink Q192627.
- Q5090479 wikiPageWikiLink Q25308.
- Q5090479 wikiPageWikiLink Q2658368.
- Q5090479 wikiPageWikiLink Q278932.
- Q5090479 wikiPageWikiLink Q424556.
- Q5090479 wikiPageWikiLink Q6862243.
- Q5090479 wikiPageWikiLink Q7458527.
- Q5090479 wikiPageWikiLink Q8357565.
- Q5090479 wikiPageWikiLink Q891260.
- Q5090479 wikiPageWikiLink Q9623901.
- Q5090479 comment "Chemical mimicry is a type of biological mimicry. A chemical mimic dupes an operator (e.g. a predator) by showing an adaptive chemical resemblance to an object of its environment and as a consequence receives selective advantage. Note, that a chemical mimic can always be detected as an interesting entity to the operator, while organisms showing chemical crypsis (resemblance of the background) cannot be detected as discrete entity by an operator.".
- Q5090479 label "Chemical mimicry".
- Q5090479 depiction Ophrys_lutea_(flower).jpg.