The translations of oribatid from English to other languages presented in this section have been obtained through automatic statistical translation; where the essential translation unit is the word «oribatid» in English.
List of principal searches undertaken by users to access our English online dictionary and most widely used expressions with the word «oribatid».
FREQUENCY OF USE OF THE TERM «ORIBATID» OVER TIME
The graph expresses the annual evolution of the frequency of use of the word «oribatid» during the past 500 years. Its implementation is based on analysing how often the term «oribatid» appears in digitalised printed sources in English between the year 1500 and the present day.
Examples of use in the English literature, quotes and news about oribatid
EXAMPLES
10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «ORIBATID»
Discover the use of oribatid in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to oribatid and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Oribatid Mites: A Catalogue of Australian Genera and Species
Oribatid mites are ancient, minute arthropods that live in soil, plant litter, mosses and lichens, and on trees and shrubs. Prior to the production of this catalogue, Australian Oribatid mites had been poorly documented.
MJ Colloff, RB Halliday, MJ Colloff, 1998
2
Habitat Distribution of Aquatic Oribatid Mites (Arthropoda: ...
This is surprising, because their excellent preservation and abundance in the depositional fossil record gives them much potential as proxies for examining recent climate change. Such use requires good knowledge of extant species.
Richard Booth Platt (Jr), 2006
3
The Relationship of Oribatid Soil Mite Abundance to Abiotic ...
Oribatid soil mites primarily feed on fungi and dead organisms.
Carolyn Hess, 2008
4
Oribatid mites: a catalogue of Australian genera and species
Oribatid mites are ancient, minute arthropods that live in soil, plant litter, mosses and lichens, and on trees and shrubs. Prior to the production of this catalogue, Australian Oribatid mites had been poorly documented.
Matthew Colloff, Bruce Halliday, 1998
5
Mites: Ecological and Evolutionary Analyses of Life-History ...
Evolutionary Aspects of Oribatid Mite Life Histories and Consequences for the
Origin of the Astigmata Roy A. Norton CONTENTS 1. INTRODUCTION 2.
DIVERSITY AND PHYLOGENY OF ORIBATID MITES 3. REVIEW OF ORIBATID
MITE ...
Marilyn A. Houck, 1994
6
Trends in Acarology: Proceedings of the 12th International ...
Figure 3 Non-metric multi-dimensional scaling (NMS) ordination of oribatid
communities in samples from leaves, branches, bark of trunks, forest-floor litter,
and roots, and in litter and roots of bird's nest ferns (Karasawa & Hijii, 2006b).
Scores ...
M. W. Sabelis, 2010
7
Community Structure of Oribatid Mites Associated with ...
I used the suspended soil system in western redcedar trees in the Walbran Valley to study the relative importance of local environmental factors versus regional spatial factors contributing to the structure of arboreal oribatid mite ...
Zoë Lindo, 2008
8
Oribatid mites of the Neotropical Region I
IDENTIFICATION KEYS IDENTIFICATION KEY TO THE MAIN GROUPS OF
ORIBATID MITES 1 (2) Hysterosoma weakly sclerotized and lightly pigmented,
whitish; with small, hardly visible dorsal sclerites and 2-4 pairs of long, blackish, ...
János Balogh, Péter Balogh, 1988
9
British Columbia's Inland Rainforest: Ecology, Conservation, ...
These lichen-dwelling microarthropod communities are dominated by
assemblages of oribatid mites (Acari: Oribatida), with a level of abundance in
foliose lichens exceeding that in the forest oor (Figure 3.17). Although oribatid
mite species ...
2011
10
Evolutionary Persistence and Co-existence of Sexual and ...
Asexual reproduction is expected to be beneficial on short evolutionary time scales but costly over long time scales.
Jennifer M. Cianciolo, 2008
10 NEWS ITEMS WHICH INCLUDE THE TERM «ORIBATID»
Find out what the national and international press are talking about and how the term oribatid is used in the context of the following news items.
1
Fire Ant and Mosquito Control, Nature's Way?
Sources: John Daly, et al, Batrachotoxin.; Ralph A. Saporito et al, "Oribatid mites as a major dietary source for alkaloids in poison frogs", PNAS, ... «Victoria Advocate, Jan 15»
2
Worms vs. Drugs: The Fundamentals
One important difference is that tapeworms have an indirect life cycle; they must spend time within a second “intermediate host,” a tiny oribatid ... «TheHorse.com, Jul 14»
3
Earthworms Trap Carbon, But Do They Influence Climate Change?
Other new studies find that the fecal matter of millipedes and oribatid mites also transform carbon into its more decay resistant form. The second ... «Inside Science News Service, Nov 13»
4
An Invertebrate Detective Reveals the Secrets of Creepy Crawlers in …
They found three nonparasitic soil invertebrates: one oribatid mite and two mesostigmatid mites. One of those latter species had never been ... «Scientific American, Aug 13»
5
Getting the measure of tapeworms
These are oribatid mites, which are common in pasture. Needless to say, these mites find plenty of edible organic material in horse faeces and ... «Horsetalk, Oct 12»
6
Poisonous Snakes Can't Resist Toxic Toad Tucker...or Can They?
Oribatid mites as a major dietary source for alkaloids in poison frogs. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 104:8885-8890. . «Scientific American, Aug 12»
7
How Mosses Have Sex in Spite of Their Swimming-Challenged Sperm
In a paper published in Nature this past week, scientists followed up on findings that tiny arthropods called springtails and oribatid mites (little ... «Scientific American, Jul 12»
8
UK Equine Showcase Presents Young Horse Research
Tapeworms are flat, segmented worms transmitted to the horse by ingesting an intermediate host--oribatid mites—infected with the tapeworm. «TheHorse.com, Feb 12»
9
The Secret to Machu Picchu's Success: Llama Poop
About the same time that there was an increase in maize pollen, there was an increase in oribatid mites, tiny insects that live in soil and feed on ... «Smithsonian, May 11»
10
Did Llama Dung Spur the Rise of Andean Civilization?
They were oribatid mites, which dine on dung and other detritus. Chepstow-Lusty went back and analyzed the mites as well, sampling the core ... «Science Now, May 11»
REFERENCE
« EDUCALINGO. Oribatid [online]. Available <https://educalingo.com/en/dic-en/oribatid>. May 2024 ».