MOTS EN ANGLAIS EN RAPPORT AVEC «BIONOMICALLY»
bionomically
bionomically
define
origin
nomics
probably
model
economics
nomy
related
forms
bionomic
bionomical
adjective
adverb
used
with
sing
verb
ecology
from
french
bionomique
pertaining
bionomie
greek
medical
recent
term
merger
biologic
economic
theory
older
biology
physiology
collins
always
derived
ˌbioˈnomic
ˌbioˈnomically
bionomist
baɪˈɒnəmɪst
pronunciation
noun
reverso
meaning
also
binomially
bionomics
biometrically
words
that
word
finder
list
search
official
ending
letter
enter
generate
definitions
onelook
found
dictionaries
include
click
first
link
below
directly
page
where
what
anagrams
rhymes
rhyming
rhyme
rhymer
check
your
spelling
last
10 LIVRES EN ANGLAIS EN RAPPORT AVEC «BIONOMICALLY»
Découvrez l'usage de
bionomically dans la sélection bibliographique suivante. Des livres en rapport avec
bionomically et de courts extraits de ceux-ci pour replacer dans son contexte son utilisation littéraire.
1
forest, steppe & tundra studies in animal evironment
is close, and the forms are structurally or bionomically adapted to one another,
we can sometimes indicate at least the centre of the complex. Every degree of
association is known, from cases where one animal is entirely dependent on
another ...
2
Corporations and Society
Granted their membership in a single society, whether segmental or stratified in
its structure, the accommodation of racially distinct populations has a limited
number of primary alternatives. If the racial segments are bionomically and
spatially ...
They are, however, bionomically sufficient because they are constant. They are
useful not because they copy the external reality or represent it, but because,
being constant results of external causes, they enable consciousness to
prophesy or ...
4
A Systematic and Taxonomic Review of the Family ...
Tanaidaceans are usually considered to be a minor taxonomic group of
peracarids, although they may constitute one of the most bionomically significant
groups in a wide range of marine habitats from intertidal (Holdich and Jones
1983) to ...
Jerry Alan McLelland, 2008
5
New Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research
These findings suggest that any physiological differences between morph types
are likely to be complex, and that the morphological differences between
bionomically dissimilar allopatric subspecies are perhaps fortuitous. If this should
prove ...
6
The Principles of Insect Control
The border line between the biological race and the true specific feeder is thus
often very vaguely demarcated, and probably all such specific feeders, though
now distinct morphologically and bionomically, have passed through a biological
...
Robert Arnold Wardle, Philip Buckle, 1929
Large to very small insects, winged or wingless, highly diverse morphologically
and bionomically both in adult and larva. Adult with mouthparts chewing, piercing
or licking, rarely (14) *Mesopsychidae Tillyard, 1917 Only two or three families ...
Natalya V. Belayeva, A.P. Rasnitsyn, Donald L. Quicke, 2002
A larger taxon, a genus or a family, can be assigned to one link of the chain only
when it is bionomically uniform. This approach is risky, however, since groups,
which are uniform and close to each other taxonomically, may contain species ...
9
A Dictionary of Entomology
Adv. Bionomically. BIONOMICS Noun. (Greek, bios I life + nomos I law.) A branch
of biology that involves relationship of animals to their environment. Ecology in
broad sense. Alt. Bionomy. Cf. Ergonomics. BIONOMY Noun. (Greek, Bios I life +
...
10
Basic Questions in Paleontology: Geologic Time, Organic ...
142a) that are similar in external form and bionomically equivalent show a
diameter of only between 10 and 20 millimeters. This is a considerable difference
in size. A direct comparison of the two forms, however, is not justified because
they ...
Otto H. Schindewolf, Wolf-Ernst Reif, 1993