apterous การใช้
- Many of the tropical taxa are apterous.
- These species are completely apterous, but are provided with well-developed and pigmented compound eyes.
- The "'Coccidae "'are a family of scale insects belonging to the superfamily apterous.
- All true troglobionts are apterous, yellowish-brown or pale reddish-brown, with eyes mostly atrophied or absent.
- Wing polymorphism is common in the Gerridae despite most univoltine populations being completely apterous ( wingless ) or macropterous ( with wings ).
- Apterous and invected, Carroll's team has found, serve as two of the positioning coordinates of the butterfly's wing.
- While on buckthorn, gynoparae produce a generation of apterous female sexual morphs ( oviparae ) that mate with male alatae to produce overwintering eggs.
- Some fairyflies possess slightly reduced ( brachypterous ) to greatly reduced ( micropterous ) wings, while others may even be completely wingless ( apterous ).
- Apterous populations of gerrids would be restricted to stable aquatic habitats that experience little change in environment, while macropterous populations can inhabit more changing, variable water supplies.
- The genes that control the development of the fruit fly's wing include those known as apterous, invected, scalloped, decapentaplegic, wingless and distal-less.
- Apterous marks a cell as being part of the topside or underside of the wing; the signal is simply that apterous is switched on only in the topside cells, not in the underside.
- Apterous marks a cell as being part of the topside or underside of the wing; the signal is simply that apterous is switched on only in the topside cells, not in the underside.
- It is apterous and Victoria, Tasmania, South Australia, New South Wales, and Queensland . " Euborellia brunneri " tends to keep hidden beneath plant detritus and other debris where it is dark and damp.
- The subsequent apterous exules feed solely on the oats and eventually lead to growth of gynoparae which will return to the bird cherry, where they will produce males and oviparae, which in turn will reproduce, giving eggs for the next year.
- Unusually for ants, the queens are apterous ( i . e ., wingless ), like workers, and thus these queens are called ergatoid ( i . e ., worker-like ) to be distinct from alate queens that have wings.