kype การใช้
- The kype functions as a dominance hierarchies at the spawning grounds.
- The article nominated can be found at Kype ( anatomy ).
- The size of the kype is believed to determine male spawning frequency.
- This fast growing skeletal tissue fuses with the dense dentary, becoming a permanent, growing kype.
- More recently, the kype is regarded as a secondary sex characteristic displayed by males at the spawning grounds.
- They may grow a hump, develop canine-like teeth, or develop a kype ( a pronounced curvature of the jaws in male salmon ).
- He delivered what was to be his last sermon at Kype Water, Clydesdale ( modern Lanarkshire ) on Sunday 18 July 1680, where he told the assembled congregation,
- Salmon are sexually dimorphic, and the male salmon develop canine-like teeth and their jaws develop a pronounced curve or hook ( " kype " ).
- The " kype ", a basket similar to the putcher but more elaborate, for catching shrimp and eel, seems also to have been constructed for use at Goldcliff.
- The purpose of the kype is not altogether clear, though they can be used to establish dominance by clamping them around the base of the tail ( caudal peduncle ) of an opponent.
- In iteroparous cases, at least in Atlantic salmon, the kype is not fully resorbed after the breeding season, although basal parts of the kype skeleton are re-modelled into regular dentary bone . some fish never lose their kype.
- In iteroparous cases, at least in Atlantic salmon, the kype is not fully resorbed after the breeding season, although basal parts of the kype skeleton are re-modelled into regular dentary bone . some fish never lose their kype.
- In iteroparous cases, at least in Atlantic salmon, the kype is not fully resorbed after the breeding season, although basal parts of the kype skeleton are re-modelled into regular dentary bone . some fish never lose their kype.
- Other characteristics that could cause wild-type males to be chosen more frequently could be the lack of growth of the kype, the hooked jaw of a male, and red coloration on anadromous males, which demonstrates sexual maturity to females.
- Among American species of charr, the kype reaches its maximum size in the large anadromous males, Dolly Varden trout ( " Salvelinus malma " ) and Brook trout ( " Salvelinus fontinalis " ), whereas it is reportedly hardly visible or absent in large nonanadromous males, Arctic char ( " Salvelinus alpinus " ) and Lake trout ( " Salvelinus namaycush " ).