Sentences with phrase «emil molt»

But precisely this aspect of Molt - mann's work is also political theology and is recognised and named as such by him.
Numerous cultures in SE Asia are changing with the times and accepting molted tail feathers from endangered hornbills species maintained in zoos instead of harvesting / killing them in the wild so that they can meet their cultural / religious needs without killing off the species... why can't this Native American tribe do the same?
They have been using molted feathers that the government provides them with.
Why can't they «take» molted feathers from captive bald (and golden) eagles?
Our chickens go into a molt during the cold dark winter months.
The Food Alliance Certified program prohibits forced molting through starvation but allows beak cutting.
Phytoecdysteroids are similar to insect molting hormones and have been shown to dramatically increase glucose metabolism (7, 8, 9).
The yield from soft shell (recently molted) lobsters is about 15 to 20 percent.
James Collins -LRB-» 77), Ted Balestreri -LRB-» 84), Richard Melman -LRB-» 89), J.W. Marriott Jr. -LRB-» 93), Joseph K. Fassler -LRB-» 96), Ralph Brennan -LRB-» 97), Sally Smith -LRB-» 09), Timothy J. Dietzler -LRB-» 10), George L. Miller -LRB-» 11), Mary Molt -LRB-» 12), John Metz, Jr. -LRB-» 13), Jim Broadhurst -LRB-» 14) and John Miller -LRB-» 15) are among the renowned operators who have received IFMA Gold Plates over the years.
The Marlins will get weird because they are Winter Meeting cicadas, on an irregularly regular schedule, burrowed beneath the earth, ready to spring forth and pepper the Winter Meetings with nonsense and molted cicada skin.
«Intermewed» means the bird has molted while in captivity.
Matt Chapman is about to molt and become Adrian Beltre in his prime.
Steiner's conditions were radical for the day, but Molt gladly agreed to them.
Molt then asked Steiner if he would undertake to establish and lead a school for the children of the employees of the company.
Bed bugs molt during their life cycle, so they leave a lot of exoskeletons behind.
After a successful breeding season — during which we welcomed a new rockhopper chick into our care — both the rockhopper and Magellanic penguins are in various stages of their annual molt, a process that will span several weeks.
Dr. Steiner's conditions were radical for that time, but Molt gladly agreed to them.
Inspired, Emil Molt, the factory's director, asked Dr. Steiner if he would establish and lead a school for the employees» children.
It can cause scabs, nodules, abnormal molting, ulcers and other disfiguring changes to snake skin.
An expanding ice - free season also means bears» stay on land would overlap the entire caribou calving season and a good portion of a booming geese population's molt and egg - laying season.
The goliath birdeater, Marshall found, uses its hairs to create a special silken mat on which it lies upside down when molting.
We, therefore, concluded that ergosterol was in fact being used by the larvae to produce molting hormone, which reinforces the dependency between these bees and the fungus.»
«Our hypothesis was that the fungus supplied a precursor for the molting and pupating hormone required for larvae to complete the metamorphosis into adult bees.»
«Steroids, the precursors of molting hormones, are lipids.
The plankton molts were floating in seawater in a dish and imaged by laser scanning confocal microscopy.
And we opened that morning the nets and suddenly we're just going to teach the students the feathers and the molting patterns because they're so important and for surprise when we put the net one of those birds went into our net.
Here, shells molted by plankton display autofluorescence — no blacklight here; this is all natural.
According to Rasgon, people can react not only to the mites themselves but also to their exoskeletons, which are shed as the mites molt during their life cycles.
Whereas the beluga, the narwhal's nearest relative, is known to enter warmer estuarine waters in the summer to molt, this skin - renewal process had never been scientifically documented for narwhal, in part because no scientist has ever spent sufficient time in remote Arctic locations to record such an event.
Many species of mammals and birds molt from summer brown to winter white coats to facilitate camouflage.
When Nweeia learned about narwhal molting for the first time, he knew that he had to part with the traditional scientific approach that validates facts through large sample sizes.
Greater proportions of the populations molted to white in higher latitudes.
«This shows that invertebrates have social recognition, and it can be maintained and remembered even through the molting process.
He was mistaken about its origins: The common bedbug, Cimex lectularius, emerges by night from the walls of houses or bedding to quaff the blood the insect needs to molt from nymph to adult.
Mumme's research on molt and desertion is continuing.
Third, the birds employ the odd strategy of molting and replacing all their tail feathers simultaneously at a time when they are also replacing the primary flight feathers on each wing.
If the offspring are younger and more demanding, however, a molting parent nearly always deserts.
Migratory birds desert their offspring to molt: When parental care and the annual molt overlap in time, a migratory songbird often chooses single - parent desertion.»
These observations indicate that Hooded Warblers are acutely sensitive to the costs of providing parental care during molt.
He is currently investigating the effects of single - parent desertion on growth and survival of offspring, and how females adjust their molt and migration schedules to deal with male desertion.
«It may just be an unavoidable consequence of the prolonged nesting season and early male molt, and females are able to deal with it just fine.»
So what happens when a molting Hooded Warbler loses all its tail feathers while it is still feeding nestlings or fledglings?
Males arrive on the breeding grounds earlier than females and nearly always begin molt earlier than their mates.
The new study, published in The Auk: Ornithological Advances, a journal of the American Ornithological Society, examines the trade - offs that birds make when parental care overlaps with the annual molt.
Hooded Warblers have an unusual combination of traits that makes conflicts between parental care and molt likely.
«If the costs of continuing care are relatively modest — for example, if it's an experienced male with offspring close to independence,» says Mumme, «a molting parent may elect not to desert.»
This radical solution to conflict between parental care and the annual molt provides «a nice illustration of the complex lives that migratory songbirds lead,» says Ron Mumme, the study's author and Professor of Biology at Allegheny College in northwestern Pennsylvania.
After spending a relatively leisurely winter and early spring luxuriating in warm tropical climates, they migrate north for a brief but highly eventful summer in North America, during which they must complete three energetically demanding and time - consuming tasks: (1) they must build nests, lay eggs, and provide for their offspring until the young reach independence, (2) they must completely replace all the feathers in their plumage as part of the annual molt, and (3) they must prepare for the fall southward migration by eating prodigiously and storing the body fat that will fuel their long - distance flights.
She says that it has been a recalcitrant question exactly how tardigrades are related to seven other phyla of molting animals known as ecdysozoans, a group that includes both arthropods and nematodes.
The larvae, which hatch in 3 - 10 days, move about on the skin, molt into a «nymphal» stage, and then mature into adult mites.
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