Religion in the lives of tropical forest foragers increasingly reflects borrowings from neighboring African groups. |
|
A hive entrance was blocked for 1 min, and four returning foragers were collected in individual plastic vials. |
|
Prior to independence, tropical forest foragers remained outside the mainstream of society and politics. |
|
At about 3 weeks of age workers leave the hive as foragers who gather pollen and nectar and are exposed to a more variable environment. |
|
In lizards, actively foraging insectivores identify animal prey using lingually sampled chemical cues, but ambush foragers do not. |
|
Here, we are concerned with the exploitation of renewing resources by groups of foragers. |
|
From mammoths and mastodons the Clovis foragers would have learned much about edible wild plants. |
|
Near geysers and hot spots, the ground is warm, the snow shallower, and the grass more accessible to hungry foragers. |
|
Tropical forest foragers fashion their own nets from lianas, and make belt pouches, baskets, and mats from grasses. |
|
Nurses and foragers also differ in phototactic behaviour where nurses are negatively phototactic and foragers are positively phototactic. |
|
Similarly, fruit flies selected to resist the attacks of parasites are less competitive foragers than their nonresistant counter-parts. |
|
When food is clumped, dominant foragers can apparently monopolize food with few interactions. |
|
Active foragers, turnstones are best known for their habit of turning over objects and eating the food underneath. |
|
It is relatively easy to imagine that information about food will be available when foragers gather in groups to rest. |
|
Beaded lizards and Gila monsters are opportunistic foragers, just as monitors are, eating any palatable thing they find. |
|
Thus, the ratio of young, nurse workers to older foragers becomes imbalanced, further stressing the colonies. |
|
These fussy foragers pick the best and ripest coffee berries. |
|
Chronicling the fungus foragers who count posh New York restaurants as their clients. |
|
Morel Mushroom Toasts by Alice Waters The official mushroom of Minnesota, the morel is a particular spring prize for foragers. |
|
By responding to their past experiences, using sample-and-shift traplining, foragers benefit only when many patches are left unvisited in the habitat. |
|
|
Blue whales are low trophic level foragers, consuming between two and four tonnes of prey per day. |
|
Sheep are excellent foragers and, being ruminants, can utilize both pasture forage and harvested roughage. |
|
However, some professional foragers have dispensation from the landowner or site owner to forage sustainably and within reason. |
|
Dr Elfwing believes that foragers and trackers may be the first step down that evolutionary path. |
|
This is less disturbing to the colony since it does not interfere with the flight path of the foragers. |
|
This, then, is the best time to inspect the colony since most of the foragers are away from the hive. |
|
The foragers are returning with nectar and pollen, thus they will be readily accepted in the new hive. |
|
Good flying weather for the foragers during a good nectar flow is necessary for a good honey flow. |
|
Destruction of the queen cells combined with the loss of foragers will usually stop the swarming impulse in the colony. |
|
After a while they become bolder, set off on their first orientation flights and become foragers. |
|
In California, tourists have been pitted against career foragers, causing problems for wild mushrooms and abalone. |
|
Like storm chasers, Alaskan crabbers, and catfish noodlers, foragers come with their own sets of customs and rules. |
|
The majority of these species are considered frequent digesters, whereas eight species fast for extended periods, either as sit-and-wait foragers or while estivating. |
|
Models of interference competition, therefore, do not provide a satisfying answer to the question why foragers interact agonistically in such systems. |
|
Fergus and Miles are two of the country's top professional foragers, scouring the countryside for everything from bittercress to dandelions for London's most savvy chefs. |
|
This behavior highlights an implicit assumption in our model, that searching foragers should always begin handling any unhandled food items that they find. |
|
Ambush foragers typically respond visually to moving prey, but omnivores and herbivores may frequently need to identify immobile plant parts as food. |
|
Immediate return foragers consume their food within a day or two after they procure it. |
|
Harbour porpoises tend to be solitary foragers, but they do sometimes hunt in packs and herd fish together. |
|
One theory suggests that selection has led males to be smaller because it allows them to be efficient foragers. |
|
|
Iso Rabins, the founder, had hoped to employ staff foragers but found that the laudable attributes of folks willing to forage full-time did not include promptness in returning calls or punctuality. |
|
Even some fellow foragers look askance at Mr. Brill. |
|
She spent her childhood, over a century before mine, in a family of itinerate farmers and foragers, traveling in their covered wagon through uncharted, often dangerous territory. |
|
Inspiration is found in the root and herb lore of the Khoikhoi, the Cape's first inhabitants and master foragers of the coastal shrubland fynbos. |
|
Eastslope Sculpin are nocturnal foragers primarily consuming aquatic insect larvae, but also molluscs and fishes. They may also forage on fish eggs, including sculpin eggs. |
|
With its network of local fishers, foragers and artisanal food producers, this dynamic couple have created one of the most internationally recognized and acclaimed inns in this country. |
|
I'd assumed that most casual foragers are motivated by their palates, but on our second scavenge, with the mycological society, we met several people who sought out mushrooms for other purposes. |
|
If you cannot achieve your aim in this way, then the colony must be placed outside the flight area, i.e. at a distance of 5 to 6 km, for three weeks, after which time the foragers will have died. |
|
More bees are freed from duties in the hive to become foragers. |
|
In some army ant species, a group of foragers who become separated from the main column sometimes may turn back on themselves and form a circular ant mill. |
|
Note: the foragers will return to the site of the original strong colony. |
|
Which is just what the plan is now: Balena's bruschetta for dinner, as April's showers give way to the loamy scent of May and fresh, wildish mushrooms start popping up at markets courtesy of cultivators and foragers alike. |
|
This prevents weakening of the colony from the loss of foragers. |
|
Water is carried to the colony in the honey stomachs of the foragers. |
|
Star-nosed moles, Condylura cristata, have an incredible sense of touch in their tentacled schnozzes and are among the world's fastest foragers. |
|
Before the programme began, the community used wood for their fuel needs and many hours every day were spent foraging for fuel-and the foragers were the young girls whose daily task prevented them from attending school. |
|
When it is hot, many foragers are busy collecting water. |
|