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Posted: 24 Aug 2006, 15:10
by bronzefry
Thanks, Mats! :D
Amanda

Posted: 24 Aug 2006, 16:41
by MatsP
Another one:

Obligate - Forced to do something to be alive, i.e. obligate parasite can not survive without parasiting.

--
Mats

Posted: 26 Aug 2006, 14:21
by bronzefry
You're on a roll, Mats! :wink:
Amanda

Posted: 12 Sep 2006, 16:27
by MatsP
Does this belong in the Glossary?

Revision - (Taxonomy) To re-examine a species, genera or family to correct mistakes/inconsistancies and possibly make changes to the status of described taxa.

Better explanations welcome....

--
Mats

Posted: 14 Sep 2006, 14:19
by bronzefry
MatsP wrote:Does this belong in the Glossary?

Revision - (Taxonomy) To re-examine a species, genera or family to correct mistakes/inconsistancies and possibly make changes to the status of described taxa.

Better explanations welcome....

--
Mats
Oh, as in the former planet Pluto? Good question.
Amanda

Posted: 14 Sep 2006, 14:26
by MatsP
bronzefry wrote:
MatsP wrote:Does this belong in the Glossary?

Revision - (Taxonomy) To re-examine a species, genera or family to correct mistakes/inconsistancies and possibly make changes to the status of described taxa.

Better explanations welcome....

--
Mats
Oh, as in the former planet Pluto? Good question.
Amanda
Minor re-write:
b]Revision[/b] - (Taxonomy) To re-examine species, genus or family to correct mistakes/inconsistancies and possibly make changes to the status of described taxa.

And yes, Pluto was "revised" into the dwarf-planet category, if I understood what I heard on the radio correctly.

--
Mats

Posted: 16 Sep 2006, 18:40
by bronzefry
Any other input on this definition?:?:
Amanda

Posted: 18 Sep 2006, 14:23
by bronzefry
I'll put that in when I have a few moments. This one is from Lee Finley.
Commercial Extinction: A food fish no longer common enough to be profitable.
Amanda

Posted: 21 Oct 2006, 20:15
by bronzefry
Oxbow: A "U"-shaped lake that occurs when a section of a river, stream or tributary is cut off from the main section and isolated. Oxbows are usually located in flood plains.

Are oxbows more likely to appear with the dry season and disappear with the wet season?
Amanda

Posted: 21 Oct 2006, 22:02
by natefrog
Oxbow may also apply to a river type that consists of many "u" shaped meanders in a rivers course, not only the lakes that are formed when the river changes course and cuts the "u" off from the river channel.

Posted: 22 Oct 2006, 15:27
by bronzefry
natefrog wrote:Oxbow may also apply to a river type that consists of many "u" shaped meanders in a rivers course, not only the lakes that are formed when the river changes course and cuts the "u" off from the river channel.

Oxbow: A "U"-shaped lake that occurs when a section of river, stream or tributary is cut off from the main section and isolated. Also applies to a river type that has many "U"-shaped meanders in its course.
Would you agree with that, Nate? Or, do you think I should have two separate definitions: one for Oxbow and one for Oxbow Lake?
Amanda

Posted: 11 Nov 2006, 15:55
by Jools
We need an entry for synonym at least and perhaps junior synonym too?

Jools

Posted: 12 Nov 2006, 16:07
by bronzefry
Jools,
Is there something in the definitions already there we should change?

I have another that I saw in one of Silurus' posting about the Mekong giants:

Anthropogenic: Relating to the impact (usually negative) of humans on an environment.
Amanda

Posted: 12 Nov 2006, 23:41
by Jools
bronzefry wrote:Jools,
Is there something in the definitions already there we should change?
No, it's just synonym is a link from the catelog pages that doesn't go anywhere...

Jools

Posted: 13 Nov 2006, 08:22
by racoll
Pedantic I know, but should it not read ?.....

Revision - (Taxonomy) To re-examine species, genera or families to correct mistakes/inconsistancies and possibly make changes to the status of described taxa.

Posted: 13 Nov 2006, 12:59
by bronzefry
Jools wrote:
bronzefry wrote:Jools,
Is there something in the definitions already there we should change?
No, it's just synonym is a link from the catelog pages that doesn't go anywhere...

Jools
Oops! I'll check that out. Thanks, Racoll. :wink:
Amanda

Posted: 09 Feb 2007, 14:52
by bronzefry
Another word! :D
Finfold: A "full-body" fin in a larval fish that will define itself into adult fins such as the dorsal fin, etc.

Please feel free to correct/expand upon this. I'd like to thank Frank Falcone for giving me the name of this piece of anatomy. I'd noticed it over the past number of Corydora spp.broods. It's fascinating watching the fins develop so quickly.
Thanks,
Amanda

Posted: 25 Jul 2007, 18:09
by Deb
Vermiform, as in:
The vermiform lines are found predominantly on males.
under sexing for Ancistrus claro (and possibly others.)

Dictionary: resembling a worm in shape.

I realize this word is related to vermiculation, as in the Glossary, but it is not the same word, and may be entitled to its own definition.
:D

Posted: 26 Jul 2007, 09:15
by Jools
Yup, I'd go for

Vermiform means resembling a worm shape. Vermiform lines also referred to a vermiculation.

Jools

Posted: 06 Aug 2007, 15:49
by bronzefry
Sorry folks. Zoned out for a while there. :al: I'd be happy to place that in the glossary for you!
Amanda

Posted: 06 Aug 2007, 17:36
by bronzefry
I just stumbled on a most interesting website:
http://www.etymonline.com/
All the etymology one could ever use.
Getting back to veniform: I've looked high and low for this word and it's definition. I've found villiform and vermiform. I've found venous and all its combinations. Is this a scientific term? I'm asking more from curiosity than anything else.
Amanda

Re: Glossary questions and requests

Posted: 15 Aug 2011, 14:16
by Jools
Just a bump to see I any more might need adding.

Jools

Re: Glossary questions and requests

Posted: 25 Oct 2011, 06:14
by Shovelnose
How about tautonomy???


Tautonomy : A taxonomic designation, such as Gorilla gorilla, in which the genus and species names are the same, commonly used in zoology but no longer in botany.

Re: Glossary questions and requests

Posted: 25 Oct 2011, 08:30
by Jools
Shovelnose wrote:How about tautonomy???
I think it should go in. Amanda?

Jools

Re: Glossary questions and requests

Posted: 15 Nov 2011, 13:34
by Shovelnose
Oophagy too???

Oophagy , literally "egg eating", is the practice of embryos feeding on eggs produced by the ovary while still inside the mother's uterus. (From Wikipedia)

Re: Glossary questions and requests

Posted: 16 Nov 2011, 06:17
by Birger
Added tautonomy...

For Oophagy It seems to me after a search that Synodontis multipunctata when the young eat the cichlid eggs in the hosts mouth would also be considered this...do you think so?

Birger

Re: Glossary questions and requests

Posted: 16 Nov 2011, 07:14
by Shovelnose
From what I understand, oophagy could refer only to intrauterine cannibalism.

Re: Glossary questions and requests

Posted: 24 Nov 2014, 02:24
by bekateen
My son and I were reading the glossary today and we saw the definition for the phrase "T-position." It reads, "The manner in which some Corydoradine catfishes breed. So named because the breeding pair look as if they are forming the letter "T." Also see More..."

Actually, I think that reads okay. My concern is what happens when you click on the "More..." link: The link takes you to http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=de ... gle+Search. The results you obtain do describe sex positions, but they have nothing to do with Corys. :ymblushing: They weren't too explicit, so they just gave us some giggles (I didn't have to cover my son's eyes). But I don't think that these are the results you intended, esp. since we do have some younger members on PC.

You might wish to rework the link to actually include the word "Cory" in the search phrase. :d

Cheers,
Eric

P.S.,
Shovelnose wrote:From what I understand, oophagy could refer only to intrauterine cannibalism.
If you're still deliberating oophagy, its usage is not confined to intrauterine egg eating. It refers broadly to any animal that subsists primarily by eating eggs. Consider, for example, the specialized egg eating snakes that swallow eggs whole, crush the shells, then emit the empty shells; they are considered oophagous. So AFAIK, any fish that survives mainly on eggs practices oophagy. What it does not include is any fish that eats eggs opportunistically but gains most of its nutrition from other foods (like my albino BNs).

Re: Glossary questions and requests

Posted: 24 Nov 2014, 03:59
by Shovelnose
bekateen wrote: It refers broadly to any animal that subsists primarily by eating eggs. Consider, for example, the specialized egg eating snakes that swallow eggs whole, crush the shells, then emit the empty shells; they are considered oophagous.
Thanks for clarifying Eric!!

Re: Glossary questions and requests

Posted: 24 Nov 2014, 04:52
by bekateen
You're welcome. I realize that the previous posts were years old, so I hope I'm not out of line bringing up an old issue. Have a great day.
-Eric