wingless$92093$ - traducción al árabe
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wingless$92093$ - traducción al árabe

EXTINCT ORDER OF BIRDS
Moa (bird); Moas; Dinornithiformes; Wingless bird; Wingless birds; Moaspecies
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  • 30 px
  • 30 px
  • A size comparison between four moa species and a human{{Clear}}1. ''[[Dinornis novaezealandiae]]''{{Clear}}2. ''[[Emeus crassus]]''{{Clear}}3. ''[[Anomalopteryx didiformis]]''{{Clear}}4. ''[[Dinornis robustus]]''
  • 40 px
  • 60 px
  • An artist's rendition of a [[Haast's eagle]] attacking moa
  • A restoration of ''Dinornis robustus'' and ''Pachyornis elephantopus'', both from the South Island
  • An excavation in Kapua Swamp, 1894
  • 30 px
  • 30 px

wingless      
adj. غير مجنح
WINGLESS         
  • Figure 1. Wnt doesn't bind to the receptor. Axin, GSK and APC form a "destruction complex," and β-Cat is destroyed.
  • Canonical Wnt pathway
  • Diagram illustrating the epithelial-mesenchymal transition
  • Noncanonical PCP pathway
  • Noncanonical Wnt/calcium pathway
  • Figure 2. Wnt binds to (activates) the receptor. Axin is removed from the "destruction complex." β-Cat moves into the nucleus, binds to a transcription factor on DNA, and activates transcription of a protein. "P" represents [[phosphate]].
  • Diagram illustrating the interaction between the Wnt and insulin signaling pathways
  • Crystal structure of Wnt8 (rainbow coloring) bound to the cysteine rich domain of Frizzled8 (green).
SERIES OF MOLECULAR SIGNALS INITIATED BY BINDING OF A WNT PROTEIN TO A FRIZZLED FAMILY RECEPTOR
Wnt Signaling Pathway; Wingless signaling; Wnt signalling pathway; Wnt proteins; WNT signals; Wnt/Wingless; Wingless; Wnt7a; Wnt2b; Wnt8c; Wnt pathway; Wnt protein; Polarity genes; WNT pathway; Wnt signaling; Wnt signalling; Wnt signaling pathways; Wnt receptor; Canonical wnt signaling; Canonical Wnt signalling

الصفة

دُونِ أَجْنِحَة

wingless         
  • Figure 1. Wnt doesn't bind to the receptor. Axin, GSK and APC form a "destruction complex," and β-Cat is destroyed.
  • Canonical Wnt pathway
  • Diagram illustrating the epithelial-mesenchymal transition
  • Noncanonical PCP pathway
  • Noncanonical Wnt/calcium pathway
  • Figure 2. Wnt binds to (activates) the receptor. Axin is removed from the "destruction complex." β-Cat moves into the nucleus, binds to a transcription factor on DNA, and activates transcription of a protein. "P" represents [[phosphate]].
  • Diagram illustrating the interaction between the Wnt and insulin signaling pathways
  • Crystal structure of Wnt8 (rainbow coloring) bound to the cysteine rich domain of Frizzled8 (green).
SERIES OF MOLECULAR SIGNALS INITIATED BY BINDING OF A WNT PROTEIN TO A FRIZZLED FAMILY RECEPTOR
Wnt Signaling Pathway; Wingless signaling; Wnt signalling pathway; Wnt proteins; WNT signals; Wnt/Wingless; Wingless; Wnt7a; Wnt2b; Wnt8c; Wnt pathway; Wnt protein; Polarity genes; WNT pathway; Wnt signaling; Wnt signalling; Wnt signaling pathways; Wnt receptor; Canonical wnt signaling; Canonical Wnt signalling
غير ذى جناحين ، عديم الجناح

Definición

Moa
·noun Any one of several very large extinct species of wingless birds belonging to Dinornis, and other related genera, of the suborder Dinornithes, found in New Zealand. They are allied to the apteryx and the ostrich. They were probably exterminated by the natives before New Zealand was discovered by Europeans. Some species were much larger than the ostrich.

Wikipedia

Moa

Moa (order Dinornithiformes) are an extinct group of flightless birds formerly endemic to New Zealand. There were nine species (in six genera). The two largest species, Dinornis robustus and Dinornis novaezelandiae, reached about 3.6 metres (12 ft) in height with neck outstretched, and weighed about 230 kilograms (510 lb) while the smallest, the bush moa (Anomalopteryx didiformis), was around the size of a turkey. Estimates of the moa population when Polynesians settled New Zealand circa 1300 vary between 58,000 and approximately 2.5 million.

Moa are traditionally placed in the ratite group. However, their closest relatives have been found by genetic studies to be the flighted South American tinamous, once considered to be a sister group to ratites. The nine species of moa were the only wingless birds, lacking even the vestigial wings that all other ratites have. They were the largest terrestrial animals and dominant herbivores in New Zealand's forest, shrubland, and subalpine ecosystems until the arrival of the Māori, and were hunted only by the Haast's eagle. Moa extinction occurred within 100 years of human settlement of New Zealand, primarily due to overhunting.