brooder - definitie. Wat is brooder
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Wat (wie) is brooder - definitie

GENUS OF FISHES
Kurtidae; Forehead brooder; Kurtoidei; Nursery fish; Kurtid; Brooders; Nurseryfish
  • Time M. Berra]]

brooder      
¦ noun a heated house for chicks or piglets.
brooding         
THE PROCESS BY WHICH CERTAIN OVIPAROUS (EGG-LAYING) ANIMALS HATCH THEIR EGGS
Incubate (biology); Incubate (bird); Brooding; Avian incubation; Brooded; Reptilian incubation; Reptile incubation
adjective appearing darkly menacing.
brood         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Brood (disambiguation)
(broods, brooding, brooded)
1.
A brood is a group of baby birds that were born at the same time to the same mother.
N-COUNT: usu with supp
2.
You can refer to someone's young children as their brood when you want to emphasize that there are a lot of them.
...a large brood of children.
N-COUNT: usu sing [emphasis]
3.
If someone broods over something, they think about it a lot, seriously and often unhappily.
She constantly broods about her family...
I continued to brood. Would he always be like this?
VERB: V over/on/about n, V

Wikipedia

Kurtus

Kurtus is a genus of percomorph fishes, called the nurseryfishes, forehead brooders, or incubator fish, native to fresh, brackish and coastal marine waters ranging from India, through southeast Asia to New Guinea and northern Australia. Kurtus is currently the only known genus in the family Kurtidae, one of two families in the order Kurtiformes. They are famous for carrying their egg clusters on hooks protruding from the forehead (supraoccipital) of the males, although this only has been documented in K. gulliveri and available evidence strongly suggests this is not done by K. indicus (where the hook likely also is too small to carry embryos). Females do not have a hook.

In addition to the egg hook, the kurtid gas bladder is enclosed in a tubular bony structure evolved from the ribs. In both species, the back is elevated into a hump shape.

Despite their unusual reproductive habits, little is known about these species. Historically they have proven very difficult to keep alive in aquaria, although recent success with K. gulliveri has been achieved by Tokyo Sea Life Park in Japan.