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Fauna - vertaling naar duits

SET OF ANIMAL SPECIES IN ANY PARTICULAR REGION AND TIME
Infauna; Epifauna; Fauna (animals); Animal Life; Infaunal; Epifaunal; Mesofauna; Faunae; Faunas; Macrofauna; Marine fauna; Cryptofauna; Faunal; List of sediment-dwelling animals; Sediment-dwelling organism; Sediment-dwelling animal; Faunistics; Faunistic; Sediment-dwelling organisms; Macrofaunal
  • Lukina Jama–Trojama]] cave system of [[Croatia]], is completely blind with a translucent shell
  • New Zealand fauna]]. This image was likely first published in the first edition (1876–1899) of the ''[[Nordisk familjebok]]''.
  • disturbing the sediment]] as they burrow and move through it.
  • Examples of fauna in [[Olleros de Tera]] ([[Spain]])
  • Simplified schematic of an island's fauna – all its animal species, highlighted in boxes

Fauna         
n. fauna, title given to animals of a particular region or time period
marine life         
  • 124–136}}
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  • homocercal tails]].
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  • peristaltic motion]].
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  • Sponges are perhaps the most basal animals. They have no nervous, digestive or circulatory system.
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  • abundant]] biological entities in the sea.
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  • Many marine worms are related only distantly, so they form a number of different phyla. The worm shown is an [[arrow worm]], found worldwide as a predatory component of plankton.
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  • Waterbird food web in [[Chesapeake Bay]]
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  • Lobe fins are bedded into the body by bony stalks. They evolved into the legs of the first tetrapod land vertebrates.
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  • Composition of seawater. Quantities in relation to 1 kg or 1 litre of sea water.
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  •  Together with sponges, brilliantly [[bioluminescent]] ctenophores (comb jellies) are the most basal animals.
  •  The [[beroid]] ctenophore, mouth gaping, preys on other ctenophores.
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  •  These are [[cyanophage]]s, viruses that infect cyanobacteria (scale bars indicate 100 nm)
  • The Earth's [[water cycle]]
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  •  ''[[Dickinsonia]]'' may be the earliest animal. They appear in the fossil record 571 million to 541 million years ago.
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  • Elevation histogram showing the percentage of the Earth's surface above and below sea level
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  • Evolution of mangroves and seagrasses
  • T. adhaerens]]''
  • 50px]] Modified text was copied from this source, which is available under a [https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License]</ref>
  •  date = 9 May 2019 }}</ref>
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  • Video of a ciliate ingesting a diatom
  •  Drawing of a [[giant clam]] (''[[NOAA]]'')
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  •  bibcode = 2019NatSR...911609H }}</ref>
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  • ''[[Guiyu oneiros]]'', the earliest-known bony fish lived during the Late [[Silurian]] 419 million years ago.
  •  Adult [[echinoderm]]s have fivefold symmetry but as [[larvae]] have [[bilateral symmetry]]. This is why they are in the [[Bilateria]].
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  •  date = 26 March 2020 }}</ref>
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  •  [[Kelp forest]]s are among the most productive ecosystems on the planet.
  • phyla]] ([[body plan]]s).
  • [[Lichen]] on a rock in a marine [[splash zone]]. Lichens are mutualistic associations between a fungus and an alga or cyanobacterium.
  •  A [[sea snail]], ''[[Littoraria irrorata]]'', covered in lichen. This snail farms intertidal [[ascomycetous]] fungi.
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  •  doi-access = free }}</ref>
  • Under a magnifier, a splash of seawater teems with life.
  •  Thickness of marine sediments
  •  Marine [[microbial loop]]
  •  doi-access = free }}</ref>
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  • tissue]]. Yet they have the same genes that form the vertebrate (including human) head.
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  • The drainage basins of the principal oceans and seas of the world are marked by [[continental divide]]s. The grey areas are [[endorheic basin]]s that do not drain to the ocean.
  •  Sea spray containing marine microorganisms can be swept high into the atmosphere where they become [[aeroplankton]], and can travel the globe before falling back to earth.
  • Pelagic [[food web]]
  • phytoplankton]].<ref name="Cavicchioli_2019" />
  • supports life]].
  •  ''[[Pelagibacter ubique]]'', the most abundant bacteria in the ocean, plays a major role in the global [[carbon cycle]].
  •  bibcode = 2010Natur.464..744R }}</ref>
  • There are over 100,000 species of [[diatom]]s which account for 50% of the ocean's primary production.
  • alt=Six relatively large variously-shaped organisms with dozens of small light-colored dots all against a dark background. Some of the organisms have antennae that are longer than their bodies.
  •  doi-access = free }}</ref>
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  • The range of sizes shown by [[prokaryote]]s (bacteria and archaea) and [[virus]]es relative to those of other organisms and [[biomolecule]]s
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  • Composite image showing the global distribution of photosynthesis, including both oceanic [[phytoplankton]] and terrestrial [[vegetation]]. Dark red and blue-green indicate regions of high photosynthetic activity in the ocean and on land, respectively.
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  • Red, orange, yellow and green represent areas where algal blooms abound. Blue areas represent nutrient-poor zones where phytoplankton exist in lower concentrations.
  • ''[[Tiktaalik]]'', an extinct lobe-finned fish, developed limb-like fins that could take it onto land.
  • Phylogenetic and symbiogenetic tree of living organisms, showing a view of the origins of eukaryotes and prokaryotes
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  • hammerhead]] protruding from its back, may be an early jawless fish.
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  • ''[[Vibrio vulnificus]]'', a virulent bacterium found in [[estuaries]] and along coastal areas
ORGANISM THAT LIVES IN SALT WATER
Sealife; Sea life; Sea creatures; Marine Life; Sea creature; Marine organisms; Marine organism; Marine animal; Marine biodiversity; Marine animals; Marine Biodiversity; Ocean life; Sea animal; Ocean fauna; Fauna of the ocean; Marine biota; Marine extinction events; Basal animal; Basal animals; Life in the ocean; Marine species
Meeresflor und -fauna, Kreaturen des Meeres
flora and fauna         
  • Size contrast of small cylindrical [[bacterial]] cells to large single-celled eukaryotic ''[[Paramecium]]''.
  • Wood–Ljungdahl or reductive acetyl–CoA pathway]] to fix carbon.
  • Gya]] (billion years old) [[geological formation]]s contain fossilized [[cyanobacteria]] microbes. This suggests they are evidence of one of the earliest known life forms on Earth.
ANY CONTIGUOUS ALIVE PHYSICAL ENTITY; ENTITY OR BEING THAT IS LIVING; AN INDIVIDUAL LIVING THING, SUCH AS ONE ANIMAL, PLANT, FUNGUS, OR BACTERIUM
Living organisms; Organisms; Organismal; Living organism; Gaeabionta; Biological organism; Form of life; Organismic; Flora and fauna; Living creature; Biological form; Non-human organism; Organism forms
Flora und Fauna, Pflanzen- und Tierwelt

Definitie

fauna
['f?:n?]
¦ noun (plural faunae -ni: or faunas) the animals of a particular region, habitat, or geological period. Compare with flora.
Derivatives
faunal adjective
faunistic -'n?st?k adjective
Origin
C18: mod. L. Fauna, the name of a rural goddess, sister of Faunus (see faun).

Wikipedia

Fauna

Fauna is all of the animal life present in a particular region or time. The corresponding term for plants is flora, and for fungi, it is funga. Flora, fauna, funga and other forms of life are collectively referred to as biota. Zoologists and paleontologists use fauna to refer to a typical collection of animals found in a specific time or place, e.g. the "Sonoran Desert fauna" or the "Burgess Shale fauna". Paleontologists sometimes refer to a sequence of faunal stages, which is a series of rocks all containing similar fossils. The study of animals of a particular region is called faunistics.

Voorbeelden uit tekstcorpus voor Fauna
1. Ein Drittel der Flora und Fauna der Welt seien in den kommenden Jahrzehnten vom Aussterben bedroht.
2. Maurice Kottelat berichtete weiter, die Forschergruppe habe den Paedocypris progenetica beim systematischen Inventarisieren der Fauna in Flüssen Asiens gefunden.
3. Gemeinsam erheben sie Daten, die sie der Wissenschaft zur Verfügung stellen, dokumentieren die Flora und Fauna des Meeres.
4. Dörfer aus dem Grenzgebiet verbannt In der Regel findet sich gerade auf der Ostseite viel unberührte Flora und Fauna.
5. Daß Schwaden von Kohlendioxyd der Fauna zum Verhängnis werden können, läßt sich heute an manchen tropischen Gewässern beobachten.