Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Biparental mouthbrooding occurs where both parents take some of the eggs.
The species is noted for being a biparental mouthbrooder.
The incidence of biparental care presents no great puzzle.
In these groups, paternity certainty could be a factor deciding about biparental care.
Both sexes often take care of the eggs (biparental care).
These birds are monogamous, with biparental care, and only fledge one young per year.
Evidence suggests that even when there is biparental inheritance, crossing-over doesn't always occur.
They are among about 10 percent of primate species considered biparental, with both sexes sharing the work.
In birds, biparental care is the most common, because reproductive success directly depends on the parents' ability to feed their chicks.
Sandhill Cranes provide extended biparental care to their young.
Many of these biparental species are socially monogamous, so individuals remain with their mate for at least one breeding season.
Mutated genes must come from both sides of the family, i.e., biparental inheritance.
Tapi was biparental, with a predisposition toward masculinity.
For instance, chloroplasts have been found to exhibit maternal, paternal and biparental modes even within the same species (5,6).
An example of biparental mitochondrial inheritance is in the yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
If both parents abandon (biparental desertion), each individual will do so at a time offering them maximal benefit based on when the other parent leaves.
And cellfusion experiments hint that biparental inheritance of organelles does indeed cause problems, says Hurst.
Silver foxes engage in a system of biparental care, which is associated with their seasonal monogamous mating scheme.
By contrast, most of the far fewer Sarotherodon species are biparental mouthbrooders, with both parents protecting the eggs and fry.
Similar breeding systems, with biparental care and monogamy, are used by some cichlid fish, and several species of primate.
These are vegetative segregation, uniparental inheritance and biparental inheritance.
They are one of the most interesting of the Tanganyikans, as they are biparental mouthbrooders.
On the other hand, Schmitt (2005) discusses how demanding reproductive environments should increase the desire and pursuit of biparental, monogamous relationships.