首页-日语 - 地盘 - 记录 - 日志 - 下载 - 查词 - 翻译 - 排行
F8键(暂停/播放)| F9键(重复此句)| 左键或ALT+Z(上一句)| 右键或ALT+X(下一句)
提示:听写播放器因为flash插件问题无法播放,请点击此处解决
听写窗口
译文窗口
注释窗口

您没有登录,系统不能保存您的听写记录和听写错词,点击此处登录

听写提交之后可查看原文
A similar kind of mimicry is" Mullerian mimicry" - named after another another early biologist and in this sort of mimicry,
both the model and the mimic are dangerous or taste bad.
A very obvious example is the way that so many unrelated species of bees, wasps, and ants have assumed similar,
bold, black and-yellow or black and - orange banded patterns.
By doing this, Mullerian mimics present a united image that predators soon learn to be wary of.
There's also another aspect of mimicry that I 'd like to mention, too, and that's the mimicry used by predators.
This is called" aggressive mimicry", and it is used to conceal or misrepresent a predator until its prey comes near enough to capture.
Many mantids, for example, are green or brown, so that they blend in with their plant surroundings, but some tropical mantids are fantastically shaped and colored,
like the beautiful Orchid Mantis, which resembles a petal of one of those tropical flowers, and it hides motionless next to one of these orchids until an insect comes within its reach.
There 're also several green colored vines and branches of the jungle until they suddenly lash out to grab their prey.
Actually, there is an endless number of ingenious mimics in the natural world, and I recommend that you all try a Google Images search tonight for some more interesting examples of this fascinating behavior.
暂无译文
暂无注释
听写注意
1.为防止灌水听写至少要输入超过10个单词方可提交同时听写内容不能粘贴;
2.标点符号不用填写,听写比对会忽略掉标点符号;
3.单词与单词之间要留有空格,同时数字(年月或金额)请用阿拉伯数字。
可友留言
加载中...
我来说2句
抱歉,您需要先登录后才能留言
谁正在听写
得分最高
最新听写
热门听写