0 someone who climbs mountains for sport
1 a plant that grows up a supporting surface
2 a person who climbs mountains as a sport
Closed, hatched line, vertical line and open indicate trees, herbs, climbers and epiphytes, respectively.
In 1981, for example, he argued that larger populations created ' opportunities which some would-be social climbers were quick to seize and exploit '.$!
Table 1 shows that leaf area has a negative influence on leaf longevity, and climbers have relatively small leaves.
As predicted, the proportion of stem twiners increased and tendril climbers decreased over stand age in this study.
The hook/thorn climbers attach themselves to the vegetation with either backward-pointing spines or with hooks that may grow around their hosts.
Tendrillar climbers tended to occur in roughly equal amounts in tree species to the left of the vertical axis.
Tendrillar climbers had the highest probability of being found on mid-sized, fleshy-fruited trees.
Scrambling climbers showed the least variability in part because their rarity minimized the statistical difference between their abundance on host species.
中文繁体
人, 攀登者, 登山者…
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人, 攀登者, 登山者…
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escalador, -ora, alpinista [masculine-feminine]…
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alpinista…
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登山者…
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dağcı, tırmanıcı…
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alpiniste [masculine-feminine], grimpeur/-euse [masculine-feminine], alpiniste…
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alpinista, escalador, -a…
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