- nonegalitarian.
Immediate return foragers consume their food
within a day or two
after they
procure it. Dela****
return foragers store the
surplus food. Hunting-gathering...
-
onset of
foraging behavior, task
division between foragers and workers, and bias in
foraging for
either pollen or nectar.
Honey bee
foraging activity...
-
forage or
purchase from
foragers in
order to add
these foods to
restaurant menus.
While most
foragers engage in the
activity as a pastime,
foraging can...
-
Forage is a
plant material (mainly
plant leaves and stems)
eaten by
grazing livestock. Historically, the term
forage has
meant only
plants eaten by the...
- The
African Pygmies (or
Congo Pygmies,
variously also
Central African foragers, "African
rainforest hunter-gatherers" (RHG) or "Forest
People of Central...
- they
showed that
information s****ers use the same
strategies as food
foragers. In the late 1990s, Ed H. Chi
worked with Pirolli, Card, and
others at...
- Look up
forager or
foraging in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. A
forager is one who
forages, i. e.,
looks for
forage.
Forager may
refer to: A hunter-gatherer...
- A
forage harvester – also
known as a
silage harvester,
forager or chopper – is a farm
implement that
harvests forage plants to make silage.
Silage is gr****...
-
plants cut and
carried to them),
rather than that
which they
forage for
themselves (called
forage).
Fodder includes hay, straw, silage,
compressed and pelleted...
- load size
tends to
increase with
foraging distance from the nest, as
predicted by CPF.
Other central place foragers, such as
social insects, also show...