
T cell A type of lymphocyte derived from bone marrow
stem cells that matures into an immunologically competent cell
under the influence of the thymus. T cells are involved in a variety
of cell-mediated immune reactions; also known as a T lymphocyte.
tachyzoite Small, merozoitelike stages of Toxoplasma.
They develop in the host cells' parasitophorous vacuole by endodyogeny.
tactile (touch) receptor A sensory receptor in the skin that detects light pressure; formerly called Meissner's corpuscle.
tactile Pertaining to touch.
tadpole larva The larva of tunicates.
tagma, A compound body section of an arthropod resulting from embryonic
fusion of two or more segments; for example, head, thorax, abdomen.
tagmatization The specialization of body regions
of a metameric animal for specific functions. The head of an arthropod
is specialized for feeding and sensory functions, the thorax is
specialized for locomotion, and the abdomen is specialized for
visceral functions.
taiga Areas of coniferous forests north of 50degree
latitude having extended cold and snow cover winter conditions.
tailings Mining waste left after mechanical or
chemical separation of minerals from crushed ore.
taking Unconstitutional confiscation of private
property.
tall grass prairie A grassland biome characterized
by many tall grasses up to 5 meters tall.
tangential cut A longitudinal section cut at right
angles
tannin A secondary product found in many plants
that have been widely utilized as stains, dyes, inks, or tanning
agents for leather; believed to function in plants by discouraging
herbivores.
tantulus Larva of a tantulocaridan
(subphylum Crustacea).
tapetum The nutritive somatic tissue surrounding
the microsporocyte.
tapeworms Parasitic flatworms, typically consisting
of a chain of repeated units.
taproot system A system of roots characterized
by the presence of one dominant axis (the primary root) and several
lateral, subordinate roots.
Tardigrada A phylum of animals whose members live
in marine and freshwater sediments and in water films on terrestrial
lichens and mosses. Possess four pairs of unsegmented legs and
a proteinaceous cuticle. Water bears.
target cell The cell influenced by a specific hormone.
Tarsal tarsus = the ankle.
tarsus Most distal podomere of the insect or acarine
limb; articulates proximally with the tibia and usually is subdivided
into two to five subsegments in insects.
taste buds Structures in the mouth and other locations
of fishes that are sensitive to chemical stimuli.
taxis Directed reactions to a stimulus
involving an orientation of the long axis of the body in line
with the stimulus source.
taxon A group of organisms that are genetically
(evolutionarily) related.
taxonomy The description of species and the classification
of organisms into groups that reflect evolutionary relationships.
See phylogenetic systematics, evolutionary systematics, and numerical
taxonomy. Also systematics.
technological optimists Those who believe that
technology and human enterprise will find cures for all our problems.
Also called Promethean environmentalism.
technopolis Also called a vertical city; this model
of city development proposes that cities grow vertically instead
of horizontally.
tectonic estuary An estuary that results from the
sinking of land due to movements of the crust.
tectonic plates Huge blocks of the earth's crust that slide around slowly, pulling apart to open new ocean basins or crashing ponderously into each other to create new, larger landmasses.
tectum A rooflike structure, for example,
dorsal part of capitulum in ticks and mites.
tegmen External epithelium
of crinoids (phylum Echinodermata).
tegument Surficial covering of a multicellular
organism, an integument.
telencephalon
The most anterior vesicle of the brain; the anterior-most
subdivision of the prosencephalon that becomes the cerebrum and
associated structures.
teleology The philosophical view that natural events
are goal directed and are preordained, as opposed to the scientific
view of mechanical determinism.
teleomorphic The sexual phase, or perfect stage,
in a fungal life cycle.
teliospore A thick-walled spore found in the
rust and smut fungi; karyogamy occurs within the teliospore and
it gives rise to the basidium.
telmophage Blood-feeding arthropod that cuts
through skin and blood vessels to cause a small hemorrhage of
blood from which it feeds.
telocentric
Chromosome with centromere at the end.
telolecithal Having the yolk concentrated at one end of an egg.
telome theory A theory that regards the primitive
vascular plant as consisiting of upright, dichotomously branched
axes, some of which bear terminal sporangia and from which, through
a series of geometric, architectural modifications, the reproductive
and vegetative organs of other vascular land plants evolved.
telophase Stage in mitosis during which daughter
cells become separate structures; the two sets of separated chromosomes
decondense, and become enclosed by nuclear envelopes.
telson Posterior projection
of the last body segment in many crustaceans.
temnospondyls A large lineage of amphibians that extended from the
Carboniferous to the Triassic.
temperate deciduous forest An ecosystem that occurs
in regions with moderate climate and well-defined seasons;
deciduous trees predominate; animals include insects, white-tailed
deer, and wolves.
temperate rain forest A biome dominated by coniferous
trees, high rainfall, and high humidity; moist coniferous forest.
temperate Characterized by a mild or moderate temperature.
temperature A measure of the speed of motion of
a typical atom or molecule in a substance.
temperature-compensated rhythm The relative
insensitivity of biological rhythms to the effects of temperature;
this contrasts with the fact that many chemical reactions double
in rate for every 10C increase in temperature.
template A pattern or mold guiding the formation
of a duplicate; often used with reference to gene duplication.
temporary parasite Parasite that contacts its host
only to feed and then leaves. Also called an intermittent parasite
or micropredator.
tendon Fibrous band connecting
muscle to bone or other movable structure.
tendril A modified leaf or stem in which only a
slender strand of tissue constitutes the entire structure.
teneral Newly emerged adult arthropod that is soft
and weak.
tension wood The reaction wood produced along the
upper side of leaning woody trees, straightening the trunk by
contracting and "pulling" the tree upright.
tentacle A flexible, elongate appendage.
Tentaculata The class of ctenophorans with tentacles
that may or may not be associated with sheaths into which tentacles
can be retracted. Pleurobranchia.
tentaculocyst One of the sense organs along the margin of medusae; a
rhopalium.
Tentorium An
extension of the parietal bone between the cerebral and cerebellar
hemispheres; actually an ossification of the meninges.
tepal Members of the perianth that are not differentiated
into sepals and petals.
teratogens Chemicals or other factors that specifically
cause abnormalities during embryonic growth and development.
terebra Functional unit of a hymenopteran ovipositor,
formed from first and second valvulae.
tergite Main dorsal sclerite of a somite of an arthropod.
tergum Dorsal part of an arthropod body
segment.
terminal bud scale scars The scars left by the
reduced leaves that enclose the apical meristem of a twig. The
distance between successive terminal bud scale scars represents
one year's growth.
terminal bud The meristematic tissue located at
the tip of a stem.
terpene An unsaturated hydrocarbon formed from
an isoprene building block; found in many plants in the form of
essential oils.
terpenes A group of secondary compounds composed
of two to many isoprene units in a chain or ring; sometimes categorized
as hydrocarbons only, sometimes to include terpenoids.
terpenoids A term referring to all compounds composed
of isoprene units.
terracing Shaping the land to create level shelves
of earth to hold water and soil; requires extensive hand labor
or expensive machinery, but it enables farmers to farm very steep
hillsides.
terrarium A closed biological system in which plants
and animals coexist without external inputs or discharges; H2O,
CO2, O2, and nutrients cycle in the closed system.
terrestrial Pertaining to the land.
territoriality An intense form of intraspecific
competition in which organisms define an area surrounding their
home site or nesting site and defend it, primarily against other
members of their own species.
territory
A restricted area preempted by an animal or pair of animals, usually
for breeding purposes, and guarded from other individuals of the
same species.
tertian malaria Malaria in which fevers recur every
48 hours. Caused by Plasmodium vivax, P. ovale, and P. falciparum.
tertiary treatment The removal of inorganic minerals
and plant nutrients after primary and secondary treatment of sewage.
test A shell or hardened outer
covering.
testa Seed coat.
testcross Crossing an organism having a dominant
expression for a trait with an organism having a homozygous recessive
genotype for that trait to determine the genotype of the organism
expressing the dominant phenotype.
testing Application of theories to examine repeatability
and accuracy, should have comparisons to known information.
testis Primary reproductive organ of a male; a sperm-cell
producing organ.
testosterone Male sex hormone secreted by the interstitial
cells of the testes.
Tethys Sea A shallow sea that once separated the
Eurasian and African sections of the supercontinent Pangaea. It
eventually gave rise to the modern Mediterranean Sea.
tetracotyle Strigeoid metacercaria in the family
Strigeidae.
tetrad A pair of homologous chromosomes during synapsis
(prophase I of meiosis). A tetrad consists of four chromatids.
tetrapods A nontaxonomic designation used to refer
to amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals.
tetrathyridium Only metacestode form known in the
tapeworm cyclophyllidean genus Mesocestoides. A large, solid-bodied
cysticercoid.
thalamus An oval mass of gray matter within the
diencephalon that serves as a sensory relay area.
Thaliacea A class of urochordates whose members
are planktonic. Adults are tailless and barrel shaped. Oral and
atrial openings are at opposite ends of the tunicate. Water currents
are produced by muscular contractions of the body wall and result
in a weak form of jet propulsion.
thallus The complete body of a seaweed.
thecodonts
A large assemblage of Triassic archosaurian diapsids of the order
Thecodontia and characterized by having teeth set in sockets.
theileriosis Disease of cattle and other ruminants,
caused by Theileria parva. Also called East Coast fever.
thelyotoky, thelytoky Type of parthenogenesis in
which all individuals are uniparental and essentially no males
are produced.
theory of evolution by natural selection A theory
conceived by Charles Darwin and Alfred Russell Wallace on how
some evolutionary changes occur.
theory of inheritance of acquired characteristics The mistaken idea that organisms develop new organs, or modify existing organs as environmental problems present themselves, and that these traits are passed on to offspring.
theory An idea that is well supported by data (information)
but not known to be universally true.
therapsids Extinct
Mesozoic mammal-like reptiles from which true mammals evolved.
thermal plume A plume of hot water discharged into
a stream or lake by a heat source, such as a power plant.
thermal pollution Pollution by heated water.
thermal stratification The layering of different
temperatures of water or air caused by different densities, less
dense floating on more dense layers.
thermocline
Layer of water separating upper warmer and lighter water from
lower colder and heavier water in a lake or sea; a stratum of
abrupt change in water temperature.
thermoconformer To conform to the temperature of
one's external environment.
thermodynamics The branch of science that deals
with heat, energy, and the interconversion of these; the study
of energy transformations.
thermogenesis The generation of heat by muscle contraction.
thermoplastics Soft plastics composed of single-chain,
unlinked polymers, such as polyethylene, polypropylene, polyvinylchloride,
polystyrene, and polyester, that can be remelted and reformed
to make useful products.
thermoreceptor A sensory receptor that is sensitive
to changes in temperature; a heat receptor.
thermoregulation Heat regulation.
thermoset polymers Hard plastics composed of cross-linked
molecular networks, such as acrylic, phenolic, or epoxy resins,
that cannot be remelted or recycled.
thermosphere The highest atmospheric zone; a region
of hot, dilute gases above the mesosphere extending out to about
1600 km (1000 mi) from the earth's surface.
Third World Less-developed countries that
are not capitalistic and industrialized (First World) or centrally-planned
socialist economies (Second World); not intended to be derogatory.
thoracic Pertaining to the
thorax or chest.
thorn forest The dry end of a savanna community; hotter and drier than a typical savanna, these areas are characterized by dense, thorny small trees.
thorn A modified stem terminating in a sharp point.
threatened species While still abundant in parts
of its territorial range, this species has declined significantly
in total numbers and may be on the verge of extinction in certain
regions or localities.
threshold The minimum stimulus necessary to initiate
an all-or-none response.
thrombin. Enzyme catalyzing fibrinogen transformation
into fibrin. Percursor is prothrombin.
thrombocyte See platelet.
thrombus Blood clot in a blood vessel or in one
of the cavities of the heart.
thylakoid membrane A saclike photosynthetic membrane
in chloroplasts; stacks of thylakoids form the grana.
thylakoid The lamellar structure of the grana of
chloroplasts.
thymine A pyrimidine base occurring in DNA but
not in RNA.
thymus gland A ductless mass of flattened lymphoid
tissue situated behind the top of the sternum; it forms antibodies
in the newborn and is involved in the development of the immune
system.
thyroid gland An endocrine gland located in the
neck and involved with the metabolic functions of the body.
thyroid An endocrine gland
near the shield-shaped cartilage of the larynx.
Ti plasmid The tumor-inducing plasmid from
the bacterium, Agrobacterium tumefaciens; commonly used as a vector
for recombinant DNA studies in plants.
tibia Podomere of an insect or acarine leg that
articulates proximally with the femur in insects and patella in
acarines and distally with the tarsus in insects or with the metatarsus
or tarsus in acarines.
tidal bore A steep wave generated as high tides
move up some estuaries and rivers.
tidal current A current that is generated by tides.
tidal energy Energy that can be harnessed as a
result of the movement of tides.
tidal marsh See salt marsh.
tidal range The difference in water level between
successive high and low tides.
tidal station A dam built across a narrow bay or
estuary traps tide water flowing both in and out of the bay. Water
flowing through the dam spins turbines attached to electric generators.
tide pool A depression that holds seawater at low
tide.
tide table A table that gives the predicted time
and height of tides for particular points along a coast.
tide The periodic, rhythmic rise and fall of the
sea surface.
tied ridges Series of ridges running at right angles
to each other so that runoff is blocked in all directions and
water is allowed to soak into the soil.
Tiedemann's bodies
Four or five pairs of pouchlike bodies attached to the ring canal
of sea stars, apparently functioning in production of coelomocytes.
tight junction. Region of actual fusion of cell
membranes between two adjacent cells.
tillering The production of lateral buds and shoots
near the ground to result in a plant with several shoots instead
of one; particularly important in grasses and grain crops.
timberline In mountains, the highest-altitude
edge of forest that marks the beginning of the treeless alpine
tundra.
tintinnids Ciliates that secrete vase-like
cases, or loricas.
tissue A group of similar cells that performs a
specialized function.
titer Concentration of
a substance in a solution as determined by titration.
tolerance limits See limiting factors.
tolerance range The range of variation in an environmental
parameter that is compatible with the life of an organism.
tonicity The state of tissue tone or tension; in
body fluid physiology, the effective osmotic pressure equivalent.
tonoplast The membrane surrounding the vacuole.
tool-making revolution The invention of tools--probably
first of stone, wood, or bone_ sometime in the early Paleolithic
period. Knowledge of tool-making and tool-using technologies
may have predated modern humans, as evidenced by tool utilization
by other primates.
top carnivore The consumer at the end of a food
chain or web; a carnivore that ordinarily has no predator under
those ecological conditions.
topography The surface condition of an area of
land; relief features.
topsoil The first true layer of soil; layer in
which organic material is mixed with mineral particles; thickness
ranges from a meter or more under virgin prairie to zero in some
deserts.
tornado A violent storm characterized by strong
swirling winds and updrafts; tornadoes form when a strong cold
front pushes under a warm, moist air mass over the land.
tornaria A free-swimming
larva of enteropneusts that rotates as it swims; resembles somewhat
the bipinnaria larva of echinoderms.
torpor A time of decreased metabolism and lowered
body temperature that occurs in daily activity cycles.
torsion A developmental twisting of the visceral
mass of a gastropod mollusc that results in an anterior opening
of the mantle cavity and a twisting of nerve cords and the digestive
tract.
tortoiseshell The polished shell of hawksbill turtles.
total fertility rate The number of children born
to an average woman in a population during her entire reproductive
life.
total growth rate The net rate of population growth
resulting from births, deaths, immigration, and emigration.
toxic colonialism Shipping toxic wastes to a weaker
or poorer nation.
toxicyst
Structures possessed by predatory ciliate protozoa, which on stimulation
expel a poison to subdue the prey.
toxin present in certain dinoflagellates that cause
red tides.
toxins Poisonous chemicals that react with specific
cellular components to kill cells or to alter growth or development
in undesirable ways; often harmful, even in dilute concentrations.
trabecula In general anatomical usage, a septum extending from an envelope through an enclosed substance, which, together with other trabeculae, forms part of the framework of various organs; here referring specifically to the cell processes connecting the perikarya of cestode and trematode tegumental cells with the distal cytoplasm. Also called internuncial process.
trabecular net Network
of living tissue formed by pseudopodia of amebocytes in Hexactinellida
(phylum Porifera).
trace element an element needed for normal metabolism
but available only in minute amounts from the environment
trace elements Microelements of plant nutrition,
needed in small quantities such as boron, zinc, and copper.
trace mineral Dietary minerals that are required
in minute quantities.
trachea The windpipe. Also, any
of the air tubes of insects.
tracheae The small tubes that carry air from spiracles
through the body cavity of an arthropod; arthropod tracheae are
modifications of the exoskeleton.
tracheal system System of cuticle-lined tubes
in many insects and acarines that functions in respiration; opens
to outside through spiracles.
tracheid An elongated, tapering xylem cell that
is specialized for conducting water and support with lignified
pitted walls.
tracheophytes Plants with a well-defined vascular
system.
tract A bundle of nerve fibers within the central
nervous system.
tradable permits Pollution quotas or variances
that can be bought or sold. If you have a permit to emit a certain
amount of some pollutant, I might buy a portion of that amount
from you rather than put pollution controls on my equipment. You,
in turn, would have to reduce your emissions accordingly.
trade winds Steady winds that blow from east to
west toward the Equator, replacing the hot air that rises at the
Equator.
tradition A behavior pattern that is passed from
one generation to the next by learning.
tragedy of the commons An inexorable process of
degradation of communal resources due to selfish self-interest
of "free riders" who use or destroy more than their
fair share of common property. See open access systems.
transcription The formation of a messenger RNA molecule
that carries the genetic code from the nucleus to the cytoplasm
of a cell.
transducer A receptor that converts one form of
energy into another.
transduction. Condition in which bacterial DNA
(and the genetic characteristics it bears) is transferred from
one bacterium to another by the agent of viral infection.
transection The severing of a nerve to determine
its specific function(s).
transfer RNA (tRNA). A form of RNA of about 70
or 80 nucleotides, which are adapter molecules in the synthesis
of proteins. A specific amino acid molecule is carried by transfer
RNA to a ribosome-messenger RNA complex for incorporation
into a polypeptide.
transform fault A large horizontal displacement
in the mid-ocean ridge.
transformation. Condition in which DNA in the environment
of bacteria somehow penetrates them and is incorporated into their
genetic complement, so that their progeny inherit the genetic
characters so acquired.
transforming factor A substance that can be passed
from one cell to another and cause a permanent change in heredity.
transgenic Cells or organisms that contain genes
that were inserted into them from other organisms using the techniques
of genetic engineering.
transitional mutants A type of mutation in which
a single purine-pyrimidine base pair is replaced by another.
transitional zone A zone in which populations from
two or more adjacent communities meet and overlap.
translation The second stage of protein synthesis
in which the codon of mRNA pairs with the anticodon of tRNA at
the surface of the ribosome.
translocation Moving animals from one location
to another, for instance to determine whether and how soon they
shift their activity cycle to match the photoperiod and/or other
features in their new location.
transmission electron microscope The type of microscope
that produces highly magnified images of ultrathin tissue sections
or other specimens.
transpiration The evaporation of water from plant
surfaces, especially through stomates.
Transpiration-Cohesion Theory The theory that
explains water movement in the xylem; the driving force is the
pull of transpiration and the cohesion of water molecules.
transpirational pull Water molecules being "pulled"
up the xylem are triggered by transpirational water loss at the
leaf surface.
transplantation The movement of neural or hormonal
tissue from one area of an animal to another or from one animal
to another. Also, the movement of individuals or colonies from
one location to another.
transport host Paratenic host.
transporter. See permease.
transverse cut A section cut at right angles to
the long axis. Also termed a cross section.
transverse plane A plane
or section that lies or passes across a body or structure.
transversional mutant A type of mutation in which
a purine-pyrimidine base pair is replaced by a pyrimidine-purine
base pair.
Trapezium trapez = a table.
trauma Injury caused by accident or violence.
Trematoda The class of platyhelminthes that has
members that are all parasitic; several holdfast devices present;
have complicated life cycles involving both sexual and asexual
reproduction.
trematodes See flukes.
trench A narrow, deep depression in the sea floor.
trench deep area in the ocean floor, generally
deeper than 6,000 m
triactinomyxon Stage in the life cycle of a myxozoan,
formerly assigned to a separate class.
tribocytic organ Glandular, padlike organ behind
the acetabulum of a strigeoid trematode.
trichinosis A disease resulting from infection by
Trichinella spiralis (Nematoda) larvae by eating undercooked meat;
characterized by muscular pain, fever, edema, and other symptoms.
trichocysts An anchoring structure present in the
ectoplasm of some ciliates. A bottle-shaped extrusible organelle
of the ciliate pellicle.
trichogon Spiny male larva of a rhizocephalan cirripede
that comes to lie within a special receptacle in the female.
trichome An epidermal appendage, such as a hair
or scale.
Trigeminal tri = three; geminus = twin.
triglyceride A type of lipid formed from three
fatty acids bonded to a molecule of glycerol; a fat or oil.
Trilobitamorpha The subphylum of arthropods whose
members had bodies divided into three longitudinal lobes. Head,
thorax, and abdomen present. One pair of antennae and biramous
appendages. Entirely extinct.
Trimerophytophyta An extinct division of early
vascular plants characterized by a monopodial axis, dichotomously
branched lateral axes bearing terminal sporangia. Believed to
have been the ancestor of the ferns and progymnosperms.
trimerous
Body in three main divisions, as in lophophorates and some deuterostomes.
tripartite See trimerous.
triplet A group of three nucleotides on a nucleic
acid that codes for a particular amino acid.
triploblastic Animals whose body parts are organized
into layers that are derived embryologically from three tissue
layers: ectoderm, mesoderm, and endoderm. Platyhelminthes and
all coelomate animals are triploblastic.
triploid A cell or nucleus that contains three
sets of chromosomes; common in endosperm.
Triquetrum A carpal bone.
trisomy 21 See Down syndrome.
tritonymph Third nymphal stage in most acarines.
tritosternum Ventral, bristlelike sensory organ
just behind the gnathosoma of a mesostigmatid mite.
triungulin First instar larva of
some parasitic, hypermetamorphic Neuroptera and Coleoptera and
of the Strepsiptera, which is an active, campodeiform oligopod.
trochanter Podomere of an insect or acarine leg
that articulates basally with the coxa and distally with the femur;
usually fixed to the femur in insects.
Trochanter trochanter = runner. Two processes
on the proximal femur.
Trochlea trochlea = a pulley.
trochophore larva A larval stage characteristic of many molluscs, annelids, and some other protostomate animals.
trochophore A free-swimming ciliated marine larva characteristic
of most molluscs and certain ectoprocts, brachiopods, and marine
worms; an ovoid or pyriform body with preoral circlet of cilia
and sometimes a secondary circlet behind the mouth.
trochophore early free-swimming, ciliated
larval stage of many marine mollusks, annelid worms, ectoprocts,
and brachiopods
trombe wall An interior, heat-absorbing wall;
may be water-filled glass tubes that absorb heat rays and
let light into interior rooms.
trophallaxis Exchange of food between young and adults, especially
certain social insects.
trophi Jaw-like
structures in the mastax of rotifers.
trophic Pertaining to feeding
and nutrition.
trophic hormones Hormonal
or neurosecretory products from endocrine glands or neurosecretory
cells that influence the production and release of other hormone
products from endocrine glands.
trophic levels The feeding level of an organism
in an ecosystem; green plants and other autotrophs function at
producer trophic levels; animals function at the consumer trophic
levels.
trophoblast Outer ectodermal nutritive layer of blastodermic vesicle;
in mammals it is part of the chorion and attaches to the uterine
wall.
trophont Stage in the life cycle of gregarines.
trophosome Organ
in poganophorans bearing mutualistic bacteria, derived from midgut.
trophozoite Active, feeding stage of a protozoan,
in contrast to a cyst. Also called the vegetative stage.
tropic Related to
the tropics (tropical); in endocrinology, a hormone that influences
the action of another hormone or endocrine gland.
tropical rain forest An ecosystem characterized
by very high rainfall and temperatures between 20 and 25C; very
diverse life-forms; broad-leaved, nondeciduous trees;
highly stratified forest.
tropical seasonal forest Semievergreen or partly
deciduous forests tending toward open woodlands and grassy savannas
dotted with scattered, drought-resistant tree species; distinct
wet and dry seasons, hot year-round.
tropics Equatorial regions with year-round
warm weather.
tropomyosin
Low-molecular weight protein surrounding the actin filaments
of striated muscle.
troponin Complex of globular proteins positioned
at intervals along the actin filament of skeletal muscle; thought
to serve as a calcium-dependent switch in muscle contraction.
tropopause The boundary between the troposphere
and the stratosphere.
troposphere The layer of air nearest to the earth's
surface; both temperature and pressure usually decrease with increasing
altitude.
true language Communication that includes the use
of symbols to represent abstract objects or ideas, and syntax,
where those symbols convey different messages depending on their
sequence.
true navigation The ability to maintain or establish
reference to a goal without the use of landmarks.
trypomastigote Form of Trypanosomatidae with an
undulating membrane and the kinetoplast located posterior to the
nucleus. An example is Trypanosoma.
tsetse fly Bloodsucking fly of the genus Glossina.
tsunami Giant seismic sea swells that move rapidly
from the center of an earthquake; they can be 10 to 20 meters
high when they reach shorelines hundreds or even thousands of
kilometers from their source.
tube feet (podia) .Numerous small, muscular, fluid-filled
tubes projecting from body of echinoderms; part of water-vascular
system; used in locomotion, clinging, food handling, and respiration.
tube nucleus One division of the microscope nucleus
in a pollen grain that is responsible for the formation of a pollen
tube from the stigma through the style to the ovule.
tuber An enlarged, fleshy, underground stem tip,
such as the potato.
tubercle Small protuberance,
knob, or swelling.
Tuberculum Process on some bones.
Tuberosity A normal raised
area on a bone, such as the deltoid tuberosity, which is the site
of insertion of the deltoid muscle.
tuberous roots Modified fibrous roots that have become fleshy and enlarged with food reserves.
tubular eyes Specialized eyes of many midwater
animals that allow upward or downward vision.
tubular nerve cord A hollow nerve cord that runs
middorsally along the back of chordates; one of four unique chordate
characteristics; also called the neural tube and, in vertebrates,
the spinal cord.
tubulin Globular protein forming the hollow cylinder of microtubules.
tumor necrosis factor. A cytokine, the most important
source of which is macrophages, that is a major mediator of inflammation.
tumor A spherical mass of cells in which cell divisions
occur at random and often in an uncontrolled fashion.
tundra Terrestrial
habitat zone, located between taiga and polar regions; characterized
by absence of trees, short growing season, and mostly frozen soil
during much of the year.
tunic In tunicates, a
cuticular, cellulose-containing covering of the body secreted
by the underlying body wall.
tunicates Chordates that
show the three basic chordate characteristics only in the larva.
Turbellaria The class of Platyhelminthes that has
members that are mostly free living and aquatic; external surface
usually ciliated; predaceous; possess rhabdites; protrusable proboscis;
mostly hermaphroditic. Examples: Convoluta, Notoplana, Dugesia.
turbellarians Mostly free-living flatworms.
Turbinate Folded parts of the
ethmoid bone.
turbulence random, nonlaminar flow of a fluid
turf The intertwined fibrous roots of grasses forming
a mass with the soil just below ground level.
turgid A swollen, distended cell that is firm due
to water uptake.
turgor pressure The real pressure developed in
living cells by pressing against a membrane.
turning over The mixing of thermal zones in a standing
body of freshwater due to cold, more dense water "sinking"
from the top through the other layers.
turnover rate the rate at which members of a population
or community replace themselves
turpentine A solvent that includes two terpenes--camphor
and pinene.
tusk shells Molluscs
that have an elongate, tapered shell that is open at both ends.
tympanal (tympanic) organs Auditory receptors present on the abdomen or legs of some insects.
tympanic bulla bony case in the middle ear that
encloses the sound-processing structures of mammals
tympanic Relating to the
tympanum that separates the outer and middle ear (eardrum).
type specimen. A specimen deposited in a museum
that formally defines the name of the species that it represents.
typhlosole A longitudinal fold projecting into the intestine in certain
invertebrates such as the earthworm.
typology A classification of
organisms in which members of a taxon are perceived to share intrinsic,
essential properties, and variation among organisms is regarded
as uninteresting and unimportant.