Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
Here it will be referred to as Bombyx Hybrid.
The species was identified as bombyx mori, the domesticated silkworm.
Since Bombyx Hybrids are much more common than the other variation more is known about them.
Together, the two species constitute the genus Bombyx, the true or mulberry silkmoths.
The silkworm Bombyx mori is the larva of a moth.
Silk is produced by caterpillars of several moth species belonging to the genus Bombyx.
The species Bombyx mori has been domesticated to the point where it is completely dependent on mankind for survival.
Canestrini, on proportion of sexes in Bombyx.
Butenandt named the substance after the moth's Latin name Bombyx mori.
The species name, bombycomorpha refers to the resemblance to the silkworm moths of the Bombyx genus.
The mulberry bushes along the road were for rearing Bombyx (silkworm), and were a great success in the 1870s.
Embiopterans produce a silk thread highly similar to that produced by the much better known silkworm Bombyx mori.
They usually produce a tougher and rougher silk than that from domesticated Bombyx mori silkworms.
Morus is grown for the breeding of Bombyx mori (silkworms) as part of the silk industry.
Small-scale production of silk by raising and domesticating the silkworm Bombyx mori in early sericulture was also known.
Moricin is a highly basic antibacterial peptide that was isolated from the silkworm Bombyx mori.
Tirelli was a specialist in the anatomy and biology of Bombyx mori the Mulberry silkmoth.
Comparison to the sequence of the silk moth Bombyx mori reveals the Lepidoptera as a relatively fast-evolving order.
The Long-tailed Bombyx (Trichiocercus sparshalli) is a moth of the Thaumetopoeidae family.
"Silk" is commonly understood to mean the material that is created from the cocoon of the Asian moth Bombyx mori.
Bombyx huttoni is a species of Bombycidae in the genus Bombyx.
Pat silk is produced by Bombyx textor silkworms which feed on mulberry (Morus spp.)
The available studies indicate that under natural conditions, the isolate only infects species belonging to the Acrididea and the domesticated silk worm Bombyx mori.
Bombyx mori females are much more likely to mate with a male Bombyx mandarina, but both species have to be kept in the same container.
The best-known type of silk is obtained from cocoons made by the larvae of the silkworm Bombyx mori reared in captivity (sericulture).