chenopod การใช้
- The chenopod is a low shrub found in arid environments of South America.
- The conservation park protects and conserves an " assemblage of fossilised chenopod habitat ."
- Most of North Island is dominated by chenopod shrubs, generally less than a metre ( 3 ft ) high.
- The efficacy of chenopod oil as a medicine was increased by adding a strong laxative that expelled the worms and their eggs.
- Some of the chenopod ( " Chenopodium berlandieri " ) seeds had husks only one third as thick as wild seeds.
- In this case, however, chenopod saltbushes found throughout semi-arid Australia were considered a more likely source of the C4 signature.
- The understorey includes an open layer of chenopod shrubs and other woody plant species and an open to continuous groundcover of grasses and herbs.
- Habitats are varied and include : riparian Coolabah forest, tussock grassland, stony saltbush plains, mulga and savannah woodlands, chenopod shrubland and sandy ridges,
- The birch fungus, Capasso wrote, was probably the only such remedy available in Europe before introduction of the far more toxic chenopod oil from the Americas.
- Its natural habitat is dry savanna, with perennial shrubland, especially of succulent and semi-succulent plant species including the chenopod and pig-face genera.
- It has relatively diverse flora dominated by chenopod shrubs and fauna that includes the introduced tammar wallaby, around seven species of reptile, and about 15 resident bird species.
- The park ( sic ) provides habitat for the Malleefowl, mallee communities on the eastern plains of the park ( sic ) include Western Myall and associated chenopod shrubland.
- It is a widespread but sparsely distributed species found across arid and semi-arid inland Australia, commonly found in tussock grassland, chenopod shrubland, and mulga or savannah woodlands.
- Mulga snakes inhabit woodlands, hummock grasslands, chenopod scrublands and almost bare gibber or sandy deserts, usually sheltering near humans under timber, rubbish piles, burrows and deep soil cracks.
- Gibbers : Covering extensive areas in Australia such as parts of the Tirari-Sturt stony desert ecoregion are desert pavements called " Gibber Plains " after the pebbles or " gibbers . " " Gibber " is also used to describe ecological communities, such as " Gibber Chenopod Shrublands " or " Gibber Transition Shrublands ".