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tadpole shrimp การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • Nationally, some species with the largest respective habitat coverage include : vernal pool fairy shrimp, vernal pool tadpole shrimp.
  • They are similar in structure to the legs of tadpole shrimp, and similarly, their size decreases from front to back.
  • Unlike other species of tadpole shrimp, " Lepidurus arcticus " is known to coexist with fish, such as Arctic char.
  • It was proposed for listing along with the vernal pool fairy shrimp, vernal pool tadpole shrimp, conservancy fairy shrimp and longhorn fairy shrimp.
  • The pools come to life as they fill with water : fairy and tadpole shrimp emerge from cysts embedded in the soils the previous year.
  • There are several vernal pools in this area that are home to such invertebrate species as tadpole shrimp, clam shrimp and the endangered conservancy fairy shrimp.
  • Tadpole shrimps may be found in parts of South America, in ( Argentina and Gal醦agos Islands ), the West Indies, and the Pacific Islands, including Japan and New Caledonia.
  • Kiviat said more promising biological controls might use smaller predators and parasites of mosquito larvae, like fungi, protozoa, nematodes, tadpole shrimp, dragonflies and-- for the supreme insult-- the cannabalistic mosquito, Toxorhynchites.
  • This includes the brine shrimp, clam shrimp, fairy shrimp and tadpole shrimp belonging to the branchiopods, the lophogastridan shrimp, opossum shrimp and skeleton shrimp belonging the Malacostraca; and seed shrimp which are ostracods.
  • When the United States Fish and Wildlife Service listed the vernal pool fairy shrimp, vernal pool tadpole shrimp, conservancy fairy shrimp and longhorn fairy shrimp, they stated that surveys conducted in 1993 and other information that had become available to the Service indicated that the range extends from Ventura County.
  • For example, on tadpole shrimp ( " Triops " ), one article notes, " Our work shows that organisms with conservative body plans are constantly radiating, and presumably, adapting to novel conditions . . . . I would favor retiring the term  living fossil altogether, as it is generally misleading ."