The irony is that the German breweries rendered idle by Pasteur's strategy were adapted to manufacture acetone for cordite production. |
|
An example is Euglena which have adapted to become mixotrophs which as means that they are both heterotrophic and autotrophic. |
|
These birds are highly adapted to aquatic life. They dive to catch most of their prey, and have a gular pouch in which they can carry food. |
|
Those adapted to it, namely the radially organized frondose Petalonamae, anchored in the mat with their basal bulbs. |
|
Moreover, particularly in developing countries, the use of personal computers had yet to be adapted to a legal domain. |
|
They are non-polluting, and can be adapted to different cultural and ecological environments. |
|
Plant species growing in the semi-arid regions of the world need to be adapted to an environment in which drought strongly affects plant growth. |
|
Common hippos are gregarious, live in herds, and are well adapted to life in the water. |
|
Now, he has said that both Labour's eco-towns and other urban areas should be adapted to improve people's health. |
|
Elegant arcades girdled courtyards but most remaining today have been roughly adapted to modern needs. |
|
Does Gaullism, a tempered nationalism adapted to the late twentieth century, have any significance beyond the borders of France? |
|
Sea turtle lungs are adapted to permit a rapid exchange of oxygen and to prevent the formation of gasses during deep dives. |
|
It is known that crochet galloon machines consist of a number of cooperating members adapted to create a fabric. |
|
Our direct fuel injection can be flexibly adapted to meet the varying requirements of engine builders. |
|
He Frenchifies their apple pie while observing with an aching heart how much better adapted to expatriation they are than he is. |
|
The foxglove is a marvellous example of a plant which is adapted to be pollinated by insects. |
|
Buddhism itself, however, continues to flourish, having successfully responded to the challenge of colonialism and adapted to modern democracy. |
|
Older traditions of internationalism and isolationism have been revived and adapted to post-cold war conditions. |
|
Cache miss buffer adapted to satisfy read requests to portions of a cache fill in progress without waiting for the cache fill to complete. |
|
The positioning and delivery system comprises an injector which is adapted to allow a syringe to be attached and a housing. |
|
|
The variety grown here is well adapted to the climate, requiring less water and fertilization than modern hybrids. |
|
It is also indirect evidence that the common ancestor of all today's birds was, like Gansus, adapted to an aquatic lifestyle. |
|
Some species of waterfowl adapted to feeding on rice, barley, lettuce, and other crops grown on farms in California. |
|
Most styles can be adapted to meet any pool codes in your area, and provide a safe perimeter fence around your pool. |
|
Superbly adapted to arid environments, wild houbaras do not need to drink water but manage to get all the moisture they need from their food. |
|
Individual species have adapted to a wide diversity of ecosystems ranging from desert-like habitats to rain forests and swamplands. |
|
Dolphins, for example, descend from a hoofed mammal that adapted to life in the ocean about 50 million years ago. |
|
As their name implies, chimney swifts adapted to man's presence and commonly nest on the inside walls of chimneys. |
|
The feet seem to be adapted to digging, but pacaranas are not known as diggers. |
|
Scattered throughout the region are smaller areas of riparian, holophytic, and other vegetation types adapted to specific site conditions. |
|
Their digestive tract is adapted to break down fairly large bones such as the femur of the chamois, the small, goatlike antelope of the Alps. |
|
The unit connector port is also adapted to receive power from a connected cellular telephone. |
|
The hemipterous beetles are partially adapted to visiting flowers, as the genera Chauliognathus, Gnathium, and Nemognatha. |
|
Its body is sleek and streamlined, with muscles especially adapted to give a good forward push in water. |
|
Especially well adapted to low or nonexistent light levels are several new species of electric fishes and catfishes. |
|
They tend to be big, bold shrubs, well adapted to use as a flowering hedge or windbreak, or for planting at the back of a flower border. |
|
The case-study methodology can be adapted to the observation of large samples of dyslexics. |
|
The hand gun carried by the first man was a Webley revolver adapted to fire shot gun cartridges. |
|
Many catering businesses occupy old buildings and ventilation systems are often adapted to fit around the structure. |
|
Lasky admitted charges of possessing a CS gas canister and possessing a weapon adapted to discharge a noxious substance. |
|
|
Patrick, as a novelist, how was the experience of having your work adapted to film? |
|
A protective structure adapted to buttress opposed upright walls of an excavation. |
|
They adapted to the variable bounce, and then launched into the bowlers in a flurry of cuts, sweeps, drives and lofts over the infield. |
|
His chosen profession would, in the late 19th century, become increasingly adapted to a capitalistically controlled art market. |
|
They were adapted to running down prey before spear throwers or bows were invented. |
|
Although it evolved from land-dwelling brown bears only 300,000 years ago, the white bear is superbly adapted to life on the frozen sea. |
|
The performances are polished and well adapted to the differing styles of the various works. |
|
A small group of hardcore zine creators have adapted to using new media, moving off the printed page to establish the e-zine. |
|
He had a neoclassical French eye, a certain feeling for the rational and geometric that he adapted to the machine age. |
|
We are not adapted to natural pesticides in our food as plant breeding accidents have adequately demonstrated. |
|
The larvae of the main African vector, Anopheles gambiae, are adapted to the muddy borrow pits left after a mud-brick wall has been constructed. |
|
It is preferred that the control means be adapted to adjust automatically the slew of the discharge boom relative to the hopper car. |
|
The pieces were bisque fired and decorated with underglazes then fired again with a gloss glaze, but the project can be adapted to use acrylics. |
|
Muddlers can be readily adapted to address most fishing opportunities you meet. |
|
A large number of previously uncertificated courses were now adapted to be eligible for FEFC funding. |
|
In Brazil, the living descendants are a diverse group of opossums and mouse opossums, that have adapted to a range of habitats. |
|
The level of curriculum for gifted learners must be adapted to their needs for advancement, depth, and complexity. |
|
Insects have adapted to nearly every ecological niche available, from arctic to tropic and mountaintop to river bottom. |
|
Their tricuspid teeth are especially adapted to feed on organisms with hard shells such as clams, snails, crabs and shrimp. |
|
The first engagement is adapted to mate with the second engagement member to engage the snowboard boot to the binding. |
|
|
It is designed for backhoe or trencher mounting, but it can be adapted to fit a dozer blade on small grading jobs. |
|
The access to the feed was adapted to the size of animals with a traverse allowing only one animal to enter. |
|
Some adjustment will be required, as prior rules and procedures are adapted to a new kind of transnational conflict. |
|
Woody shrubs adapted to nutrient poor conditions, such as leather leaf and sheep laurel, begin to appear. |
|
They simply adapted to the conditions better and have now crept up on Ayr, who remain third and this season will go no higher. |
|
But the five-time Wimbledon champion, in reality, was a natural baseliner who consciously adapted to the serve-and-volley style to win on grass. |
|
Research by Ponganis and Kooyman suggests emperor penguins are metabolically adapted to conserve oxygen while swimming. |
|
These classic pieces are often timeless, never seem to go out of fashion and are easily adapted to the style of the season. |
|
Organisms living in that environment would, of necessity, be specifically adapted to coping with a very soft, semi-fluid bottom. |
|
Standard procedures for candidate selection and nomination often have to be adapted to local conditions. |
|
And with sixpences becoming more scarce, the tradition may have to be adapted to the handing out of old threepenny bits. |
|
The pointillist painting method can be adapted to all levels of elementary and secondary art education. |
|
The inner diameters of the seals were adapted to the diameters of the basal parts of root systems and adjusted by screws. |
|
The tune was also adapted to regional music genres like the Tex-Mex flavor of Texas, salsa in New York, and the mana-style rhythms of California. |
|
At first a fairly generalized elephant species, mammoths evolved into several specialized species adapted to their environments. |
|
Unlike myself, my sister had adapted to the fashion of the day, and her scanty blouse and short skirt left little to the imagination. |
|
Magnetic termites are adapted to living on floodplains with waterlogged soil. |
|
The saltbush Atriplex halimus is a chenopodiaceous plant well adapted to dry saline habitats and widely distributed in the Mediterranean Basin. |
|
The Chenopodiaceae Suaeda salsa L. is native to saline soils of northern China and is adapted to growth in the high salt flooding region. |
|
An agile taildragger with plenty of wing, the Decathlon's configuration is perfectly adapted to short-field work. |
|
|
Most of the non-endemic species within this group have adapted to ruderal areas, while none of the endemics occupies this kind of habitat. |
|
We need to construct a different kind of politics, adapted to the real power but also to the characteristic looseness of hegemonic rule. |
|
This led to the evolution of long-legged running animals adapted to life on the savanna and prairie. |
|
Rheas are tall, long-legged birds, well adapted to a terrestrial lifestyle. |
|
The overall American legal framework was reinterpreted and adapted to fit the exigent circumstances, and rough justice was often the result. |
|
It is surely part of their distinction, too, to have adapted to a live-in photographer with apparent ease and even grace. |
|
Could the appalling 60s architecture of the town centre College really be adapted to become a hotel that visitors would want to stay in? |
|
Arguably, Ireland has rolled with the punches and adapted to necessary change. |
|
Funds permitting, there are also plans to set up some structures atop the trees as the chimps are very much adapted to an arboreal life. |
|
A temperature of 28 to 32 degree Celsius was maintained in the aquarium and the fish adapted to it. |
|
Secondary gills are found in Ancylids, which are freshwater limpets adapted to life in fast-flowing streams. |
|
I'm simply not made to handle the rigors of Detroit, and have never fully adapted to the city. |
|
Much of Inuit life was adapted to the extremes of summer and winter night lengths. |
|
Overseas nurses might work as ancillaries while they adapted to British ways. |
|
But much has changed in those 70 years and the test has been adapted to reflect advances in car design and changing road layouts. |
|
Fourteen different finches evolved from a common ancestor, each adapted to suit the conditions of their various islands. |
|
Warm-season annuals such as marigolds, impatiens and zinnias are adapted to bloom even during the hottest weather. |
|
It strikes me that this version of the bicycle could be adapted to help people with ambulatory difficulties. |
|
The Jacanas are totally adapted to wetland habitats with floating vegetation like lotus, lily, hydrilla and wetland rushes. |
|
Many wheat breeders were successful in breeding semi-dwarf, high-yielding varieties that were well adapted to intensive agriculture. |
|
|
The Kaua'i cave wolf spider and Kaua'i cave isopod are small, blind creatures adapted to life in moist lava tubes and adjacent crevices. |
|
The insect's wings have properties to reflect light that scientists hope can be adapted to camouflage tanks and aircraft. |
|
Unlike kelp and other seaweed, sea grasses are descended from terrestrial plants, which adapted to shallow non-rocky coastal waters. |
|
The low maintenance Africander is heat-tolerant and well adapted to withstand harsh conditions. |
|
To sustain this kind of stamina, they are exquisitely adapted to the rarefied mountain air of their high-altitude stomping grounds. |
|
But her eyes had hardly adapted to the darkness when a new shock made her jump. |
|
The desert sheep is an interesting breed, well adapted to local conditions. |
|
When they got to a brand-new racetrack, surprisingly everybody adapted to the track. |
|
A process used to coat the inside of drinks cartons was adapted to deposit a thin film of acrylic acid polymer on to the discs. |
|
The Indians adapted to the invasion, indicating they were not a passive and static element, and adopted a new resource use strategy that tied their fate to that of the bison. |
|
According to Terry Root, a biologist at the Stanford University, creatures adapted to previous changes in climate by migrating. |
|
His voice, as heard over the television, is not ideally modulated, but it was probably adapted to the acoustics in the room as he heard his own voice. |
|
The control unit also has a receiver electrically connected to the relay switch and is adapted to receive a control signal for actuating the relay switch. |
|
Both Lamarckians and Weismannists admit that the better adapted to its surroundings a living form may be, the more likely it is to outbreed its compeers. |
|
He should've adapted to us rather than trying to make us adapt to him. |
|
In an insular environment a plant family may undergo adaptive radiation with new taxa adapted to and occupying different and sometimes narrow habitats. |
|
The code can easily be adapted to do anything from collecting security passwords to wiping a computer's hard drive within seven seconds of activation. |
|
But these seeds, collected over generations, were the germ of crops that were especially adapted to thrive in the sere, rocky croplands of Afghanistan. |
|
So while the Irish elk preferred relatively temperate conditions and semi-woodland habitats, the woolly mammoth was adapted to cold temperatures and open tundra. |
|
The tribal people who had not crossed the land bridge to Alaska and colonised the Americas had lives perfectly adapted to the harsh conditions of the frozen north. |
|
|
The guns fire blanks but can be adapted to shoot real bullets. |
|
We can see how the leopard seals have adapted to changes in the past century, and that will allow us to predict how they will cope with changes in the future. |
|
They were not alone in enjoying this subterranean existence because Bermuda's caves support a diverse fauna specially adapted to a lightless existence. |
|
Ge'ez is easily adapted to melody because each sign represents a syllable. |
|
It is particularly adapted to rough, rocky land, trees with large, spreading root systems, finer textured soils and for interplanting in previously planted areas. |
|
How freakishly well some kids have adapted to the world after zombies is an angle now left to Carl. |
|
Only plants like sweet woodruff and asarabacca, which are adapted to life in the shade under its thick branches, manage to grow in such conditions. |
|
Encystment is an outstanding feature of the complex life cycle of this crustacean adapted to life in marine salterns and inland hypersaline lakes all over the world. |
|
The same techniques can be adapted to route LSPs in a backbone network. |
|
Most of them adapted to technological change and newer forms of manliness. |
|
The affable Jim, who captained both East Kerry and UCC to county championship honours, has adapted to the small ball game with the greatest of ease. |
|
Large balloon style glasses are best adapted to the qualities of the red wines, the size of the surface area helping the rapid development of the bouquet. |
|
The meiofauna, as the tiny invertebrate animals are called, are equipped with all sorts of odd appendages and body shapes that are well adapted to this unique environment. |
|
The Scythians rejected the Greek way of life, but their aristocracy frequently used jewelry and toreutics made by the Greeks especially for them and adapted to their taste. |
|
It was created for writing the Arabic language, but has been adapted to such diverse languages as Persian, Turkish, Spanish, Hebrew, Urdu, Berber, Malay, and Swahili. |
|
He notes he has adapted to no-huddles, mondo replays and screen clutter. |
|
He showed a nuanced understanding of how the forms and features of animals are adapted to their environments. |
|
And, yes, I have neurotically adapted to the gladiator sport of celebrity culture, the cruelty of a life lived as a moving target. |
|
This clearly shows the unnaturalness of the idea of borrowing foreign doctrines regardless of whether they can be adapted to the Russian environment. |
|
The fauna is entirely soft-bodied and was probably adapted to relatively low oxygen conditions in a variety of usually nearshore marine environments. |
|
|
The brake pad contacting surface of each of the side walls is formed with a wear-indicating projection adapted to be in frictional contact with a brake pad. |
|
By developing the original ideas of neoplasticism, a free mode of structuring has been achieved, that can be adapted to the most diverse building projects. |
|
In the 20th century the Pitot tube was adapted to become the key instrument in measuring the air speed of planes. |
|
The problem was that the head-high buffalo grass that thrived in the thin topsoil had slowly adapted to its deceptively hostile environment over several thousand years. |
|
Examples of this include the bulldog bat, who has adapted to catch fish, or the infamous Desmodus rotundus or vampire bat which survives primarily on the blood of mammals. |
|
It has jaws adapted to receive and grasp a roller and a movable sliding spindle to engage with the staff of the balance-wheel, and a lever for operating the spindle. |
|
Clematis flammula var. maritima is an example of a lianoid, smaller-bodied viny plant that has adapted to open conditions where there are few climbing opportunities. |
|
His compositions are remarkable well adapted to the instrument for which they are written and have achieved a well deserved popularity among violoncellists. |
|
All social institutions have been adapted to suit the prejudices of a canaille debased beyond any degeneracy that our forefathers could have imagined. |
|
The hank has a generally cylindrical body member with a longitudinal channel therethrough large enough to accommodate and slide on a stay on which it is adapted to be mounted. |
|
A large number of studies show that urban populations in the USA and Europe have successfully adapted to recurrent extreme weather events and heatwaves. |
|
Humans and other animals have been living with helminths, or worms, since the dawn of time, and our intestinal tracts have adapted to their presence. |
|
The very nature of this prohibition makes it ideally adapted to produce direct effects in the legal relationship between Member States and their subjects. |
|
The first instance of steam adapted to propel ships dates to the late eighteenth century in France, where small boats with side-mounted paddle wheels were tested on rivers. |
|
By Early Permian time certain lagenides were adapted to cool water paleoenvironments, as evidenced by their occurrences in high paleolalitudes and even in glaciomarine basins. |
|
All types of artillery were used in mountainous terrain, but mortars, mountain guns, and howitzers proved by far the most adapted to action on difficult, rugged terrain. |
|
In this process, pre-existing communicational purposes and procedures are adapted to the new environment, but basically there does not seem to be any radical change. |
|
Among those species that Mohlenbrock lists as occasional to common, those adapted to moist soils tend to be from the red oak group, for example, pin oak and shingle oak. |
|
However, it is a fish which is well adapted to being filleted, yielding cohesive, firm fillets of a good thickness, and many of the classic sole recipes are for fillets. |
|
The slow clumsy creodonts, well adapted to the jungle thickets, were replaced by the swift intelligent cat and dog type carnivora as the dominant predators. |
|
|
It crosses my mind how fast we've adapted to our surroundings. |
|
The two extinct species of Metasequoia were adapted to distinctly different swamp habitats, as are living dawn redwood compared with swamp cypress. |
|
Always the scholar and never the socialite, I adapted to pre-teen activities and the effervescence of wide-eyed, precocious little girls, much to my delight. |
|
The mice that are there are deer mice, but they've adapted to blend in with the lighter concrete so they're a different color than deer mice anywhere else. |
|
Our communities use the word promiscuously, adapted to order. |
|
Psychrophilic enzymes are present in psychrophiles, organisms that have adapted to very cold climates, such as those microorganisms living in the Artic and Antarctic regions. |
|
The morphological differences are genetically determined and it is thus possible that the turlough population is a distinct ecotype adapted to this unusual habitat. |
|
West Indian genotypes are adapted to humid tropical conditions and are hence very cold sensitive but show tolerance of soil salinity and other adverse edaphic conditions. |
|
These could be due to the fact that most of the non-endemic species within this group have adapted to ruderal areas, while none of the endemics occupies this kind of habitat. |
|
The couple wore diving suits adapted to look like real wedding outfits. |
|
I also think that ethnomethodology and conversation analysis could be successfully adapted to give us some unique insights into blogging as a social practice. |
|
Plants and animals are often exquisitely adapted to living in the desert. |
|
Meanwhile, Earth-dwelling extremophile microorganisms, both thermophilic and psychrophilic, are variously adapted to temperatures that would fry us or freeze us. |
|
Horses are herbivores with a digestive system adapted to a forage diet of grasses and other plant material, consumed steadily throughout the day. |
|
Owlerton uses the Tavern as a special party area that can also be adapted to cater for Six-Pack patrons, and that is something Gilburn envies. |
|
Gorse is closely related to the brooms, and like them, has green stems and very small leaves and is adapted to dry growing conditions. |
|
As a prey species, a sheep's system is adapted to hide the obvious signs of illness, to prevent being targeted by predators. |
|
It has been adapted to film, television, opera, novels, comics, and other media. |
|
Intertidal organisms experience a highly variable and often hostile environment, and have adapted to cope with and even exploit these conditions. |
|
Traditions may also be adapted to suit the needs of the day, and the changes can become accepted as a part of the ancient tradition. |
|
|
Even when adapted to more conventional methods, the new plan provoked a storm of protest from the majority of German generals. |
|
State mandated objectives need to be adapted to be on the developmental level of the Involved learner. |
|
Could it be that we are simply poorly adapted to inactivity? |
|
Dogs were sometimes used on machines such as a treadmill, which could be adapted to churn butter. |
|
Pheasants are well adapted to the British climate and breed naturally in the wild without human supervision in copses, heaths, and commons. |
|
In the wake of the Republic's collapse, State religion had adapted to support the new regime of the Emperors. |
|
Some species adapted to disturbed, sunny areas are well adapted to urban conditions and are commonly found in cities. |
|
Coppice management favours a range of wildlife, often of species adapted to open woodland. |
|
During the 20th century, Cherbourg, a strategic point during both world wars, adapted to new threats. |
|
Ospreys have vision that is well adapted to detecting underwater objects from the air. |
|
A particular set of plants and animals tend to be adapted to a relatively narrow range of climate. |
|
In Europe and Asia, the common carp frequently lives in naturally Eutrophic or Hypereutrophic areas, and is adapted to living in such conditions. |
|
The timing of speciations and extinctions differs for animals living in the same region that have adapted to contrasting habitats, Vrba states. |
|
The sickhouse was a cool, capacious, and convenient building, well adapted to the purpose for which it was used. |
|
Wart snakes are adapted to aquatic systems and prey almost exclusively on fish. |
|
The webworm has evolved, along with our climate changes, so that it is completely adapted to our environment. |
|
Whalen, of the Warren Featherbone Company and the Featherbone Communiversity, will discuss how his company has adapted to the changing times. |
|
Modern animal husbandry relies on production systems adapted to the type of land available. |
|
In 1999, all DUALMESH Biomaterial configurations were adapted to feature the advanced CORDUROY tissue ingrowth surface. |
|
Virtually any Swiss Standard German word can be borrowed into Swiss German, always adapted to Swiss German phonology. |
|
|
Orchids have adapted to these conditions through the use of mycorrhizal fungi to extract nutrients. |
|
Some species, like lodgepole pines, thrive with periodic fires, but Joshua trees aren't well adapted to this new threat. |
|
This is mainly due to the species-specific breaking requirements evolved in spermatophytes adapted to alpine environment. |
|
It is highly adapted to fire, producing large amounts of flammable detritus and increasing the frequency and intensity of wildfires. |
|
He shows how our relationships to our predators, parasites, and mutualists have changed, and how we have adapted to these changes. |
|
His short story collection Tales of the Unexpected was adapted to a successful TV series of the same name, beginning with Man From the South. |
|
The knees of many species of reindeer are adapted to produce a clicking sound as they walk. |
|
For a parasitic organism, its habitat is the particular part of the outside or inside of its host on or in which it is adapted to live. |
|
For example, the archerfish has adapted to see above and below the water, now isn't that just fascinating? |
|
Plus, a look at how Arctic foxes have adapted to catch auks in mid-flight and the hunting strategies of Arctic wolves. |
|
It is adapted to habitat made up of shifting, accreting sand layers, as well as that composed of stabilised dunes. |
|
Modern electric light sources come in a profusion of types and sizes adapted to myriad applications. |
|
While the earliest mammals were probably predators, different species have since adapted to meet their dietary requirements in a variety of ways. |
|
The underside consists of a muscular foot, which has adapted to different purposes in different classes. |
|
When borrowing, pronunciation was adapted to Polish phonemes and spelling was altered to match Polish orthography. |
|
The Skagerrak is habitat for approximately 2,000 marine species, many of them adapted to its waters. |
|
Avian influenza, known informally as avian flu or bird flu, refers to influenza caused by viruses adapted to birds. |
|
Most are specially adapted to life under the greater pressure of the water column above it, and the total darkness of the deep sea. |
|
The ethnic groups have adapted to mountains, deserts, grasslands, and forests. |
|
However, some species, such as the brown rat, red fox, and introduced grey squirrel, are well adapted to urban areas. |
|
|
Marshes provide a habitat for many species of plants, animals, and insects that have adapted to living in flooded conditions. |
|
They suggested that microbes had adapted to desiccation, as N was found to be immobilised within 4 h after dry soil was rewet. |
|
We humans have an endogenous circadian rhythmicity in physiology that is adapted to the solar cycle of day and night. |
|
The resulting TF34 was adapted to become the CF34, whose wide variety of models powers many of the regional jets flying today. |
|
The vast majority of humans stayed in Africa and adapted to a diverse array of environments. |
|
Albatrosses are so well adapted to this lifestyle that their heart rates while flying are close to their basal heart rate when resting. |
|
Other birds that have adapted to oceans as their living space are penguins, seagulls and pelicans. |
|
The Antarctic toothfish have large, upward looking eyes, adapted to detecting the silhouettes of prey fish. |
|
These equations are adapted to the conditions of the gas system in question. |
|
For instance, seabirds are a diverse group of birds that have adapted to a life mainly on the oceans. |
|
This is the result of a single ancestral structure being adapted to function in different ways. |
|
Wheelchair access is possible at several places on the former railway trails, and cycle hire centres offer vehicles adapted to wheelchair users. |
|
There, it grows as an understorey plant in the laurel forests so is happily adapted to shade and dry conditions. |
|
In addition, many land animals have adapted to living a major part of their life on the oceans. |
|
For example, the cheek teeth of pinnipeds and odontocetes are specifically adapted to capture fish and squid. |
|
Well adapted to living around humans, it frequently lives and even breeds indoors, especially in factories, warehouses, and zoos. |
|
In some respects though, the sea otter is more fully adapted to water than pinnipeds, which must haul out on land or ice to give birth. |
|
In contrast, both otters and the polar bear are much less adapted to aquatic living. |
|
Since its arrival, sylvatic plague has readily adapted to and pro foundly influenced wild American rodent populations. |
|
In cities such as Amsterdam, they are ever present and well adapted to modern city life. |
|
|
The limbs of this archaeocete were adapted to swimming, but terrestrial locomotion was still possible. |
|
Birds adapted to living in the marine environment are often called seabirds. |
|
A cephalopod is a mollusk that has feet adapted to form tentacles around its mouth. |
|
He adapted to this purpose whatever could upbuild and stimulate people to laud and praise God in Christ Jesus. |
|
It is possible that the rhyme was acquired from one of these sources and then adapted to fit the most famous bridge in England. |
|
Due to the fact they are not fully adapted to Arctic conditions, they are more vulnerable to predators, most notably polar bears. |
|
Their modular design is said to enable these machines to be optimally adapted to the process task. |
|
Every society should adopt an order of business adapted to its special wants. |
|
For example, in England's Exmoor is found the rare horse breed the Exmoor Pony, which has adapted to the harsh conditions of that environment. |
|
The divisions of the High Court are not separate courts, but have somewhat separate procedures and practices adapted to their purposes. |
|
For example, the cultures in the region and the Arctic indigenous peoples have adapted to its cold and extreme conditions. |
|
Some larger species, particularly those adapted to drier habitats will take larger prey including insects and small reptiles. |
|
A few specialized species such as the mergansers are adapted to catch and swallow large fish. |
|
An ecological species is a set of organisms adapted to a particular set of resources, called a niche, in the environment. |
|
As leatherback turtles spend the vast majority of their lives in the ocean, their eyes are not well adapted to night vision on land. |
|
Most species have strong legs and long toes which are well adapted to soft uneven surfaces. |
|
Their distinctive, flattened tests and tiny spines were adapted to life on or under loose sand. |
|
Peatlands are adapted to the extreme conditions of high water and low oxygen content, of toxic elements and low availability of plant nutrients. |
|
As it spread, its ideas diversified and changed, being adapted to local culture. |
|
We are evolutionarily pretty well adapted to eat just about anything. |
|
|
The camel is specially adapted to its hostile desert habitat. |
|
These too are adapted to the low soil water content and have small, prickly leaves which reduce transpiration. |
|
The ocean beneath the arctic ice cap hosts many unique organisms adapted to the cold and shortage of light. |
|
These strays adapted to life in the wilderness, and the breed now called longhorns developed. |
|
As the last and most derived member of the Pleistocene rhinoceros lineage, the woolly rhinoceros was well adapted to its environment. |
|
It has adapted to life in suburban areas and urban parks, although not to the extent of red foxes. |
|
These cuisines have been adapted to local tastes, and have also affected local cuisines. |
|
Over time, various cuisines have blended with indigenous dishes, while foreign ones have been adapted to local tastes. |
|
It is perfectly adapted to the island ecosystem, and occupies a similar ecological niche that the extinct myotragus had. |
|
Therefore, it is possible that one ecotype is better adapted to one ecozone than another. |
|
Many have adapted to local communities or emigrated to the United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, the United States and New Zealand. |
|
Ideally adapted to the chalky and schistose soils of the domaine, Porto Carras' Cabernet has won many awards internationally. |
|
Their eyesight, unlike that of their microbat relatives, is adapted to both night and daylight vision including some colour vision. |
|
The word fantastic has been widely adapted to convey excessive pleasure, such as shagtastic. |
|
It has a vernier adapted to the decimated, or the duodecimated division of the unit of length. |
|
They have adapted to change their pulse emission frequency in relation to their flight speed so echoes still return in the optimal hearing range. |
|
The war was over by the time the plant opened and it had to be adapted to new manufacturing. |
|
Acanthocephalans are dioecious pseudocoelomate worms remarkably adapted to a parasitic lifestyle in that there is no mouth or digestive system. |
|
It is among the largest hare species and is adapted to temperate, open country. |
|
In their natural state they are adapted to mountainous areas with temperate climates. |
|
|
Nutria are large hystricomorph South American rodents adapted to semi-aquatic environments. |
|
Flora in the Pennines is adapted to moorland and subarctic landscapes and climates. |
|
The technology has also been adapted to exercise bicycles, electric bikes, golf carts and wheelchairs. |
|
Most Middle English rewritings of French romances have been undervalued as abridged versions adapted to less cultured audiences. |
|
The earliest known animals fully adapted to terrestrial conditions appear during the Mid Silurian, including the millipede Pneumodesmus. |
|
Our soil and climate are peculiarly adapted to the culture of what has contributed so much to the comfort and welfare of the Native Californian. |
|
From China the major exports were silk and porcelain, adapted to meet European tastes. |
|
They appear in English mythology as the Wyrdes, who were later adapted to become the Three Witches in Shakespeare's Macbeth. |
|
The common ostrich is well adapted to hot, arid environments through specialization of excretory organs. |
|
In the absence of monkeys and other competitors, these primates have adapted to a wide range of habitats and diversified into numerous species. |
|
Gradually, this inland sea became a massive swampy, freshwater lake and the marine inhabitants adapted to life in freshwater. |
|
Canoes can be adapted to many purposes, for example with the addition of sails, outboard motors, and outriggers. |
|
Wild Tarpans have a reputation of being tough and easily adapted to the harsh conditions of semi-open wilderness landscapes. |
|
The blue gum, as well as other species including the Harding grass, are much more flammable and better adapted to wildfires than native species. |
|
In the deep ocean, the waters extend far below the epipelagic zone, and support very different types of pelagic fishes adapted to living in these deeper zones. |
|
Creatures adapted to complex landscapes might move on to specialise in a range of niches, requiring different sorts of locomotory and behavioural adaptations. |
|
And, most fortunately, you have pursued a course of reading, and cultivated your mind in a manner the most admirably adapted to make you a great and successful author. |
|
They went out and looked at modern humans who, like Lucy, have feet adapted to terrestrial bipedalism, and found these people can still function as effective treeclimbers. |
|
For the production of thin-walled items and screw caps, special features are available that enable the packaging Allrounders to be adapted to the particular application. |
|
Webb thought the aulacopod condition better adapted to burrowing in soil and the holopod condition, with less pronounced grooves, more dry-adapted. |
|