A supplement was formulated based on the results of the forage test, nutritional requirements of beef cows, and locally available feedstuffs. |
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The Ancient Murrelet is more agile in flight than most alcids and will often plunge directly from the air into the water to forage. |
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Supplemental forage was provided on all grazing farms when pasture availability was limited. |
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The forage cap became the service cap, and the blouse became the pocketed service coat, worn with pegged breeches, leggings, and russet footwear. |
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If you're short of forage and wheat straw is available, give ammoniation a try. |
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Small flocks of mangy goats and sheep, shepherded by women in flowing black abayas, forage in the trash. |
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In honey bee colonies, scouts search for productive forage sites and then recruit other workers to those locations using a waggle dance. |
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The goats forage, trample, and create wallows, scraping away surface material and accelerating soil erosion. |
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All purchased forage and bedding should be sourced from suppliers operating to recognised quality control standards. |
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When alewives return to the rivers, they provide abundant forage for resident and sea-run fish, waterbirds, and raptors. |
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They usually forage below the tide line of rocky beaches and jetties on the Washington coast. |
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Due to its low value for livestock forage, it is a concern to livestock producers and ranchers. |
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Despite this, the trials of other feed grain wheats and forage cereal varieties east of Bairnsdale continue to attract the interest of growers. |
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In any event, if a lid is not closed properly on a wheelie bin, a fox will forage in the bin and the rubbish will still be strewn. |
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Until the 1940's rapeseed was grown mainly for lamp fuel and as forage for animals. |
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Female kakapo raise their chicks on their own, and at night they leave their nest to forage for food. |
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Like their attempts to afforest treeless subalpine meadows, they planted forage species that had never grown in these mountains. |
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Beetles, on the other hand, keep their hind wings well hidden under hard protective wing cases to protect them as they forage for food. |
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Unlike most other woodpeckers, Northern Flickers are principally ground feeders, though they also forage on tree trunks and limbs. |
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This can cause difficulty for forage producers who have increased their use of mixtures of grasses and legumes, especially with alfalfa. |
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Ranchers and farmers also killed pronghorn, erroneously believing the antelope would take away forage from sheep or cattle. |
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Many trees, such as lime, sycamore, horse chestnut and willow provide excellent bee forage. |
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They also forage in shallow water for aquatic invertebrates and catch insects on foliage or near the surface of water. |
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During winter, these birds roost and forage on beaches, dunes, and sandy and muddy flats of the Atlantic and Gulf coasts. |
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Some species of woodcreepers forage by following army ant swarms to catch the prey that are flushed by the swarms. |
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Forage soybeans also can be used as a one-year forage crop in rotation with corn. |
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It provides early spring forage not only for cattle and sheep, but for wild ruminants as well, including deer, bison, elk, and moose. |
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Accurate and precise estimates of forage energy content are required to formulate diets properly for lactating dairy cows and other ruminants. |
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Beef cows, brood ewes, and most other ruminants do not require consistent quality forage, and longer grazing periods should suffice. |
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Guarding males are thought to forage less during the rut than do nonguarding males, possibly leading to greater fitness costs. |
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Native grasses support cattle grazing and provide forage and shelter for native wild animals, such as elk, bighorn sheep, and sage grouse. |
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When not engaged in territorial behaviors or mating, the winged adults forage great distances to prey on insects. |
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A large number of magpie-larks forage in the park surrounding Calamvale Creek. |
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The forage and baggage came into camp promptly, and this contributed greatly to celerity of movement and comfort for man and beast. |
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But within minutes of the restart, all the tension and tetchiness vanished as both sides began to pick up the tempo and forage forward at will. |
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It outcompetes forage grasses, and its thornlike prickles pose a threat to workers picking vegetable crops in infested areas. |
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The nuts were a vital source of food for their families, autumn forage for their animals, and a commodity for barter and sale. |
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Flooded banks with green vegetation are prime areas to attract forage fish and predatory bass. |
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The risk of infection is greatest in fields where forage legumes have been grown recently and minimum tillage has been used. |
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Rotating corn with forages on minesoils is encouraged because soil tilth rapidly improves with forage cover. |
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The remaining laboratory sessions were dedicated to activities such as forage analysis and pasture allocation. |
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Black bears may be seen best by boat in May and June, as they forage for crabs and fish along shorelines at low tide. |
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Among the plants being tried are corn, sunflowers, forage turnips, triticale and various different perennial grasses. |
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They require a sandy or gravelly substrate for nesting near a wet or muddy area where they can forage. |
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Moles don't dig new tunnels each time they forage, and in fact a very active mole territory may sport very few molehills. |
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Hunters selectively cull the does to make more forage available for the bucks. |
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Western ragweed provides forage for deer and the fruits are an important food source for upland game birds, wild turkeys and songbirds. |
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Some graziers are planting paddocks with kale or turnips for winter forage in the North. |
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Corn silage is best when conditions are good, but a combination of corn and forage sorghum isn't far behind. |
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When pasture was not available, hay or silage harvested during periods of excess pasture growth was fed to meet forage requirements. |
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Pups learn from their mothers how to forage and what prey items to look for as well as swimming and grooming behaviors. |
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Four Brahman and four Angus sires were rotated among breeding pastures in both forage systems each year. |
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The sittellas often forage head-downward, and the tree-creepers climb up tree trunks seeking prey under the bark. |
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In addition, biennial weeds such as musk thistle, wild carrot, and burdock should be eliminated before establishing forage. |
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Previous studies have shown that loons forage within aquatic habitats and nearshore marine waters of the Beaufort Sea. |
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Guillemots often forage solitarily, or in small groups, and they primarily select nearshore demersal fishes for their chicks. |
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The birds typically forage along the upper edge of mudflats, or up on sandy beaches, often in vegetation. |
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Start grazing no later than the bud stage for improved utilization of the available forage. |
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When an animal emerged to forage, the noose was pulled tight, preventing the animal from retreating back into its burrow. |
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He dropped his reins, and his horse began nosing about in the undergrowth for forage. |
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They forage on the ground and in trees, caching much of the food they find and retrieving it later. |
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The scant rainfall is still sufficient for forage growth for goats, sheep and camels. |
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Some grass is grown on the farm for hay or silage, together with swede, turnip or kale for winter forage. |
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Gerry favors a high forage diet, preferring baled hay and haylage over corn silage, and says that the cows require no additional protein. |
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Where adapted, it is unmatched by any other forage as a feed for livestock, as a cash crop, and as an energy-efficient crop. |
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Nesting areas typically have emergent vegetation to which these birds anchor their nests and open water in which they can forage. |
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The dominant forage is orchard grass, with some quack, brome, blue grass and assorted other species. |
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Its main uses are as a forage crop for feeding cattle and as a green manure. |
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Unlike their cousins the spotted hyenas, the striped hyenas in the wild, forage during night hours. |
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The herbage was allowed to wilt for approximately 48 hours and was then chopped with a forage harvester and conserved. |
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Early spring emergence and rapid growth, high palatability and herbage production make the grasslands ideal for grazing and forage production. |
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The ethnic-religious texture of the conflict is exacerbated by competition between Arab herdsmen and ethnic African farmers for water and forage. |
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Treatment heifers had access to unlimited amounts of ungrazed forage prior to calving and were fed a different supplement. |
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These data suggest that when forage is not limited, large increases in energy consumption can be obtained by supplementing protein. |
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Owls hooted in the treetops, while other nocturnal animals came out to forage for food. |
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Flyovers were generally excluded, except for those species that normally forage or search for food in flight. |
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Dietary fiber is the complex carbohydrate found in grain, hulls, and plant forage material and is not efficiently digested by swine. |
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There were thousands of them leaving their daylight perches and flying away to forage on neighbouring islands. |
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Intake was estimated by dividing fecal output by the indigestibility of the forage. |
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Years of overgrazing have reduced the forage supply and largely eliminated cover for newborn fawns. |
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Clean feathers allow birds to use their power of flight to forage for food, escape predators, and maybe just have some fun. |
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It is now cultivated for forage feed, but you can purchase triticale from health food shops. |
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Some grass species can be harvested very intensively to achieve dairy-quality forage. |
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Some forage fish will be sexually mature the first season after stocking as fingerlings. |
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This concurs with Calanus selection of oceanic winter habitats below depths where planktivorous fish can forage efficiently by sight. |
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They may also forage for insects, plankton, mollusks, crustaceans, and small fish. |
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Increased grain costs or decreased cattle prices have usually been the factors for renewed interest in finishing cattle on forage diets. |
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They forage on the open ocean over the continental shelf and farther out to sea. |
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She is the most efficient converter of forage to milk and of course this is a holstein. |
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They produce good quality milk, are good on their feet and are good converters of forage, which is essential in an organic context. |
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The nutrient requirements of all animals were met using an optimal blend of soybean meal, cottonseed, corn grain, forage, minerals, and vitamins. |
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Prior to the two ladies feeding the pigeons, they had to go to open farmland each day to forage for food. |
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We found that parents forage during the nighttime and deliver collected food to the begging young in several small meals during the day. |
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Alexander must forage for the kind of food products no longer available in the shops. |
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White-headed Woodpeckers forage for insects on trunks and limbs as well as in clusters of needles. |
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He would forage for food in the morning and hope that tomorrow was the day his luck changed. |
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Here, officials of the government-run Forest Department reportedly did not allow them to forage for food in the forests. |
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During the winter months, they may forage for food during the day because of the difficulty in finding an adequate food source. |
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Even after the calf can forage for itself, it may hang around till the next calf is born. |
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It is at this time that we should especially forage for the early spring greens and vitamin rich edible weeds. |
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The true usefulness of the pig lies in its ability to forage anything from household waste to grass, and thrive. |
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While making forage into silage also removes nutrients from the soil, the product is more difficult than hay to transport. |
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An important discussion of forage and fodder distinguishes practices in different regions. |
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The fall-winter wheat pasture produced by dual-purpose wheat is a valuable source of high-quality forage when perennial pastures are dormant. |
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Red clover is grown widely as forage for dairy cattle in regions with poorly drained or low pH soils that are not suited for alfalfa production. |
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Lack of precipitation resulted in a severe decrease in availability of mixed grass forage, resulting in animal BW loss. |
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It may provide enough forage to delay turning cattle into spring pastures with limited growth that could be rapidly over grazed. |
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This year some producers may benefit from using a drought-stressed grain crop for livestock forage. |
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Originally, kudzu was promoted in the 1800s as an erosion control and cheap livestock forage for the eastern and southern United States. |
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However, these studies did not determine optimal stocking density on the basis of quantity of standing crop forage at placement time. |
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Cool-season grass pastures will have some forage growth in the fall, but usually less than alfalfa. |
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The tenant risks poor performance or health of the livestock due to less forage and lower quality feed. |
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With careful management, the grass crop will flourish and provide affordable forage for livestock. |
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The amount of winter hay fed varied annually depending on available winter pasture forage. |
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If only the director trusted her audience, this could've been a sublime forage into the netherworld of the human psyche. |
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We don't really know exactly what the fatigue or forage cap may have looked like, but we have some educated guesses. |
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The forage cap has a welt around the top circle and across the top part of the bill the same color as the hat. |
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This is the preferred enlisted headgear, but we are trying to get away from some of the less accurately made forage caps out there. |
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His beard flowed like a frozen waterfall, and from the rear of his trademark forage cap a radio antenna pointed straight up at the sky. |
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This was the appropriate cloth for forage caps and kepis and also for frock coats. |
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We were issued khaki uniforms with forage caps, jackets, shorts and socks, some of which were very comfortable to wear especially in the summer. |
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The annually supplied forage cap weighed six ounces and cost each soldier between two and three shillings. |
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This style of forage cap was put into service in 1992 and is still used today. |
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The forage cap was introduced just in time to become the signature headgear of the Civil War soldier. |
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These caps had been introduced in the Infantry in 1874 in place of the round Kilmarnock forage caps. |
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In 1945, the Toronto police switched to the forage cap, finally yielding to modernization and comfort. |
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Plus period photos show little use of kepis and forage caps in the western theater. |
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Confederate style forage caps are discouraged and Union forage caps are not allowed. |
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They forage on the ground in open areas, with sheltered thickets nearby for cover. |
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For forested rangeland, season of use is important for maximizing both forage value and production. |
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Heritage turkeys are allowed to roam freely in pastures and forage for food naturally. |
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Examination of forage craters indicated that caribou had to contend with only a few centimetres of soft powder snow with a loose granular base. |
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Like other diving ducks they forage under water, although in addition to diving they also walk along the bottom or dabble. |
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Black Ducks dabble for food, tipping their bodies up and dunking their heads to forage under water. |
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They forage while wading, dabbling in shallow water, or while walking on mudflats or the shore. |
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They will forage on land, but find most of their food by dabbling in shallow, muddy water. |
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Hairy Woodpeckers forage primarily on the trunks or main limbs of trees, where they probe into crevices and scale off bark searching for prey. |
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They feed by day and by night, and forage by swimming underwater, using their wings for propulsion. |
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As the rocket and purslane disappeared, I began to forage Greenmarket for fall provender. |
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Pastures are often the most economical way to provide forage for ruminant animals. |
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Temporary alfalfa pasture can reduce grazing pressure on grass pastures and provide better quality forage. |
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Nearby grasslands provide an open area where the young can forage for insects. |
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The river is straight and embanked, and most areas are shallow enough for Little Egrets to forage. |
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The Department of Agriculture has discovered sorghum ergot in a small area of forage sorghum growing in southern Western Australia. |
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All day long, the tailorbirds forage for worms to feed their chick, which often turns out to be a plaintive cuckoo that's been left in their nest. |
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They can nest up to 60 km inland, but are dependent on marine habitat for their primary food, Pacific sand lance, which they forage for close to shore. |
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Through conventional breeding, the sid gene has been transferred to forage and amenity grasses to produce stay-green varieties of ryegrass and darnel. |
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Everywhere in fresh waters, except in Australia, species of little cyprinoids or characoids are the principal forage fishes on which larger predators feed. |
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In this lagoon, brown pelicans, double-crested cormorants, great and snowy egrets, and numerous terns and gulls forage for fish and other items of food all day long. |
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Incredibly, this stable, rural world still exists two hours south of Paris in the village of St. Brancher, where small farms lie on the hillsides, and cows drowse and forage. |
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They prefer grasslands, chaparral, and scrub oak areas to forage for food. |
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On the greater part of their home places and on the country's abundant common lands, they encouraged hogs and sheep to roam wild in the woods and forage for themselves. |
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Standing herbage mass in the pastures was estimated by measuring the forage height with a rising-plate meter in 25 places along evenly spaced, predetermined paced transects. |
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Therefore, based on forage availability, the performance of heifers grazing pastures on the corn treatment would not have been limited because of standing herbage mass. |
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Fluid seeding is a new technique being used to seed forage legumes. |
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These data, and others, have led to the concept that plants actively forage resources from their environment using assessment mechanisms similar to those of animals. |
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I've had my share of disasters from grasshoppers, including having the bark on my young evergreen firs eaten when there was still lots of other forage. |
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For both human and animal there are cues in the environment that help us judge whether to continue foraging in the same location or to forage elsewhere. |
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Precocious foragers-bees stimulated to forage early-also have significantly higher brain levels of the gene's messenger RNA and four-fold higher levels of the enzyme. |
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Because of the shade and buffering from seasonal weather extremes, the microclimate in the woods may also support more and better forage growth during seasonal extremes. |
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During the grazing period, cows were rotated among the four paddocks within each pasture treatment as forage availability within a paddock became limited. |
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Emigrant John Hackney's complaints along the Platte road in 1864 remind us how overlanders had devastated the great valley's timber and forage beds. |
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Although many birds visit the flowers for nectar, purple sunbirds are the only ones that forage from the legitimate position between the standard and the keel. |
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They come out from the trunks of trees at twilight to forage. |
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Similarly, oystercatchers forced to forage for shorter periods of time increased food intake to a level that maintained the same mean consumption over a longer period. |
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The valley through which the Guadalquivir winds its course, is supereminently fertile, and from it the French armies derive the greatest part of their forage and provisions. |
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Andrew is wearing a plain forage cap and a 9 button shell jacket. |
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Resident species that we expected to forage preferentially on either longleaf pines or hardwoods during the breeding season continued to do so during the winter. |
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As the amorous side of your life goes up and down, you forage in the laundry basket of love, reselecting old flames instead of dusting yourself down and seeking new conquests. |
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In Australia, bottlenose dolphins place sponges over their snouts as protection from the spines of stonefish and stingrays as they forage over shallow seabeds. |
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These species are relatively low yielding, but produce nonbloating forage of high nutritive value that furnish excellent quality pasturage in late summer. |
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Gadwalls forage mainly while swimming, either taking items from the surface or dabbling in shallow water, or diving, which they are more likely to do than most other dabblers. |
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Though pearl millet, a grain crop native to western Africa, is grown in the United States for forage, there is no established grain market for it. |
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I've been loosed with a rifle and a uniform and a forage cap! |
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Supplementing grazing animals with grain or hay without regard to nutrients they receive from forage is inefficient if we overfeed of underfeed them. |
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Some grass is grown on the farm for hay or silage, together with swede, turnip or kale for winter forage because grass growth declines drastically in the winter. |
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Active and agile, they forage in emergent vegetation along shorelines and in wet, shallow, muddy areas, mainly by dabbling their bills at the water's surface. |
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When chimps forage for food they do not ask themselves why, or consider better alternatives any more than does a beaver consider better ways of building dams. |
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For example, Himalayan snowcocks, a bird that feeds on grasses, forbs, and sedges, are more vulnerable to raptorial predators in areas where they can forage most efficiently. |
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Four Brahman and four Angus sires were rotated among breeding pastures in both forage systems each year to prevent confounding of sire and forage system effects. |
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The total predominance of forage caps did throw me for a bit though. |
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Many wasp and bee species are scavengers and will forage for a wide variety of foods including fruits, ice cream, soda pop, jelly, sweet salads, and meat products. |
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On rangelands, exotic weeds have displaced forage eaten by cattle and extended harm to other aspects of American agriculture, including those who earn their living from it. |
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A building of rooks flock around the pigs as they forage for food. |
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Because many desert rodents that footdrum, such as kangaroo rats, inhabit open habitats and tend to forage in areas with little cover, locomotion for escape is well developed. |
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The discharge of salt besides decreasing the agriculturally useable area is destroying pastures and creating a consequent shortage of forage for domestic animals. |
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Allowing livestock to consume annual forage left in windrows has become a common method to reduce costs associated with harvesting, storing, and feeding forage. |
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To the contrary, the timing of the highest nutrient requirement period of the winter calving cow was more coincident with the period when forage quality was highest. |
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Varieties of winter wheat used for grain may also be used for forage. |
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You can see red knots, dunlins, and sandpipers as they rest and forage for food on the beaches, using the untouched island habitat as a safe haven during their journey south. |
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With the excellent nutritive value and palatability of lablab, this forage may be used as a direct browse crop or as hay for supplementation or as an attractant. |
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When a pond is overpopulated with stunted forage fish and neither bass nor forage fish are reproducing, removal of part of the fish population will seldom solve the problem. |
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Cow and calf producers typically choose to commence calving and breeding at times of the year when weather is least stressful and forage conditions are optimal. |
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In addition, honeyeaters are known to forage on a range of plant families, genera and species at any one time, and do not rely on a single plant species for food. |
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The value of the crop for cattle feed if grazed, hayed or ensiled depends on yield, the price of alternative forages, and cost of utilization as forage. |
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Fish and crustaceans enter this system, attracting native waterbirds, shorebirds, and seabirds, which regularly forage along the ditch's riparian banks. |
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They raise cattle on the grassland, and sow the other half in wheat and forage for the herd. |
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They go to the grocery store dumpster to forage for food, find potatoes, butter, and celery. |
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Some local governments are requiring stall-feeding of livestock with forage gathered by hand, hoping that this confinement measure will permit grasslands to recover. |
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The wolves live in packs of up to 12 adults but hunt and forage alone, unlike gray wolves, their North American and European cousins, that hunt in packs. |
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The goal is, as far as possible, to let the cows walk to the pasture, harvest forage from pastures, spread their manure themselves, then walk back to the milking station. |
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The average length of the daily raid system of the army ants studied by Burton and Franks was 195 m, and chipmunks forage within 160 m of their burrows. |
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In particular, perennial broadleafs and grasses such as dandelion, curly dock, Canada thistle, and quackgrass are much easier to manage prior to planting a forage crop. |
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In many areas of the Southeast U.S., cottonseed hulls are often the primary source of roughage or are used to extend conventional forage supplies. |
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Common Goldeneyes are diving ducks and forage mostly under water. |
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Pasture fields were soil tested each year, and inventories were completed in the spring and summer for forage species, weeds, and bare ground percentage. |
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The team looked at crops such as corn, peas, proso millet, safflower, sunflower, triticale, and winter wheat, with some crops grown for grain and some for forage. |
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The Borana pastoralists have been practicing transhumance to counter seasonal fluctuations in forage and water resources. |
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Beaver dams trap sediment and improve water quality, and recharge groundwater tables and increase cover and forage for trout and salmon. |
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And better hay crops east of the Rocky Mountains mean forage prices should remain moderately priced, barring widespread alfalfa winterkill. |
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One home run strategy we've used for a decade now is to custom blend forage soybeans right in with our brassica blends. |
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Jools was at the wheel of a proper WWII Jeep and, from somewhere, he had even found an army forage cap. |
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Make him forage, dig it out of the ice, catch the occasional live trout. |
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The macerated and triturated ant nosode preparations were obtained from 50 worker ants randomly collected from the primary forage trails. |
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Based on product types, the forage seed market is categorized into alfalfa, clover, chicory, ryegrass, lablab, and fescue among others. |
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At times, Black Swifts forage close to the ground or water capturing emerging insects, especially during inclement weather. |
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There is an officer's forage cap, a pocket from an RAF tunic with a Waterman pen still clipped inside and a silk flying glove. |
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Conversely, they are a central prey item or forage fish for higher trophic levels. |
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Signaller Singh is exempt from wearing the traditional forage cap, but does have the Royal Signals corps badge on the front of his turban. |
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Copepods, the primary zooplankton, are a major item on the forage fish menu. |
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Smaller mackerel are forage fish for larger predators, including larger mackerel and Atlantic cod. |
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The same order stipulated that engineers would wear silver castles on their epaulettes, forage caps, and belt plate. |
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In fact, the hooded seal has to be ready to forage for itself in the cold arctic waters after just four days of suckling. |
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Several species of froghopper or spittlebugs are general pests of sugarcane and gramineous forage plants in the Neotropical region. |
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The factory, which will be located in the breadbasket of Bulgaria a the region of Dobrudja, will process forage plants for export. |
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Many marine fishes enter productive estuarine habitats to forage on abundant zooplankton, meiofauna, molluscs, crustaceans and fishes. |
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The end users for forage feed markets are usually dairy farms, animal husbandry and poultries which use forage products for livestock feeding. |
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As adults they have sharp teeth, and hunt small crustaceans such as copepods, as well as forage fish, shrimp and squid. |
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The only reason they characterize wild horses as overpopulated is because they allocate the lions' share of forage to livestock. |
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Norway lobsters spend most of their time either lying in their burrows or by the entrance, only leaving their shelters to forage or mate. |
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Other seaducks forage by diving underwater, taking molluscs or crustaceans from the sea floor. |
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Groups may stay together longer in summer to forage and feed cooperatively. |
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As to my dress, I covered my Hussar uniform with a long cloak, and I put a grey forage cap upon my head. |
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Halophytes and salt-tolerant plants as potential forage for ruminants in the Near East region. |
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If you topdress the recommended amount of nitrogen-based fertilizer, you will significantly increase forage production. |
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One can regard them as high yielding fescues with improved forage quality or as high yielding, more persistent ryegrasses. |
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Some species, such as California and South American sea lions, may forage with cetaceans and sea birds. |
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In between nursing bouts, the females leave their young onshore to forage at sea. |
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Some may forage with other kinds of animals, such as other species of whales or certain species of pinnipeds. |
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They forage for any food source they can find with marine worms, shellfish and dead fish all making up the diet of pouting. |
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A sprat is the common name applied to a group of forage fish belonging to the genus Sprattus in the family Clupeidae. |
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Then paint it with a black magic marker, trim it or let the two tag ends dangle like legs or barbies of a forage item. |
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Birthing lairs are often destroyed before the seal pup is able to forage on its own leading to poor body condition. |
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Walruses prefer shallow shelf regions and forage primarily on the sea floor, often from sea ice platforms. |
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Depending on forage availability, older and more experienced females may breed again in summer. |
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The message said that the party intended to hunt and forage through this region, for a month or two, afore it went back into the Canadas. |
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Dark, dumpy, aquatic birds which are able to forage for food on the beds of rivers. |
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The parents lead their chicks to the edges of cereal fields, where they can forage for insects. |
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These can transport nutrients and provide feeding grounds for plankton eating forage fish. |
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This in turn draws larger fish that prey on the forage fish, and can result in productive fishing grounds. |
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Capelin is an important forage fish, and is essential as the key food of the Atlantic cod. |
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During a campaign the soldiers would often forage food from their enemies land. |
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Epipelagic fish can be broadly divided into small forage fish and larger predator fish which feed on them. |
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In general, predatory and forage fish share the same morphological features. |
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In fact as part of the standard kit, Roman soldiers would carry a sickle, which would be used to forage food. |
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Small pelagic fish are usually forage fish that are hunted by larger pelagic fish and other predators. |
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The world annual catch of forage fish in recent years has been around 22 million tonnes, or one quarter of the world's total catch. |
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Many of these fish hunt forage fish, but are in turn hunted by yet larger pelagic fish. |
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The Danes had beached half their ships and gone inland, either to rest their rowers or to forage for food. |
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The use of satellite tracking is teaching scientists a great deal about the way albatrosses forage across the ocean to find food. |
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These plans encourage producers to monitor all nutrients coming onto the farm as feed, forage, animals, fertilizer, etc. |
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And when the crops are ready for picking a forage or combine harvester is used. |
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At the Battle of Maloyaroslavets the French tried to reach Kaluga, where they could find food and forage supplies. |
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Owing to the Russian army's scorched earth tactics, the French found it increasingly difficult to forage food for themselves and their horses. |
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However, his estimates did not take into consideration a part of the Gothic cavalry that had gone to forage further away. |
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In 1712, Walpole was accused of venality and corruption in the matter of two forage contracts for Scotland. |
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This meant that large distances had to be covered by herds to collect sufficient forage. |
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Wild animals eat the forage from the marginal lands and humans survive from milk, blood, and often meat of the herds. |
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Mothers in such a group may sometimes leave their calves with one female while they forage and drink elsewhere. |
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Northern gannets forage for food during the day, generally by diving into the sea. |
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Diurnal animals that forage tidally may need to be able to feed at night occasionally. |
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Horses are herbivores with a digestive system adapted to a forage diet of grasses and other plant material, consumed steadily throughout the day. |
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Other than forage, the other staple feed for sheep is hay, often during the winter months. |
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Although we did not videotape Chuck-will's-widows at dawn, Sprunt noted that they forage most often at both dusk and dawn. |
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Tayras forage for food on the ground and also in the trees, where their long tail helps them to balance as they move through the branches. |
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A few of the triodias are good forage grasses, but others are of little value. |
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Northern gannets also forage for fish while swimming with their head under water. |
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For those who like to forage for edible plants, QAL is edible but there is a similar looking plant called Water Hemlock that is deadly poisonous. |
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When fire rolls over a rangeland, it gives perennial sod-forming grasses, which are good sources of forage for livestock, a better chance to take hold. |
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Staff forage for ingredients such as sorrel and reindeer moss. |
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His flexible wings, wrapped round him, serve him as bed-clothes, and his mate carries the batling clinging to her breast even when she flies out to forage. |
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Herring are forage fish, mostly belonging to the family Clupeidae. |
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Mackerel range in size from small forage fish to larger game fish. |
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Individuals separate for only a few hours at a time, to mate or forage. |
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Like most forage fishes, sprats are highly active small oily fish. |
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They may forage for wild grasses and weeds but with the intensification of agriculture, they have taken to feeding on crops when preferred foods are not available. |
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Pelagic fish range in size from small coastal forage fish, such as herrings and sardines, to large apex predator oceanic fishes, such as bluefin tuna and oceanic sharks. |
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They include forage fish as well as the predator fish that feed on them. |
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Nearly all fish are predator fish to some measure, and apart from the top predators, the distinction between predator fish and prey or forage fish is somewhat artificial. |
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After 45 days, the calves are able to graze and forage but continue suckling until the following autumn when they become independent from their mothers. |
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During winter, reindeer travel to forested areas to forage under the snow. |
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Even if a few tent caterpillars take up residence in the tree, birds, especially yellow-billed cuckoos, will forage for them and sometimes take care of the problem. |
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Other forage crops are also grown and many of these, as well as crop residues, can be ensiled to fill the gap in the nutritional needs of livestock in the lean season. |
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They also compete with livestock for forage and are sometimes culled. |
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I let them forage in the woods for acorns in the fall, and in summer for the leaves on the maple, sweetgum, slippery elm, sourwood, and mulberry trees. |
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This handbook is intended to aid in the management of arthropod species both injurious and beneficial to forage and rangeland crops in the United States and Canada. |
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As willow ptarmigans begin molting into white plumage that conceals them in snow, singing voles build forage piles of vegetation for winter feeding. |
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One option we're exploring is to include forage crops or green fallow. |
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Crops are both forage and subsistence such as cowpea and sorghum. |
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If he's not walking the grounds wearing an RAF forage cap glad-handing total strangers to the championships, he's working the queues giving away free tickets. |
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