Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Silver wattle is the common name of several plant species:
Fire can also be used to control silver wattle and prickly box if they become too dense.
In addition there are small patches of musk and silver wattle.
Note chainsawed silver wattle which was living prior to this burn.
The seeds of the silver wattle (Acacia dealbata) are also eaten.
Common names include the western silver wattle and the showy wattle.
Acacia dealbata (silver wattle) is a common understorey tree species.
Information about original understorey vegetation is scant, but silver wattles thrive in the areas close to the rivers.
A large area of silver wattle dominated regrowth with rainforest species in the gullies.
Most of the bulldozed piles of vegetation are Silver Wattle.
These "mimosas" are actually from A. dealbata (silver wattle).
Trees include New England peppermints, snowgums and silver wattles.
Acacia dealbata (silver wattle) Other tree species sometimes present:
Located just over 2 hours from Melbourne and nestled in a still valley of Silver Wattles.
(A dealbata is also called silver wattle.)
During the early establishment phase vigorous regrowth of silver wattle occurs on these areas necessitating broad-acre control measures.
Cape wattle is a small tree or tall spreading shrub with a close resemblance to silver wattle.
Common names for it are Mount Morgan wattle and Queensland silver wattle.
Acacia dealbata or Silver Wattle seems to be the species most popularly known as mimosa in France.
Acacia dealbata (silver wattle) is frequently present but it is typically in the tall shrub layer rather than the canopy.
Plants on the island include river red gums, silver wattle, manna gum, southern mahogany and wallaby and spear grass.
Home of tall wet eucalypt rainforests, with massed displays of Silver Wattle in early Spring.
Dying Myrtle Beech due to widening of track 12 by logging contractor who wounded this tree with a bulldozed silver wattle.
Blackwood, silver wattle, sassafras, southern mahogany and many other feature grade timbers are harvested by specialty mills working closely with Forestech.
Also in the main plantation area, a large portion of the buffer supposedly protecting Icy Creek had been destroyed with many Silver Wattles being cut.
It has an eye-ring of bare skin, and a bright blue wattle.
Blue wattles evolved only once, in a lineage which seems to have originated north of the Amazon River.
It has blue wattles (although this colour develops with age: in the young of this bird they are actually coloured a light pink).
He told me about the Tragopan, and he is positive that the blue wattle becomes gorged with blood, and not air.
It is considerably larger than a Tui, and has a distinctive steel grey body with a black face mask and sky blue wattles.
Blue Wattle, $16 a pound, sounds like it could only come from the country of yabbies and wallabees, but it is named for a flower.
The eye is surrounded by a bright blue wattle which derives its colour, like the rest of the asities, from bundles of collagen.
The size of a common pigeon, both males and females have blue-grey plumage with black masks and striking bright blue wattles.
Belonging to the Wattlebird family, an ancient group of birds, the North Island Kokako have bright blue wattles at the base of the bill.
There were faces covered with red and blue wattles, with hair, with saurian scales, with weeping scabs, with cheeselike exudate.
I even had a fleeting glimpse of a kokako, a particularly rare bird with a blue wattle, a Lone Ranger mask and a beautifully haunting, mournful song.
The short-tailed paradigalla is medium-sized, approximately 23 cm long, stocky black plumaged with slender black bill and bright yellow and blue wattles in front of each eye.
The most obvious difference between the two subspecies is their wattle colour: North Island birds have blue wattles, while the South Island subspecies has orange wattles.
A white rooster wearing the club's blue home kit and with a blue tail, blue crest and blue wattle, named Galo Azul, is the club's mascot.
Acacia caerulescens, commonly known as limestone blue wattle, Buchan blue or Buchan blue wattle is a tree species that is endemic to Victoria, Australia.
The 100 forests include Australian natives and rare and endangered species from across the globe, from Persian walnut, English oak, Moroccan cypress and California's giant sequoia to weeping snow gum, red ironbark and limestone blue wattle.
In South America, the form cumanensis has a greenish gloss to the plumage, a white face and crest, and a blue wattle, cujubi has a blue face and a red wattle, and jacutinga has a black face and a red wattle.
Acacia dealbata (known as silver wattle, blue wattle or mimosa) is a species of Acacia, native to southeastern Australia in New South Wales, Victoria, Tasmania, and the Australian Capital Territory and widely introduced in Mediterranean, warm temperate, and highland tropical landscapes.
You have the mimosa in America, but not this variety.
All they wanted to know was whether Mimosa had been burned.
If not the absolute best, it certainly wasn't something you'd use to make mimosas with.
The next morning, they made a big brunch with mimosas.
She was staring out of the window, standing very still between the mimosa trees.
I think we should have mimosas with that French toast.
This is because the leaves of the mimosa close at night, or when touched.
While waiting for your mimosa, check out the photographs on the walls.
Look for, pile of rock with a mimosa growing below it.
So the chance of getting a genuine mimosa are slim.
Does any sensitive species of Mimosa grow in your neighbourhood?
After all, we're most likely going to make mimosas with it, he reasoned.
Asked to explain himself, he could only say: "The mimosa thing was potentially a bad idea."
Mimosas can be covered and refrigerated for up to 3 hours.
I'm thinking like a bottomless mimosa deal or something along those lines.
"We usually get a run on Champagne for mimosas," he said.
Things we think of as exotic grow wild here, like the mimosa.
For the Mimosa tour, a short film was created which ended with this cover version.
The tree had compound leaves and flowers like a mimosa.
Why not a mimosa, she decided, to celebrate Matthew's success.
In Italy, to celebrate the day, men give yellow mimosas to women.
The pink flowers of the mimosa make it a good ground cover for gardens.
Next step, from the car to the mimosa tree.
The only silver lining is that the women get to drink mimosas first.
The Mimosa tree is very common in the area and was used as a fencing material.
“Mimosa” is the common name for Acacia dealbata.
The larvae feed on Acacia dealbata.
It is probably named after the common name in Anglophone Europe for the yellow flowers of Acacia dealbata.
Occasionally, on siliceous substrates the understorey can be grassy, often with the only shrubs being very scraggly Acacia dealbata.
Glaucous foliage. 5.20 Acacia dealbata "Mimosa Tree" Scented yellow flowers in spring.
Associated tree species include Acacia dealbata, Eucalyptus obliqua, E. sieberi and E. regnans.
Known foodplants of the larvae of this species are Mimosoideae, Acacia dealbata and Acacia mearnsii.
The larvae feed on the flowers and young fruit of Prunus avium, Malus domestica and Acacia dealbata.
Some of the most common unrelated plants with this name are the Silk Tree (Albizia julibrissin) and Sattle (Acacia dealbata.)
In mountain country the mountain brushtail possum is reported to depend mainly upon Acacia species for its diet and in particular the Silver Wattle, Acacia dealbata.
Plantation development next door to 0343 has occurred in the headwaters of the small catchment which is mapped as Silver wattle (acacia dealbata) in both maps but was in fact young gully rainforest.
Analysis of the exudate of Acacia dealbata, A. obliquinervia and A. frigescens from central Victorian ash forests showed that sugar content varied from 24 to 68% and nitrogen from 0.2 to 0.7% per sample.
The caterpillars feed on various Acacia species including the Acacia dealbata, Acacia decurrens, Acacia elata, Acacia mearnsii, Acacia melanoxylon, Acacia obtusata, Acacia pravissima, Acacia terminalis and the Acacia trachyphloia.
A few species are widely grown as ornamentals in gardens; the most popular perhaps is 'Acacia dealbata' (Silver Wattle), with its attractive glaucous to silvery leaves and bright yellow flowers; it is erroneously known as "mimosa" in some areas where it is cultivated, through confusion with the related genus 'Mimosa'.