Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Fire also created open spaces ideal for the oaks' light-loving seedlings.
Eddie may have become far too light-loving, but he wasn't helpless or harmless, Valentine would bet on that.
Typha minima is a light-loving plant and cannot tolerate shade.
It is simple and cost-effective, but it can only operate on trees that are already present, mostly light-loving pioneer species.
Illumination may prove a problem if high intensities are required from fluorescent tubes to support light-loving invertebrates.
And begonias are not light-loving.
The upper shoots and leaves of such a Philodendron grow as typical light-loving photophilous plants once they break out into full sunshine.
Sometimes aided by light-loving materials, he made small perforations in the body of a work; their placement affecting the emanation of light from within.
He deprived us of that Power and the chance to use it against the humans and those soft, light-loving White Elves."
The Zulus did not like it at all, for they are a light-loving people and I noted that even Umslopogaas seemed scared and hung back a little.
Light-loving orchids like Acampe papillosa, A. rigida and Dendrobium acinaciforme grow well at the top storey up to 20-30 meter height.
The Light-loving Noctuid moth, Agrotis photophila was a species of moth in the Noctuidae family.
All her life, Amaranthia thought in despair, she had sneered at the White Elves' soft, light-loving ways and their music that had brought her nothing but discomfort.
Just as people whose winter garb approached total coverage should not bask in the first broiling sun clad only in bikinis, even light-loving indoor plants need time to get adjusted.
The best way to put light-loving plants center stage is to keep them under grow lights or on a sunny windowsill, then give them brief star turns in the living room when they are at their best.
They have an especially high variety of trees and allow more room of light-loving species such as silver birch, rowan, sycamore, willow and dwarf bushes such as the blueberry (Vaccinium myrtillus).
The idea is to harvest timber in a sequential pattern that produces all stages of the natural recovery, from light-loving trees like white birch in the early years to shade-tolerant kinds like sugar maple, beech and spruce that appear later.
Light-loving Mylar is the medium of choice for Alice Aycock, whose "The New China Drawing: The World Above, the World Below," 1984, contrasts an elaborate architectural scheme of tiny units with a dark field of white bars and spatters.