Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Maryland named the diamondback terrapin its official state reptile in 1994.
Some turtles they save are endangered, like the diamondback terrapin; others are not.
In 1933, Byrd spearheaded the adoption of the diamondback terrapin as the official school mascot.
The diamondback terrapin is also common.
The nightly menu on board included oyster fritters, diamondback terrapin, duck, and turkey.
The diamondback terrapin have large webbed feet.
The state reptile is the diamondback terrapin.
Diamondback terrapin diets are not generally well studied, and almost all work on diets has been done in the southeastern part of their range.
The diamondback terrapin - to many connoisseurs the best-tasting turtle in the world - is in danger.
The mascot is a diamondback terrapin named Testudo, which means "turtle" in Latin.
Since the University mascot is a Diamondback Terrapin, the craft would be a flying turtle.
Check with the Diamondback Terrapin Working Group for a recent review of state-by-state laws.
The hunting season for Diamondback Terrapin turtles is August 1 - April 30.
In June 1983, the New York State officially listed the diamondback terrapin as a species of "special concern."
The new club chose to call itself the Baltimore Terrapins, after the diamondback terrapin, the state reptile of Maryland.
He owns a Diamondback Terrapin and two Pink-bellied Sideneck turtles.
The school's sports teams are referred to as the Terrapins, and the university mascot is a diamondback terrapin named Testudo.
They are even on a New Jersey specialty license plate along with saltwater cordgrass, the great egret and the diamondback terrapin.
Similarly to regulation of snapping turtles, diamondback terrapin turtles are only allowed to be hunted during specific months of the year.
Several days before the game in 1947, Hopkins supporters stole "Testudo", a 300-pound bronze statue of a diamondback terrapin, from the Maryland campus.
A small population of red fox, muskrat, mink, otter, voles, northern diamondback terrapin, and various nonpoisonous water snakes also live in the marsh areas.
The name "terrapin" is typically reserved only for the brackish water diamondback terrapin, Malaclemys terrapin.
Turtle hunting in New York State regulates two species of turtles, the Diamondback terrapin and the snapping turtle.
In 1932, Curley Byrd-who served as the university's football and baseball coach, athletic director, and president-proposed adopting the diamondback terrapin as a mascot.
The diamondback terrapin has a shell closely resembling the wood turtle's; however its skin is gray in color, and it inhabits coastal brackish and saltwater marshes.
It applies to Malaclemys terrapin in both British English and American English.
The name "terrapin" is typically reserved only for the brackish water diamondback terrapin, Malaclemys terrapin.
The Diamond-Back Terrapin, Malaclemys terrapin, is native to Bermuda.
The diamondback terrapin (Malaclemys terrapin) or simply terrapin, is a species of turtle native to the brackish coastal swamps of the eastern and southern United States.
The cape is home to the Mangrove Diamondback Terrapin (Malaclemys terrapin rhizophorarum) and the Florida Gopher Tortoise (Gopherus polyphemus).
In 1994, the Maryland General Assembly approved legislation to name the diamondback terrapin (malaclemys terrapin terrapin) as the official state reptile and the legally codified mascot of the University of Maryland.
In 1932, Curley Byrd suggested that the namesake become the diamondback terrapin (Malaclemys terrapin), a species of land-dwelling turtle common throughout the state, particularly the Chesapeake Bay area where Dr. Byrd spent his early life.
Tagging the Terrapins of the Jersey Shore - Determining the effects of anthropogenic habitat disturbance on population dynamics and reproductive biology of the diamondback terrapin (Malaclemys terrapin) in New Jersey, USA for conservation development.