Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
The next shark that came was a single shovelnose.
There is some interest in marketing the shovelnose sturgeon as an aquarium species.
The shovelnose salamander is a robust species, broad with a relatively short tail.
Some early summer foods of the shovelnose sturgeon in the Missouri River.
Virtually nothing is known of the natural history of the yellow shovelnose stingaree.
It is also called the mottled shovelnose frog.
The shovelnose is considered to be a primitively developed ray, with many features of both sharks and rays.
The shovelnose frogs are nine species of frog in the genus, Hemisus.
Unlike most digging frogs, the shovelnose frogs dig head first.
We might stay out here for years, and still catch the occasional new shovelnose returning from its extended foray into the void.
The shovelnose sturgeon, as its distribution represents, is impacted very little by turbidity.
This species is closely related to the western shovelnose stingaree (T. mucosa).
The shovelnose frogs are burrowing frogs, living most of their lives underground.
Among the wildlife in the Reserve are the shovelnose guitarfish and grey smooth-hound sharks.
Inoffensive to humans, the eastern shovelnose stingaree can be easily approached underwater.
Additional game fish species include arctic grayling, mountain whitefish and the shovelnose sturgeon.
The roe of the shovelnose sturgeon is marketed as "hackleback" caviar.
The pallid sturgeon's snout and head are longer than that of the shovelnose sturgeon.
The visual system of the shovelnose is more extensive and developed than other Elasmobranchii, with multiple large projections connecting to the brain.
The shovelnose salamander is an aquatic species, living and feeding in moderately fast-flowing streams.
The tank has more than 24 sharks, a shovelnose guitarfish, two giant groupers and four stingrays.
The western shovelnose stingaree has a rounded pectoral fin disc slightly wider than long.
The shovelnose sturgeon feeds on the bottom, using its highly protrusible mouth to suck up its food.
The shovelnose salamander does not have a fixed home range nor exhibit territorial behaviour as does the blackbelly.
As with many riverine fish species, the shovelnose sturgeon does not have a restricted home range and may travel long distances (Pflieger 1997).