Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
The bluehead chub can be found in the southeastern United States.
The All Blacks work on going 'bluehead'.
The Bluehead has the largest lips of any sucker and has tiny papillae on the lower lip.
The Bluehead sucker has unique spawning techniques, which make it different from most of the other Arizona native fish.
The bluehead chub is a freshwater fish, and lives in pools, rivers, and streams.
An easy way to distinguish the Bluehead from the other Arizona suckers is to notice the distinct cartilaginous lower jaw.
The lake contains native bluehead suckers and illegally introduced black crappie and green sunfish.
Due to poor watershed management, the populations of the Zuni Bluehead Sucker decreased 90% in the last 20 years.
As a result of bait bucket releases by fishermen, the bluehead chub has spread to multiple drainage basins in which it is not native.
Using extremely sensitive mass spectrometry techniques, he analyzed otoliths of bluehead wrasse fish for trace-metal content.
The Zuni Bluehead Sucker has a slender fusiform body with a subterminal mouth.
However, the presence of the Zuni Bluehead Suckers was confirmed in 1987 and 2000 when individuals were collected again for genetic evaluation.
The wrasse, Thalassoma bifasciatum (bluehead), preys upon the eggs of S. leucostictus.
The Bluehead sucker is the opposite, preferring the spring/summer months and much warmer water temperatures, exceeding 15.72 degrees Celsius.
The Bluehead sucker (Catostomus discobolus) is one of six catostomidae endemic to Arizona.
Zuni Bluehead Suckers eat algae and invertebrates off of rocks with the cartilaginous scraper in their mouths.
The Zuni River is one of the last remaining habitats of the Zuni bluehead sucker.
The Bluehead Sucker is the largest of all Arizona endemic suckers, reaching lengths of over 11.8 inches.
Catostomus discobolus jarrovii (Zuni bluehead sucker)
Like its relative T. amblycephalum it is commonly called "blue-headed wrasse", "blunt-headed wrasse" or "bluehead".
The Bluehead Shiner (Notropis hubbsi) is a species of ray-finned fish in the Cyprinidae family.
Thirty-two species of fish have been documented in the park, including brook trout, longnose and blacknose dace, and the bluehead chub.
This in turn makes the nudibranch distasteful to predatory fish, such as the bluehead wrasse (Thalassoma bifasciatum), which avoid consuming this species.
Blunt-headed wrasse, blue-headed wrasse or simply bluehead can refer to either of 2 species of wrasses:
Zuni Bluehead Suckers are found in stream habitats with shade and lots of substrates like bedrock, boulders, and cobble.