Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
There is one recognised species in this genus - Selenococcidium intermedium.
Many scientific binomial names have been given to the species Thinopyrum intermedium.
Microctenopoma intermedium is a fish in the Anabantidae family.
Aspidodiadema intermedium was first scientifically described in 1977 by Shigei.
Etymology: Latin; intermedium, meaning between, rapidly and slowly growing mycobacteria.
However, the proximal series can be directly compared to the ulnare and intermedium of tetrapods.
The stratum intermedium has a notably high alkaline phosphatase activity.
A new bone, or the reappearance of the intermedium, appeared on the skull roof asymmetrically.
The nuclei of these cells move closer to the stratum intermedium and away from the dental papilla.
Intermedium 2 - radio broadcast (mix from the Klangtheater installation in Vienna).
Here is a partial list of the binomial synonyms for Thinopyrum intermedium:
Aspidodiadema intermedium is a species of sea urchin of the family Aspidodiadematidae.
The flight period of Coenagrion intermedium is from the late April to mid-August.
It contains the sole species Mastigobasidium intermedium.
Bulbophyllum intermedium is a species of orchid in the genus Bulbophyllum.
Tricholoma intermedium is a mushroom of the agaric genus Tricholoma.
In amphibians and reptiles, the bone is instead referred to as the intermedium, because of its position between the other two proximal carpals.
Lyperosomum intermedium has been found in rats of saltmarshes in Florida and Georgia.
Barleys with six rows of kernels are Hordeum vulgare and H. intermedium.
Thinopyrum intermedium is best adapted to:
Grain Thinopyrum intermedium is a perennial grain crop.
Lyperosomum intermedium is a long-bodied, parallel-sided, semitransparent worm with rounded ends.
Mycobacterium intermedium sp.
The genus contains two species, Spathantheum intermedium and Spathantheum orbignyanum.
Asthenosoma intermedium was first scientifically described in 1938 by Hubert Lyman Clark.