Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
However, a new approach to the effects on the mudfish was included.
They decided the big mudfish were the most obvious prey.
The mudfish had one eye the size of a pie plate.
Mudfish may refer to any of many different fishes, including:
"I thought it must be you, mudfish," he said.
The dam would result in a loss of habitat for the endangered Canterbury mudfish.
And if they must, why not go on Whistlestop, sailing over it all, far from terrible things like mudfish that refused to die?
Wetlands throughout the region support waterbirds and fish including the endemic brown mudfish.
"Plus he stinks like dead mudfish," Fry added, quoting his mother.
The survey identified a large and abundant population of Canterbury mudfish that had previously been unknown.
There are also cases of unintentional presence of other fish species like catfish and mudfish.
Light, but I hate the taste of marshwhite; mudfish would taste sweeter.
However, the name was coined for a bottom species of the Atlantic coast, being the least important of the fundulus mudfish.
Mudfish don't school with silversides.
Cirocco was stationed four meters in front of the mudfish while Gaby and Bill approached from the sides.
He disagreed with the CPW evidence on mudfish.
Immediately the surface of the swamp began wriggling and roiling with toads and mudfish.
Clarias anguillaris is a species of African airbreathing catfish also known as the Mudfish.
The dorsal and anal fins of the brown mudfish are set well back before the caudal fin, nearly joining it.
Tasmanian mudfish are smaller than other species comprising the whitebait fishery, generally only 30 to 40 mm at this age.
In May 2010 the rare and endangered Canterbury mudfish were released into the wetland in the hope that they would become established.
Around the area, one of the better-known fish species, the mudfish, apparently - in a fish trap, and brought the fish to the market.
Grab hold of them, I have a roll of twine for tying up pigs that will do just as well for mudfish."
The Canterbury mudfish (kowaro) is an endangered species that is monitored by the Department of Conservation.
She wailed and yelled the whole way across the ledge as she swung over the toads, mudfish, and deep morass.
The fish would compete with other carnivorous fish such as the bowfin (Amia calva).
The breeding behaviour is not too dissimilar to that of the Bowfin Amia calva.
Central Projects of the lateral line and eight nerves in the bowfin,Amia Calva.
Bowfin (Amia calva)
The closest living relative of the pachycormids is the bowfin, Amia calva, but this is only very distantly related.
Amiiformes is an order of fish, of which only one species, the Bowfin, Amia calva, is extant.
structure and receptor-binding activity of insulin from a holostean fish, the bowfin:Amia Calva.
Structure and biological activity of glucagon and glucagon-like peptide from a primitive bony fish, the bowfin: Amia calva.
There are eight species divided among two orders, the Amiiformes represented by a single living species, the bowfin (Amia calva), and the Lepisosteiformes, the gars.
A reported catch from the Welland Canal in Canada turned out to be a misidentified specimen of Amia calva, the primitive North American bowfin.
Only one species, Amia calva, the bowfin, survives today, although additional species in all four subfamilies are known from Jurassic, Cretaceous, and Eocene fossils.
Discussion The bowfin, Amia calva, and the garpike, Lepisosteus osseus, are frequently compared to each other in their anatomical characters, as they are both basal actinopterygians.
Untersuchungen u ber das Gehirn der Ganoiden Amia calva und Lepidosteus osseus (1907)
The present Ohio-Mississippi river system contains some distinctive relict fish populations descended from Jurassic Period fishes of the Teays, such as the primitive bowfin (Amia calva) and various gars (Lepisosteus spp).
The largest species bowfins Bowfin (Amia calva) The most distinctive characteristic of the bowfin is its very long dorsal fin consisting of 145 to 250 rays, and running from mid-back to the base of the tail.
The Bowfin, Amia calva, is the last surviving member of the order Amiiformes (which includes 3 additional, now-extinct families dating from the Jurassic, to the Eocene), and of the family Amiidae (which contains numerous species in about four subfamilies, only one of which, Amiinae, is extant).