ruffed canal - translation to arabic
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ruffed canal - translation to arabic

GENUS OF MAMMALS
Varecia; Ruffed Lemur; Sexual behavior of ruffed lemurs
  • Color print of the two ruffed lemur species from [[Alfred Grandidier]]'s ''L'Histoire politique, physique et naturelle de Madagascar''. (1892)
  • 120px

ruffed canal      
القَناةُ الطَّوقِيَّة
ruffed canal      
‎ القَناةُ الطَّوقِيَّة,الحَيِّزُ النُّطَيقِيُّ‎
CANAL         
  • A proposal for the [[Nicaragua Canal]], from around 1870.
  • Lowell's power canal system
  • The [[Amsterdam-Rhine Canal]] near [[Rijswijk]], Netherlands
  • A family rides a boat in one of the [[canals of Amsterdam]].
  • Small boat canals such as the [[Basingstoke Canal]] fuelled the industrial revolution in much of [[Europe]] and the [[United States]].
  • Canal in [[Broek in Waterland]], Netherlands
  • Canal]]"
  • abbr=on}} long, crossing 38 municipalities.  Initially built to transport wheat, it is now used for irrigation.
  • Canal in [[Sète]], France
  • American canals circa 1825
  • Loading [[Anthracite]] on the [[Lehigh Canal]] to feed the early United States industries in the pioneer-era
  • [[Erie Canal]], Lockport, New York, c. 1855
  • [[Sluice]] in the canal of [[Gabčíkovo Dam]] (Slovakia) – the canal is conveying water to a hydroelectric power station.
  • Aerial view of the man-made canals of the [[Gold Coast, Queensland]], Australia
  • [[Griboyedov Canal]] in [[St. Petersburg]], Russia
  • A canal ([[Gracht]]) in [[Amsterdam]], Netherlands
  • Ireland]]
  • Abandoned DeLessups equipment, Panama jungle
  • The [[Danube-Black Sea Canal]] in [[Romania]]
  • Aqueduct over the [[Mohawk River]] at [[Rexford, New York]], one of 32 [[navigable aqueduct]]s on the [[Erie Canal]]
  • Miraflores Locks]] on the [[Panama Canal]], [[Panama]]
  • [[Bridgewater Canal]] in England
  • Canal of La Peyrade in [[Sète]], France
  • 
    1. Design High Water Level (HWL)
    2. Low water channel
    3. Flood channel
    4. Riverside slope
    5. Riverside banquette
    6. Levee crown
    7. Landside slope
    8. Landside banquette
    9. Berm
   10. Low water revetment
   11. Riverside land
   12. Levee
   13. Protected lowland
   14. River zone
  • Dutch canal in [[Negombo]], Sri Lanka
  • [[Saimaa Canal]], a transportation canal between [[Finland]] and [[Russia]], in [[Lappeenranta]]
  • Thal Canal, [[Punjab, Pakistan]]
  • Wharfs along the [[Oudegracht]] in [[Utrecht]], Netherlands
  • Canals can disrupt water circulation in marsh systems.
  • Canal in [[Venice]]
  • The [[Grand Canal of China]] at [[Suzhou]]
MAN-MADE CHANNEL FOR WATER
Canals; Artificial waterway; Barge canal; Irrigation canal; Navigation channel; Navigation canal

ألاسم

إِرْدَبّ ; تُرْعَة ; تَيّار ; ساقِيَة ; قَنَاة ; قَنَال ; مَسْلَك

Definition

canal
n.
1.
Artificial water-way.
2.
Channel, duct, pipe, tube.

Wikipedia

Ruffed lemur

The ruffed lemurs of the genus Varecia are strepsirrhine primates and are the largest extant lemurs within the family Lemuridae. Like all living lemurs, they are found only on the island of Madagascar. Formerly considered to be a monotypic genus, two species are now recognized: the black-and-white ruffed lemur, with its three subspecies, and the red ruffed lemur.

Ruffed lemurs are diurnal and arboreal quadrupeds, often observed leaping through the upper canopy of the seasonal tropical rainforests in eastern Madagascar. They are also the most frugivorous of the Malagasy lemurs, and they are very sensitive to habitat disturbance. Ruffed lemurs live in multi-male/multi-female groups and have a complex and flexible social structure, described as fission-fusion. They are highly vocal and have loud, raucous calls.

Ruffed lemurs are seasonal breeders and highly unusual in their reproductive strategy. They are considered an "evolutionary enigma" in that they are the largest of the extant species in Lemuridae, yet exhibit reproductive traits more common in small, nocturnal lemurs, such as short gestation periods (~102 days) and relatively large average litter sizes (~2–3). Ruffed lemurs also build nests for their newborns (the only primates that do so), carry them by mouth, and exhibit an absentee parental system by stashing them while they forage. Infants are altricial, although they develop relatively quickly, traveling independently in the wild after 70 days and attaining full adult size by six months.

Threatened by habitat loss and hunting, ruffed lemurs are facing extinction in the wild. However, they reproduce readily in captivity and have been gradually re-introduced into the wild since 1997. Organizations that are involved in ruffed lemur conservation include the Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust, the Lemur Conservation Foundation (LCF), the Madagascar Fauna Group (MFG), Monkeyland Primate Sanctuary in South Africa, Wildlife Trust, and the Duke Lemur Center (DLC).