cry stinking fish - traduction vers allemand
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cry stinking fish - traduction vers allemand

SPECIES OF PLANT
Stinking wattle; Stinking gidgee

cry stinking fish      
v. schmutzige Wäsche in aller Öffentlichkeit waschen
war whoop         
  • All Blacks]] performing a [[Haka]], 1:39 min
  • Soldiers performing a battle cry
A YELL OR CHANT TAKEN UP IN BATTLE
Battlecry; War-cry; Battle Cry; Battle shout; War chant; War cry; War whoop
Kampfschrei
fish ladder         
  • Pool-and-weir fish ladder at [[Bonneville Dam]] on the [[Columbia River]]
  • Denil Fishway on Salmon Creek, [[Montana]]
  • FERC]] Fish Ladder Safety Sign
  • Drone video of a fish way in Estonia, on the river Jägala
STRUCTURE THAT ALLOWS FISH AND OTHER ORGANISMS TO PASS ARTIFICIAL OR NATURAL BARRIERS AT WATERCOURSES
Eel ladder; Fish ladders; Fishway; Fish pass; Fish lift; Salmon ladder; Fish passage; Fish stairs; Fish Ladder; Borland Lift; Dam fish ladder; Barrage fish ladder; Weir fish ladder; Fish cannon; Salmon cannon; Fish passages
Fischtreppe, mehrere Becken das Umgehen von Fischen eines Dammes flussaufwärts ermöglichend

Définition

Stinking
·- ·adj & ·noun from Stink, v.
II. Stinking ·p.pr. & ·vb.n. of Stink.

Wikipédia

Acacia cambagei

Acacia cambagei, commonly known as gidgee, stinking wattle, stinking gidgee in English, or gidjiirr, by transliteration from indigenous languages of north-western NSW, is an endemic tree of Australia. It is found primarily in semiarid and arid Queensland, but extends into the Northern Territory, South Australia and north-western New South Wales. It can reach up to 12 m in height and can form extensive open woodland communities. The leaves, bark, and litter of A. cambagei produce a characteristic odour, vaguely reminiscent of boiled cabbage, gas or sewage that accounts for the common name of "stinking gidgee".

Confined to regions between 550 and 200 mm annual rainfall, A. cambagei is found primarily on flat and gently undulating terrain on heavy and relatively fertile clay and clay-loam soils in the eastern part of it range, and often forms mixed communities with brigalow which favours the same soil types. In drier regions, gidgee is found primarily on red earths and loams in wetter depression and low-relief areas. Gidgee communities are floristically similar to brigalow communities. Eucalyptus cambageana, E. populnea, Corymbia terminalis, Eremophila mitchellii and Geijera parviflora are typical woody species associated with gidgee communities.

Species associated with gidgee have a limited capacity to resprout following fire damage. Fire in any gidgee woodland would be a rare event under natural circumstances, since pasture is at best sparse in these communities, consisting of Chloris, Paspalidium, Dicanthium, Sporobolus and Eragrostis species.