Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"forage" Definitions
  1. food for horses and cows

391 Sentences With "forage"

How to use forage in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "forage" and check conjugation/comparative form for "forage". Mastering all the usages of "forage" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The problems for forage fish include overfishing, which is driving some key forage species to historic lows.
Fewer "forage" fish can mean a simpler and less productive ecosystem—and forage fish are being removed from marine ecosystems at high levels all around the world.
The earlier date should make more forage available for livestock.
These in turn provide ample forage for the lake's rainbows.
Primates like chimpanzees and orangutans use them to forage for food.
Argentinian owl monkeys forage at dawn, dusk, and also by moonlight.
Are there other things you're able to forage from the swamp?
Throughout the game, you forage, hunt, and fight robotic enemies together.
When forage dries up, a whole region is hit at once.
For example, these animals might forage somewhat differently, or travel different routes.
Women forage for plants, dig up tubers, and comb bushes for berries.
The forage would be reallocated to ecosystem and watershed goods and services.
It emerges at night to forage on seeds, building up underground stores.
We forage with the seasons, as the locals do–mushrooms, berries, etc.
What do we do to feed our bees when there's no forage?
It is the combination of woodland trees and forage for domesticated animals.
This allows these highly territorial animals to live and forage more closely.
I love to forage at the Union Square Greenmarket and Trader Joe's.
I don't see insects eating them, nor do deer forage on them.
And because it grows vigorously, it is a good forage crop for livestock.
They forage for berries and plants, but salmon is their main food source.
Crucifix retro forage keytar, craft beer before they sold out heirloom VHS etsy.
We dump our backpacks in the apartment and forage for something to eat.
Some huddle in makeshift shelters they have erected; others forage in the woods.
How did they grow, harvest, forage, hunt, trade, preserve, store and cook food?
This is where they learn to forage, climb trees, build nests and socialize.
But forage fish are far too important to leave exposed to patchwork policies.
Mom usually goes off to forage for food and then come back again.
Adult wasps forage for nectar and tree sap, and only the females sting.
In the wet season, they forage for berries and harvest honey from beehives.
In response, forage fish quality and quantity diminished, devastating the murres' food supply.
Smart management choices for forage fish are ultimately an investment in all fisheries.
LONDON (Reuters) - Wild bees that forage from oilseed rape crops treated with insecticides known as neonicotinoids are more likely to undergo long-term population declines than bees that forage from other sources, according to the findings of an 18-year study.
But the animals, over the years, have eaten up all the natural forage there.
Pandas eat bamboo almost exclusively, and they need room to forage, mate and hide.
Allen also sets out into the mountains to forage, a skill learned from locals.
I'll be looking for new things in the woods because I like to forage.
Compensation is calculated using satellite images to compare current forage levels with historical data.
If you can't forage your own cranberries, store-bought varieties are a fine substitute.
He also leased an area of Long Island Sound so he could forage undersea.
I could make my fluid body out of something I forage from the earth.
Before opening Froth & Forage, Mr. Reid was executive chef at Orso, in downtown Anchorage.
Little by little, her animals, starved of enough forage and water, grew weaker too.
The major ants wandered away from the colony and began to forage for food.
When the food — small forage fish — isn't there, neither are the big target fish.
Both are made by Forage Candle Company, which is based in Roan Mountain, Tenn.
Scientists first compared the two back in the 1970s when studying how animals forage.
The mushroom tea that you had is something I've been doing for a really long time, and that tea is made from mushrooms that we forage in the fall, that my dad and I used to forage for when I was young.
The Tsimane' people of the Amazon (pronounced chee-MAH-nay, roughly) hunt, farm, and forage.
Pork belly squid echo park listicle, mlkshk cronut tacos paleo gochujang yr forage roof party.
Angolans are used to the powerful growing unfathomably wealthy while the masses forage for scraps.
Found only on Madagascar, these 5-pound primates forage for leaves and fruit at night.
They'll forage in a forest or they'll eat the remainder of your Nathan's hot dog.
The morning that I leave the ranch, Putnam has left the goats out to forage.
Drought and suburban sprawl leave beekeepers with less open acreage for their bees to forage.
Those who survived were forced to forage, barter and invent meals from whatever they found.
Honeybees forage widely, self-propagate and live in large colonies that are easy to move.
Jamie Fairman worked in HR for a bourbon company before launching her plant shop, Forage.
When Forage closed in 2016, he decided to venture east and opened Elda last December.
" Tess Taylor is the author of the poetry collections "Work & Days" and "The Forage House.
"You have to forage on the table if you want to be fed," Meslay said.
When the ants forage for garden fertilizer, they pick up random bacteria from the ground.
Each time, they leave the land more parched, with less water and grass for forage.
When forage fails, the insurance pays out, which helps explain the product and build trust.
MATT MITCHELL "Forage" (Screwgun) Mr. Mitchell is a pianist of dynamic sensitivity and dauntless energy.
So forage, sauté, and Instagram away, my fellow fiddlehead fiends, before your time is up.
Wild boars forage for acorns on the land, which runs down to a sandy cove.
This is true both for small 'forage' fish, as well as krill and other plankton.
We also forage elderflower in May and dry the flowers to use them throughout the year.
Others still were seen descending rickety ladders down dark shafts to forage for higher quality silicate.
Their facilities are spacious enough for the giant animals to roam and forage, the zoos said.
He said the Dallas facilities are spacious enough for the giant animals to roam and forage.
It's studied for good reason: Forage harvest, and silage, is a big part of the industry.
Harmon's work is focused on silage, a livestock food that's used when forage production gets low.
In other regions, however, huge industries have been built on the backs of forage fish populations.
He created a form of insurance that pays out when forage coverage drops — no visits necessary.
Players who fail to forage for food, for example, will start to faint in the game.
Many are forced to skip meals and survive on mangoes and plantains, or forage through garbage.
Many birds forage on the ground for food, including the rapidly declining Northern flicker, he says.
Luckily it responds immediately to any spare yogurt you can forage from elsewhere on the table.
Folks, it's time to forage for that loose, linty change in the crevices of your couch.
Plants forage for nutrients in the soil, growing dense roots in rich areas and abandoning poor ones.
But those horses have grown hungry and emaciated because of a lack of forage in the area.
At one point in the forage, I ask Connoley what he's going to do with the chanterelles.
"Changes to the habitat where bees forage" can be a factor, per the Environmental Protection Agency's website.
An estimated 58,000 people forage for help and survival by day, then retreat to shelters at night.
Mr. Achatz envisions suspending legs of Ibérico ham, or baskets where diners forage for their next course.
Scarcity of forage and water wiped out Ali Kula's stock of 50 cattle and around 100 goats.
Another invasive is medusahead, a winter annual grass that crowds out native species and forage for livestock.
I don't know how to forage for food or fight off a mob of Twinks for Trumps.
Come warm weather, we'll go to Forest Park to forage for plants and greens for our meal.
Word about Froth & Forage has been getting around for locals, with reservations for dinner now a must.
So the liveliest spots in town are near the dumpsters, where huge brown bears forage for food.
"They can recover quite quickly once there's rain because the forage starts to grow quickly," Graham said.
Yet rats are superbly adapted to forage efficiently, breed often, and produce enough progeny to repopulate quickly.
On "Forage," a new solo piano album, he reconfigures a handful of Mr. Berne's devilishly abstract compositions.
Shopping satisfies a natural urge to forage — we feel good when we collect things for our family.
The bigger problem is that satellite data on forage cover is only a proxy for animal death.
As carnivores, some wasps are happy to forage for food, typically feasting on the odd insect or spider.
Not only is she refusing to forage and eat, she begins to engage in overtly self-destructive behaviors.
"I forage for dead animals behind my house at night as everyone would expect I do," he jokes.
But intensive farming and urbanization have reduced the amount of readily available forage that bees need to thrive.
One easy step is to grow forage plants, especially varieties that bloom at different times during the year.
And then they would play, in order to keep up the skills needed to hunt and forage, etc.
They repeated experiments in summer, autumn, and winter to assess how seasonal changes in forage impacted methane levels.
Overseas fans will have to forage through eBay or get someone to ship it to them from Japan.
They hop, or hop with the assist of a wingbeat, from branch-to-branch in trees to forage.
In other words, even bees that didn't forage on pesticide-treated plants could still be exposed to agrochemicals.
But every fall, the green parrots who nest in the cemetery forage outside of their confines for food.
Of course, it is possible to forage in your own backyard, where insects are free for the taking.
The popular dog puzzle toys tap into a dog&aposs natural instincts to forage, scavenge, and problem-solve.
And his current accommodations don't allow him to dig, burrow or forage like non-famous groundhogs naturally do.
Insurance that pays out when forage coverage drops — known as index-based livestock insurance — is an elegant idea.
Nevertheless, forage data will never be a perfect proxy; in insurance-speak, that's called a high basis risk.
Fishery managers in every region of the United States must prevent overfishing and localized depletion of forage stocks.
The ranchers complain that the free-roaming elk trample their fences and feed on forage meant for livestock.
Researchers aren't clear on exactly how this happens, but it might have something to do with either the way Hawaiian monk seals forage for snacks, according to NOAA Fisheries:Hawaiian monk seals forage by shoving their mouth and nose into the crevasses of coral reefs, under rocks, or into the sand.
Although we do gift-wrap food and hide it for them to forage on special occasions like New Year's.
If the Kori Bustard was actually a Pokémon, Super Forage seems like it could be a really powerful move.
Crafton, 35, considers himself a member of the niche forage beer movement, where brewers harvest their ingredients from nature.
According to the publication, florals were arranged by Forage and Fleur and treats were provided by Sister's Sweet Creations.
Meals at all the Pigs are made with ingredients they grow, cure, forage and raise themselves, or source locally.
Recently, they entered the marine fisheries arena, and are advocating for good management of important forage fish like menhaden.
Pesticides, parasites, lack of flowers and other forage, erratic weather, and disease have caused drastic declines in bee populations.
Other forage species are swept up at sea in large numbers by industrial fishing fleets aiming for different fish.
New Jersey bears have a more concentrated forage of acorns, hazelnuts, beechnuts, and so forth—foods that build fat.
The one-time Blackbeard impersonator let Candice Cody forage for food on Redemption Island while he saved his strength.
Back at the dorm, she explained, it's easier to take "poverty naps" than to forage for something to eat.
In the jungles of Ivory Coast, monkeys and chimps forage for food, sleep in trees and travel in groups.
On the hottest day, I forage for the wild strawberries that hide under the meadow grasses near our fence.
Front Burner The next time you are stranded on a tropical island, forage for young coconuts to make jerky.
These founding fishermen identified several critical issues early on, including ensuring that enough forage fish stayed in the ocean.
According to the bridal magazine, florals were arranged by Forage and Fleur and treats were provided by Sister's Sweet Creations.
There's a whole world of things to pick, forage, and ferment, and she hasn't had enough opportunities for it recently.
"Beekeepers look at Monsanto and other Big Ag companies as the enemy, spraying chemicals and killing bees' forage," Hayes says.
He wants to talk about mites and disappearing forage and the vast and confounding spectrum of other threats to honeybees.
Families forage through garbage, parents skip meals to let their children eat, and adolescents clamber up trees to pluck mangoes.
She released her first recipe book in May, including recipes using food that readers can forage for in the forest.
From this location, the penguins forage in the shallow waters at the nearby McDonald Bank and the McDonald Ice Rumples.
As we forage the woodland, everything has a story to tell—and one that can often be translated through flavour.
Before the advent of private property, he believed, all men had been able to support themselves through hunting and forage.
We need directives to improve bycatch reduction measures and directives that make us do a better job managing forage fish.
Pulling a baseball cap over my patchy scalp, I went out to forage for food that wouldn't make me gag.
Scared that we'd starve to death, because there wasn't anything in his Roosevelt book about how to forage for food.
"Industrial agriculture is the main culprit, due to heavy pesticide use and reduction of bee-friendly forage," Winston told me.
Two laws, the Economy Act of 1932 and the Feed and Forage Act, give the president some spending wiggle room.
The humans were taught to "forage" on a computer for videos of kittens, a dance competition, landscapes or bicycle accidents.
In March there's the Worm Moon , because in early spring the ground softens, inviting armies of robins to forage for earthworms.
In the southern parts of its range (including New York), the birds forage in old fields, fallow croplands and marsh edges.
They'll learn to forage and look after themselves and they'll be back out in the wild – because they are wild animals.
On one side of the road flows the Truckee River; on the other bands of wild horses forage for parched grass.
Bamieh points to za'atar (hyssop) and akoub, two wild greens commonly used in Palestinian dishes, that are now illegal to forage.
Research labs at UC-Davis and elsewhere are analyzing what types of flowering plants provide the best supplemental forage for bees.
Squirrels that forage for acorns and aren't forced to live in close proximity to humans can be gentle creatures, cute even.
In the "Aeneid", Virgil's heroes forage for a meal of forest fruit laid on pieces of hard bread on the grass.
Dolphins typically forage offshore in the night for fish, shrimp and squid, then return toward land during the day to relax.
And on long summer days, when the hives are busy with bees flying in and out to forage, Mack is cautious.
They roost in the river by night and forage in the surrounding fields by day, and it's a sight to behold.
In a typical day, the Hadza set out in groups early in the morning to hunt and forage in the savanna.
The floating platform full of fruit and vegetable plants, dubbed Swale, is inviting the public aboard to forage for free food.
Critics ask why that would work, given that the wild pigs are smart and curious, and regularly forage over long distances.
A salamander's life becomes increasingly proscribed during the drier summer months, leaving them to forage under logs or in small burrows.
In other cases, agents hold diplomatic posts at an embassy or consulate and forage in nearby campuses for recruits and information.
As for those upset about the horses, the flip side — praise from your neighbors for providing adequate forage — is never forthcoming.
Many of London's 140 bee species are struggling, says Ms Cotton, because of a loss of suitable forage in gardens and elsewhere.
Ben sets down a tub of pure flake finishing salt, then we head outside to forage for something to flavor it with.
And when new shoots do sprout up after the fires, those hooved animals — invasive feral deer in particular — will forage for saplings.
You can forage for supplies in the forest, or solve one of the puzzle shrines, or try out some new elixir recipes.
Frost usually hits the area in mid-September, signaling the time when cattle need feed pellets to supplement shrinking supplies of forage.
In one series of trials, a rat was placed in a box, where it was free to roam and forage for food.
Do you have the skills needed to forage or hunt your own food and build your own shelter away from privatized land?
Settle near fresh water, but not too close to rivers, forage for heirloom seeds, and search for solar panels with big batteries.
In Thailand thousands of "sea slaves," held captive in shoddy fishing vessels, trawl for cheap forage fish used in canned pet food.
Your meals come from the garden you keep, the fish you catch, and what you forage from the immense forest around you.
Without forage fish, these communities stand to lose substantial revenue from recreational and commercial fishing, seafood sales, wildlife viewing and other industries.
They have a vibrant youth population, virtually everyone knows how to hunt and forage, and the aboriginal language is very much alive.
This time of year, as the bees gear back up and forage, each hive could be buzzing with up to 60,000 bees.
We are drawn to shiny things in the same wild way our ancestors were overcome by a compulsion to forage for honey.
I cherish seeing them on my cold-weather hikes, as they forage in mixed flocks with nuthatches, titmice and other woodland birds.
Changes in the marine food web caused mothers to forage for food further away and the young sea lions were left behind.
In the summer his 30,000 hive-dwellers feast on coastal flowers; in the autumn they forage on milkweed and morning glories further north.
It likely emerged some 60-70 million years ago when mammals first diversified, allowing them to forage on new prey, such as insects.
In doing so, the tribes spend long days foraging, sell what they forage cheaply, and overharvest certain plant species to dangerously low levels.
We passed a cemetery, and a wooded area with a sign forbidding passers-by to forage for mushrooms or truffles, a regional specialty.
This impaired learning ability could make it harder for the worker bees to navigate and forage, Gill said, potentially imperiling the bee colony.
Animals in the wild are subject to outside forces — the need to forage or kill, to compete, and to prepare for future shortages.
You'll need to forage some electrical parts — about $30 worth of them — and get a few tools handy as you prepare for assembly.
It means a devastating loss of income for families who now forage through trash, and crippling loneliness for those already on society's fringes.
The United States Agricultural Department has identified parasites, diseases, poor nutrition, loss of forage habitat and environmental toxins as continuing perils for bees.
This abnormally warm water speeds up the metabolism of large predatory fish like salmon and cod, which prey on forage fish like herring.
It gives Swedes the right to travel through public, and some private, property, camp there overnight, and forage for a variety of treats.
Studying these aquatic birds in the wild is not easy, however, as they prefer to forage in the freezing, choppy waters of the Antarctic.
Sneaky lil forage of some seaweed growing profusely along the coastline.. I think the smooth one is some kind of kelp maybe Laminaria digitata?
Indian wildlife experts say such accidents are increasingly common because mining and development projects are forcing elephants to forage farther from their natural habitats.
On a searing hot day in mid-April, Chol's mother, Tipasa, took me down to a nearby swamp to forage for something for dinner.
"The minkes we're seeing are often young and underweight, which is a little puzzling because there's a lot of forage fish around," said LaCasse.
Drought is rampant right now, making it more difficult for the replenishment of forage, and extreme overgrazing has also led to the current crisis.
"Tabernacle" (pictured top), the show's closer, is shaped like a forage cap worn by both Union and Confederate infantry during the American civil war.
These labels obviously cover cows' diets — the animals can only eat grass and other stuff they forage — but they also go well beyond that.
As we forage on, next come the veggie burgers, the soy dogs, the meatless meatballs, the caramel-brown vacuum-sealed lumps called field roasts.
The protozoa in the pillow field might be feeding on the apparent grass, or are perhaps repulsed by it and desire to forage elsewhere.
And this is not a unique situation as states across the West face skyrocketing horse and burro populations and dwindling forage to support them.
Along the way, Ferriss will show readers the building blocks of successful cooking, and even how to hunt and forage in a survival situation.
That means the food needs for bigger fish, whales, seabirds and other predators are not always considered when forage fish catch limits are set.
Forage has an online store and hosts community events, like a workshop on how to make a decorative wreath or moss-covered wall hanging.
As I forage Tokyo for culinary tech stories for my MUNCHIES show Food Hacking, the subculture of video game cuisine has blown my mind.
Bees are known to pick up trace amounts of metals, which settle on leaves and flowers from the air, as they forage for pollen.
You've got to forage for food, take care of your place, and find things to do that fill your days in a meaningful way.
These domestic goats live in southwestern Morocco, where the climate is dry and in some seasons the only available forage is in the trees.
Certain areas of the country, such as Alaska, have recognized the importance of forage fish and have not authorized fisheries that target these stocks.
This is challenging, and we must recognize that in many cases forage fish species will continue to be harvested for bait and other uses.
But we can't forget that the most important role of forage species like herring and menhaden is to support the rest of the ocean.
Very few still wear traditional loincloths but the Penan maintain strong ties to the forest and forage for rattan for weaving and medicinal plants.
So then this work came up, this Forage From Fire, which is so different, but it seems to be moving a lot of people.
In Toba city, Ama forage for seafood like abalone, sea urchin and lobster, but their numbers are threatened by an aging population and climate change.
As the sipunculan pokes its head out and pulls forward to forage for food in the soft seafloor, it drags the coral along with it.
The olfactory mutations may have harmed the ability to forage and to even smell the flowers that made up an important part of their diet.
An implantable miniature microscope lets researchers track the brain activity of mice in real time, as the animals forage for food or navigate a maze.
Consumers also know that yellow is the color associated with butter and cream, because of the milk produced by pasture-raised and forage-eating cows.
According to USDA rules, once animals have been weaned off milk, they must be fed only grass and other forage, such as legumes and hay.
Jeremy Haffner began his day a little differently than most beer brewers—by dodging poison oak to forage ingredients in the hillsides of Ojai, California.
Should you prefer to forage the urban way, fresh-picked dandelion greens of both cultivated and wild varieties are showing up at farmers' markets now.
"The cattle that are coming in across the border are going straight to feedlots as opposed to onto pasture or on some forage," said McCullock.
They sneak under the turnstiles and they get in and know exactly which stop to get off at to forage for the food they need.
And without more careful management of the forest, and the mule deer and cattle that forage within him, the Trembling Giant will continue to dwindle.
Zebra mares forage here near African impala antelopes, and it is easy to forget that downtown San Antonio is only two hours to the east.
They can easily traverse jagged inclines as long as snowfall is light, and they are even capable of climbing sturdy trees to forage for foliage.
The parts for the monitors are impossible to find; if something breaks, Ms. Müller will have to forage for similar parts from similar antiquated machines.
A maximum of 228 participants will forage for provisions with Mr. Lutes, who will turn their stock into meals (from 23 Canadian dollars, or $22).
The rodents were trained to forage for the flavored pellets — banana, chocolate, grape or plain — in a square maze with a "restaurant" in each corner.
Twelve former participants will head to the African Badlands, where they'll build shelters, forage for food and create a new community – and, yes, they'll be naked.
When the malnourished pups venture off the islands to forage on their own, they end up carried off by currents and washed ashore on mainland beaches.
The researchers suspect that D. oosthuizeni's large orbits may have been an adaptation to dimly-lit waters, allowing them to forage for fish in dark conditions.
"Forage your neighborhood for fallen bits or do some snipping from your own garden, find a flat surface, and see where it takes you!" she wrote.
When there's nothing left to eat but canned sweetcorn, it'll be useful to know how to forage, so I head to Hampstead Heath midweek for lunch.
In examining thousands of flints, scrapers and ax heads, the scientists discovered that these Middle Pleistocene hominins didn't merely forage for food, they also hunted it.
They commonly forage along mowed road shoulders, on ball fields and in gardens, and will appropriate a surprising range of cavities, natural or not, for nesting.
For the executive chef at Gitanes, however, the morning commute is a multi-coloured forage fiesta of cara cara orange, chiogia beets, and shaved Burgundian truffle.
Still, some eggs wash out of nests, becoming valuable forage for an array of animals, and the basis of a critical and far-reaching food chain.
Since the beginning of Ramadan, the Syrian military has been shelling the fields just a few hundred meters away where he used to forage for vegetables.
Its remains indicate that it lived in warm coastal waters and preyed upon small fish, using echolocation to help it forage in murky, sediment-filled waters.
While several fishery management councils — including those that oversee North Pacific, Pacific and Mid-Atlantic ocean fishing — have proactively protected unmanaged forage species, others have not.
It uses satellite imagery to determine forage availability, with payouts triggered when a lack of rain shrinks grazing to less than 22017 percent of ideal conditions.
In Ivanka's world, the shore is never far, the driftwood is always photogenic and there's time aplenty, because there are servants galore, to forage for it.
" Another user, Olivia Curran Webster, concurred that tools were irrelevant: "It's because we're all vegan micro farmers who forage for mushrooms in the wilderness on Sundays.
But a recent forage for the leaves left her injured after a police officer used a Taser on her when she would not drop a knife.
Courtesy of Mikael Damkier/Shutterstock Courtesy of Mikael Damkier/Shutterstock Fish feed solutions accelerate Right now, most farmed fish eat food made from wild forage fish.
Over the past few weeks, Buzz the mangabey has stayed close to mom, leaving her to learn how to forage and nurse at the same time.
Her project Swale, a floating garden she created in 2016 that docked at various piers in New York, allowed visitors to forage for free fresh food.
As fisheries managers have learned to promote the rebuilding of fisheries and marine ecosystems, the central role of forage fish protection has become ever more apparent.
Drought in several top honey-producing states not only depleted bees' forage, but also led to more herbicide use because stressed plants don't easily absorb the chemicals.
They make their living by scavenging the bodies of other insects that have died from the heat, so they have evolved to forage in 140-degree temperatures.
And because dairy goats require much more nutrition than meat goats, Putnam's attempt to get her goats to forage the dry chaparral California landscape is completely experimental.
Colquhoun also makes use of seasonal offerings like nasturtiums, borage flowers, chive flowers, marigold petals, or whatever else you can forage or find at the grocery store.
The chef, Zachary Reid, who opened Froth & Forage in May, is making the case by serving up inventive comfort food that often pops with color and flavor.
They forage throughout the four seasons, and during warmer months can even be observed in broad daylight, scurrying through the matted vegetation in damp meadows and fields.
That program has promoted crop rotation, cover cropping, farm forage-based grazing and other methodologies that prevent soil erosion and improve the environmental sustainability of farming operations.
And while the queen plays a unique role, the workers manage to make group decisions about where to forage, by means of something called the waggle dance.
It's time to forage for consumer goods, but it's also nontime, no time at all, a faint narcosis that removes you from the bindings of daily existence.
The Feed and Forage Act, first enacted in 1799, was intended to allow military leaders in the field to spend money on essential clothing and medical supplies.
We forage sweet woodruff as well, which is a very delicate, star-shaped plant with green leaves and a delicate white flower, which gives almond and vanilla flavors.
They have unusual hand-like front paws with increased tactile sensitivity and reduced webbing, which they use to forage for their prey of crustaceans, mollusks and small fish.
Early human beings existed largely at the mercy of nature – helpless against natural disasters; constantly struggling to forage or capture enough food so as not to go hungry.
The lesser long-nosed bat is an avid pollinator of night-blooming plants like agave, and colonies swarm out of their roosts at night to forage for nectar.
The economy of every state in the country — whether it touches an ocean, or has waterways that feed into oceans — is impacted by the health of forage fish.
The failure to manage forage fish appropriately has hurt species and marine and river ecosystems from Maine to Florida, California to Washington and along the Gulf of Mexico.
When they forage for bugs and seeds on lake bottoms, they stir up sediment, uproot plants, change water chemistry, promote algal blooms and leave little food for waterfowl.
Mr. Symington spent hours watching individual bees forage, timing how long it took for the different concentrations to go down the hatch and then come back up again.
At night, the pinky-size fish comes out to forage through reefs and shallow waters with a built-in cloaking device: a soft glow emitted in its underbelly.
It lives in subterranean societies of neighboring burrows, surfacing to forage during the day and rarely venturing more than a few hundred feet from the center of town.
To do this, they must manage at both the local and ecosystem levels and ensure that scientific research priorities and management decisions reflect the importance of forage stocks.
The crop losses - which may lead to feed and forage shortages for livestock later in the year - are expected to have a broad impact nationally and even internationally.
In the game, 100 players are dropped onto an island, left to forage for weapons, vehicles, and supplies, and duke it out until only one player is left standing.
For better, and for worse, Wall Street serves as an innovation hub of financial services products; smaller banks have limited access to pioneering entrepreneurs and must forage for partners.
Certain food plants—forage rape and fodder beet, in particular—curb methane emission by as much as 25% compared with the belchings of animals fed on grass and clover.
The tags also have reliable, low-power electronics so that the single lithium battery lasts the 4003-10 months needed to fully capture seasonal changes where the seals forage.
The marauding monkeys forage for food around the entrance to the 17th century monument in the northern city of Agra, where visitors' bags are scanned and food thrown away.
In addition, once rangelands become degraded through overgrazing, shrubs sometimes increase, but clearing these shrubs to stimulate forage production for livestock further cripples the land's ability to store carbon.
By passing the Forage Fish Conservation Act, Congress can help America's coastal communities enjoy a healthy and sustainable future — and keep a lot of anglers happy in the process.
The nesting chicks are fed lethal quantities of plastic by their parents, who mistake the floating trash for food as they forage over the vast and polluted Pacific Ocean.
A number of insect species, including ants, wasps and bees, have queens that are responsible for reproduction, while a far larger number of often-sterile workers forage for food.
The British Army in the Revolution, unable to gather food and forage from the American countryside without being ambushed, relied largely on provisions shipped from English and Irish ports.
Dr. Christensen urged diners to consume more forage fish, including anchovies and sardines, and reduce their intake of bigger fish to help rebalance the fish species in the ocean.
Snow insulates soil, and by trampling it in search of forage, big herbivores expose the permafrost to the air, lowering ground temperatures by as much as 40 degrees centigrade.
"The most obvious factor contributing to the rapid growth of deer populations is increased forage," according to a 2343 paper in the Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics.
From there, it becomes a word problem: If I have a forage harvester with "X" harvesting capacity and my field is "X" distance away from the storage site, and I know all of the routes I have to take to get to the field, what is the optimal number of trucks that I need to maintain harvest efficiency and never have that forage harvester stop and wait on a truck to get back?
But he said the dolphins may not be resting as deeply as they need, which could harm their ability to forage for food at night and their ability to reproduce.
Along the way, he gathered crucial bits of information from fellow migrants: the best route to take, locations of shelters up ahead, places to avoid, where to forage for food.
I don't want to eat one of the lunches I made since I'm at home, so I forage around and eat baba ganoush, tortilla chips, kalamata olives, and mozzarella cheese.
However, though rape and beet are planted by some farmers as supplementary food crops, particularly for winter forage, they do not, unlike grass and clover, keep growing after being grazed.
Researchers believe disease may be spreading to wild bumblebees from commercial bumblebees used in greenhouses that forage outside for nectar and could be transmitting pathogens through the flowers they visit.
Puka and Kea, each eight feet long, were believed to have been killed by sharks or to have starved; in captivity they had not learned how to forage for themselves.
Sustainable beef, raised on free-range farms, also has a lower water footprint, because cattle are able to naturally forage for food (as opposed to eating manufactured grain and corn).
Required by law to seek asylum and work in the European Union country where they first set foot, the migrants are trapped in Italy, forcing many to forage to survive.
Scientists are developing reference points to measure the ecological role that menhaden serve as forage fish and how changes in their numbers would affect the predators that feed on them.
If only I could bottle that scent up... #tbt #chanterellemushrooms #chantrelle #mushroomhunting #forage #eatwhatyoufind #wildfood #allthemushroomhashtags #fungi #fungus #Oregon #pnw #pacificnorthwest Oh cool, so aliens are living amongst us. Great.
The elephants no longer get sugar cane and bananas, which are too expensive, but forage for grass in nearby fields and eat corn stalks that Mr. Amnuai buys from farmers.
Adding to their surprise, the researchers found that the mother continued to provide the fluid even after her young began leaving the nest to forage at about 20 days old.
While Twombly painted and picked up antiques, Rauschenberg arranged assemblages of street finds — stones, nails, thorns, dead insects — and continued to forage back in New York, living in Lower Manhattan.
Galápagos penguins forage just offshore, close to their nests, and return to the nest site after the young fledge, so parents and fledglings are likely to encounter one another frequently.
The differences between a toxic and a tasty mushroom or herbs are subtle, and to learn to safely forage requires more time and effort than many are willing to invest.
Should all go well, the herd will be released into a 460-square-mile area where they'll interact with other native species, forage for food, and re-integrate into the ecosystem.
The penguins are now further from the shallow banks where they likely forage, and the Halley Bay penguins are now in direct competition with the penguins already present at this site.
For now, he is working toward that goal, learning how to climb, groom and forage, and LWC is supporting him through it all, already spending more than $4,000 on his care.
Borrowing from nature, some machines now have arms that curl and grip like an octopus, others wriggle their way inside an airplane engine or forage underwater to create their own energy.
By this hypothesis, bonobos evolved in a region with a comparatively abundant and reliable food source, which meant that females could forage in view of one another without coming to blows.
The couple, who wed on Lopez a month after the restaurant opened, have gotten to know plenty of Lopezians, especially those who fish, forage, raise livestock or grow fruits and vegetables.
King penguins leave their young and swim south to forage for fish and squid in the waters of the Antarctic polar front, where cold, deep water mixes with more temperate seas.
In Kenya, rural herders can buy subsidized insurance that pays them automatically by mobile phone when satellites determine that the available forage in their area is too scarce to support livestock.
Ms. McMahon said the storm had done more than simply obstruct the birds' progress — it had left them starved, unable to find or forage for food in the snow-covered city.
He lives in a thatch hut on the side of a hill in the forest, eating mostly whatever he can forage -- though he does still throw an occasional latte into the mix.
"Back in the caveman era, men had to go out and forage for food and fight the woolly mammoths, and they had to be shoulder-to-shoulder to protect themselves," says Greif.
But the evidence is "pretty damning" that dicamba affects both pollinator forage and the bees themselves, according to Mortensen, chairman of University of New Hampshire's Department of Agriculture, Nutrition, and Food Systems.
Peasants and forest communities could still forage for materials for houses and tools, but it would now be a criminal act to log Cambodian rosewood to decorate the homes of rich foreigners.
"Geese have also been enjoying the gardens and a new flower meadow will be installed later this week to provide extra forage for bees and other pollinator insects," according to the post.
Among coastal river otters, which are different from more inland populations, the males live and forage for fish in fluid groups of as few as four otters or as many as 18.
But they were viewed as private family matters, not as a chance to publicly forage "in the gutter," as some here saw it, or conduct a public vivisection of a person's character.
Seeing them frolic and forage on the subway tracks can be a comfort; who among us hasn't felt the same things they feel when the lights of a train come bearing down?
Although it's a novelist's right, and often her strong suit, to forage, ingeniously using disparate elements to create a sense of life, Semple has a habit of foraging openly, broadly and effusively.
"Monk seals forage by shoving their mouth and nose into crevasses in coral reefs, under rocks, or into the sand," he said, and the eel may have latched on in self defense.
Her two-bedroom house on the Navajo reservation in a remote part of Arizona is at the base of a mountain, where children, aunts, uncles and grandparents hike and forage for plants.
Then, the cycles of the reindeers' circadian clock have their highest highs and lowest lows, perhaps driving the animals to forage what is available during the day and prepare for what's ahead.
Polar bears make dens there, and it is where most of the huge Porcupine caribou herd — 22,2000 animals in all — come in spring and early summer to calve and forage for food.
This makes it all the more troubling that the version of MSA reauthorization approved by the House Natural Resources Committee in December does not include bipartisan compromise language on forage fish protections.
"Species in this group that live in forests seem to rely on a well-developed sense of smell to help them forage in conditions where visual cues might be obstructed," Torres said.
In a separate statement, the company said it would buy the agricultural grass and soil implement business of Kongskilde Industries to expand its offering in tillage, seeding and hay and forage segments.
I found myself rummaging through what was left, which was really nothing, but through the ashes I'd find remnants — which is that series that people seem to respond to, Forage From Fire.
" Besides being an important source of food, fuel (in the form of wood) and forage for the British troops occupying Manhattan, he said, the island "was an interface between two enemy camps.
He is trying to understand how the availability and distribution of different plants, of varying nutritional value, affects how giraffe forage and roam, both from day to day and from season to season.
Birds that feed on bread or other human handouts fill up on the tasty carbohydrates, which means they don't forage for the natural foods they need to maintain a varied and balanced diet.
There are more than 900 species of slime mold; some live as single-celled organisms most of the time, but come together in a swarm to forage and procreate when food is short.
This will force king penguins to swim farther to forage: birds living on the Crozet Islands, for instance, will have to swim about 435 miles (700 kilometers) to reach the Antarctic Polar Front.
Just like PUBG, players in Fornite Battle Royale will parachute onto an island, forage for weapons and items, and try to out-survive 99 other players as the map gets smaller and smaller.
Like anchovies, sardines, herring, alewives and mackerel, shad are forage fish — those relatively small fish that school in large numbers in the ocean and form a major link in the marine food web.
A year after the Elwha Dam came down, Mr. Duda and his colleagues found chemical signs of marine-derived nutrients in the blood of American dippers, small aquatic songbirds that forage in rivers.
Mr. Sadr, 34, grew up spending Nowruz on his family's farm in the Gilan province in northern Iran, where he'd harvest herbs and forage for wild fruits and nuts for the holiday dishes.
For Mr. Bakhsh's sons, and for much of the rest of their community, the mountain was a place both to escape and to forage for refuse that could be sold at the bazaar.
Tiny, finely carved netsuke are displayed above a porcelain dish, which features a different take on the divine herb-picker: lucky deer forage for lingzhi, not unlike trained pigs who sniff out truffles.
Often, rather, they are deliberate targets, shot by poachers, who want their ivory; by farmers, because of the damage they do to crops; and by cattle herders, who see them as competitors for forage.
Stephanie Bowman was a desperate mother of two young girls, homeless and an addict when she did the unthinkable: She placed her 5-year-old daughter, Amber, into a dumpster to forage for food.
Bethesda is throwing players together in the irradiated wasteland of the Fallout series, where they'll be able to work together to build settlements, forage supplies, and fend off monsters... or fight each other instead.
For the industry, the key question is how many of these workers are utilizing these platforms to make a little extra cash as a side-gig versus trying to forage a full-time living.
Fully 40 percent of koalas that land in wildlife hospitals in Queensland and New South Wales are diagnosed with late-stage chlamydia and can't be rehabbed—blindness means they can't forage or avoid predators.
Today, the combination of growing commercial pressures and changing environmental conditions that is pushing forage fish further north and into deeper waters is putting this important part of the food chain at huge risk.
Chef Michael Hunter heads out into the wilderness to hunt and forage and tells us what sets him apart from other farm to table restaurants as he prepares his wild game burger at Antler.
If monkeys or meerkats are looking for a better place to forage, they need to reach a consensus about moving on among a minimum number of animals — called a quorum, just like in Congress.
I described the Outward Bound curriculum and told him about the solo, when students go off completely alone for a couple of days and nights and eat only things they are able to forage.
"Rats move closer to humans during drought, when they can't forage for food in the forest," said Dr. David Heymann, professor of infectious disease epidemiology at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
One hundred players drop from a parachute into a sprawling island map, where they salvage and forage for guns, health power-ups, ammunition, and shields, before taking out every other player on the map.
Since Hawaiian monk seals forage for food by shoving their face into the tight space around coral reefs, it is possible that the occasionally cornered eel could mistake a seal's nostril for an escape route.
NYMFAIO, Greece (Reuters) - Just four months old, bear cubs Bradley and Cooper are still bottle-fed but they will soon have to forage into the Greek forest if they are to eat on their own.
"We have seen evidence of pastoralists accessing smartphones when they recognize the value it delivers," said Mude who helped pioneer the use of satellite imagery to trigger insurance payouts for herders when forage is scarce.
Bikes are available for getting around, and the proprietors encourage guests to forage the property for ingredients, teach cooking classes and stock a mini-market of organic wine and olive oil in the main farmhouse.
He explained that for the spring-dependent bears, the sea ice is melting earlier and freezing later, which has created a shorter amount of time to forage for seals and a longer period of fasting.
Tourism and reindeer husbandry are the two main industries, and every summer in July and August the Finnish people who live in the region stop what they're doing and forage for the elusive, magical cloudberry.
The staff is a multinational coterie of volunteers, interns and young idealists who farm, forage, cook, serve and construct most of the resort each season, and the atmosphere hovers somewhere between summer camp and commune.
I forage in the fridge and see that my Swiss chard is on its last legs, so I sauté it with some spinach from my garden and sad-looking red leaf lettuce from the crisper drawer.
And excluding all humans from reserves creates tension with local villagers, who often want to graze their animals or forage for firewood—a problem with nature reserves around the world that is keenly felt in India.
Miller said the species that are the most ecologically important to freshwater systems, like the forage fish, aren't the ones that the fishing industry is interested in, so it's challenging to get funding to study them.
Negotiations have been going on for more than six years to update the treaty, which came into force in 2004 and governs access to 64 crops and forage plants judged as key to feeding the world.
One provision would prevent the regional fisheries management councils from managing many "forage fish," the short-lived species lower in the food chain that larger, typically more valuable species that we like to catch, prey upon.
Allowing livestock to graze on the annually renewing forage on our public lands maintains the health and vitality of these ecosystems by reducing fuel loads that can lead to extreme wildfire behavior during peak fire season.
In "Late Pastoral," from 2005, they are "driven towards us": by nothing to forage, by vanishing trees and razed fields, by exurbs, by white- flight and our insatiate hunger for size and space and tax advantages.
He placed a stack of resources, about 20 books on ethnobotany and indigenous foods, at the front of the room, but the real work took place outdoors, where participants were asked to forage ingredients for dinner.
But during the nine days that we hiked through Jotunheimen, permitted to light fires, swim in the rivers, forage for mushrooms and pitch our tent wherever we pleased, we saw only land that was startlingly pristine.
Along with other dangers facing bees, like pesticides and the loss of forage lands, the viruses these mites carry threaten the bees we rely on to pollinate many of the fruits, nuts and vegetables we eat.
Trilobites Their little chicks fast for more than a week while they forage for fish and krill in the waters of the Antarctic polar front, an upwelling where cold, deep seas mix with more temperate seas.
Whenever Homo sapiens have arrived in a new place, other creatures who previously roamed freely have historically become scarce or placed under human control, where their instinctual attempts to forage and build homes are tragically thwarted.
They are a source of constant concern for Kennedy International Airport's managers (whose longest runway borders this colony), but naturalists enjoy watching the birds forage on the eggs of breeding horseshoe crabs during May and June.
The predictive livestock early warning system, developed together with Texas A and M University, shows how much forage will be available in Kenya up to May 2017, using computer modeling of water flows and vegetation growth.
In an interview with Yahoo News this past July, she said that Disney employees had been so underpaid that they were forced to "forage for food in other people's garbage," a claim that she later retracted.
Seabirds such as Albatross, Gulls and Petrels have declined a staggering 70 percent in the last 70 years, faced with the combination of fewer forage fish, rising sea levels, warming oceans and greater acidity in the water.
Researchers have long known that among certain traditional cultures of Africa, people forage for wild honey with the help of honeyguides — woodpecker-like birds that show tribesmen where the best beehives are hidden, high up in trees.
For the rusty patched bumble bee, this means creating more patches of the prairie habitat it needs to forage, as well as putting out nest boxes on the edges of woodlots and hedgerows to promote hive growth.
While some go by names like "forage board" and "garden charcuterie," most chefs just call them crudités, a wink to the cocktail-party standby, often a banal tray of celery and peppers alongside Hidden Valley Ranch dip.
First, some creatures became warmblooded, which enabled them to forage at night when it's cold and no one else is around, but also required them to consume far more nutrition than coldblooded animals in order to survive.
In groups of up to 30 females and babies (the males tend to live on their own), they chatter, click, whistle and bark as they forage for insects, fruit, rodents, lizards and small snakes during the day.
With its own waters heavily overfished, and being forced to forage elsewhere to feed its people, the Chinese government commands a fleet of nearly 2,600 vessels, 10 times larger than the United States fleet, all heavily subsidized.
A city person like myself has very little in common with someone who lives off the grid, eating what they kill, drying what they forage, warming themselves through the interminable winter with wood downed in a storm.
Here along Newfoundland's treeless, surf-pounded coast, hardy men (and some women) rise before dawn and motor their boats out into the open sea in search of the birds that come to feed on small forage fish.
René Redzepi, chef and co-owner of Noma and arguably the most well-known forager on the planet, is launching a mobile app called VILD MAD that will allow users to forage "delicious edibles" by using their phones.
These flows also provide the seals with close access to food resources (such as animals that live on the ocean floor), and a place from which pups can safely learn to dive, swim and forage away from predators.
Whether you find this fowl in a free-range field or forage it from the most fearsome of factory farms, just make sure that you're able to stuff the little guy in your duffle bag for easy transport.
"Together, flight and echolocation have enabled bats to forage in the night sky, a niche that presumably was relatively unexploited until bats emerged about 65 [million years] ago," researchers from Lund University, in Sweden, write in their paper.
This assemblage of oddities began over a century ago when Dr. Rudolf Virchow, the father of modern pathology, took a particular interest in corporal deformities (as one does) and began to forage for the unusual and the abnormal.
When Castro's photo appeared on the front page of The New York Times after his arrival, it hardly needed a caption: He was instantly recognizable for his unique sartorial style, combining military fatigues, forage cap and unkempt beard.
To stay alive, I imagine a matriarch — Akan women have always been indomitable — whipping up the young to forage for edibles, which she would throw into a clay pot: snails crawling and mushrooms sprouting from the forest floor.
Front Burner In western Switzerland, Philippe Pasquier — whose company, Le Jeu de Quilles, was established in 1723 — still makes his small-batch Gruyère the old-fashioned way, using raw summer milk from cows that forage in the mountains.
One in particular, however, seemed to sense a kindred spirit in Jade, so when the family would forage in my yard, it would lag behind just enough to get Jade's attention from her bed near the glass door.
How they walk and where they do it Walking sharks, also called "epaulette" sharks for their spots that resemble the military decor, "walk" on their muscular fins to forage for small fish along shallow reefs and sea grass.
Véronique Skrotzky, who used to forage for mushrooms when the run-down old chateau stood in its place, lamented that the owner never seemed to stay there, and that the property and grounds were closed to the public.

No results under this filter, show 391 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.