KSIĄŻKI POWIĄZANE ZE SŁOWEM «LAPIDICOLOUS»
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1
A Dictionary of Entomology
LAPIDICOLOUS. Adj. (Latin,. lapis. I. stone. +. colere I living in or on.) Descriptive
of organisms that live under stones or deeply embedded among stones. See
Habitat. Cf. Rupicolous. Rel. Ecology. LAPIDESCENT Adj. (Latin, lapidescens, ...
2
Acta Zoologica Cracoviensia
Diplocephalus latifrons (Cbr.) The studied material originated from grottoes, from
a lapidicolous biotope, indigenous to the following localities: Persani Mts.: 1 o 1
immature specimen, September 27, 1962, lapidicolous in front of the No.
3
African Biodiversity: Molecules, Organisms, Ecosystems
Lapidicolous scorpions, which shelter under stones or any other available cover,
are habitat generalists (Newlands, 1978a; Lamoral, 1978b, 1979; Prendini,
2001a), displaying few ecomorphological adaptations and varied, often
widespread ...
Bernhard A. Huber, Bradley J. Sinclair, Karl-Heinz Lampe, 2007
4
A life caught in a spider's web:
In northern Italy it may almost meet its eastern vicariant Yheridion refugum,
another representative of this still insufficiently known, ground-living, lapidicolous
species complex. The allopatric occurrence of these closely allied species
indicates ...
Pavel Stoev, Jason Dunlop, Stoyan Lazarov, 2009
5
The Grandiloquent Dictionary - Tenth Anniversary Edition
A type of dilluted urine used to wash clothing or blankets Laodicean - Being lax in
one's religious beliefs or indifferent to religion lapidate - To stone a person to
death lapidicolous - Living under rocks larging - The wasteful spending of money
...
6
Roget's Descriptive Word Finder
... or place inquilinc: dwelling in the nest of another species labtebricole: living in
holes lapidicolous: living underneath rocks, like grubs or beetles limicoline:
dwelling along a coast; littoral; orarian limicolous: living in mud or slime
limnophilous: ...
7
Ants: Their Structure, Development and Behavior
Even the mound-building forms frequently start their nests in this way and
gradually heap the detritus up over the stones till they are concealed under
typical domes and the original lapidicolous habit of the colony is no longer
recognizable.
William Morton Wheeler, 1960
8
Encyclopedia of Caves and Karst Science
Its species are humicolous and lapidicolous, with large, spinous, and prehensile
pedipalpi. The main groups including troglobitic species are the Phalangodinae (
50 troglobitic species), which inhabit temperate and tropical areas in America, ...
9
There's a Word for It (Revised Edition): A Grandiloquent ...
... 72, 90 kurveyor, 119 kyphophobia, 156 kyphorrhinos, 35 labeorphilist, 121
lachanophobia, 160 lactovegetarian, 62 ladrone, 102 lagnodomnia, 79
lagnolysis, 79 lalochezia, 200 lalophobia, 155 Laodicean, 169–70 lapidate, 222
lapidicolous, ...
Charles Harrington Elster, 2005
10
Origins: A Short Etymological Dictionary of Modern English
Exx: lapidicolous, living (cf walnut) under stones; lapidiferaus, from L lapt'dtfer,
stone-bearing; lapidtfic (ct' -fic). Cf dilqat'aate. lapilll-, as in lapilly'orm: from L lapt'
lius, dim of Iapis—cf prec. largl-, as in largrfical, generous (cf ~fical at »fic): L largl-
...