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181 Sentences With "burrowing into"

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

"My mom is a hummingbird burrowing into flowers," she said.
MPs, now back in Westminster, are burrowing into the affair.
Clare found herself burrowing into her body like a feral creature.
"I can't blame him for burrowing into @instasuelos," Cohen captioned the picture.
They create space where there was none, like a tick burrowing into skin.
His tongue followed, snaking around my outer earlobe and burrowing into the hole.
And that happens to include burrowing into the sleeve of one person's sweater.
Technology firms have been burrowing into parts of the banking industry for years.
When they came home they discovered dozens of worms burrowing into their feet.
CMM: They create space where there was none, like a tick burrowing into skin.
It was just me, Everett, and the dreadful sense of inevitability burrowing into my chest.
The Russians were spelunking in these ancient networks and burrowing into US companies left and right.
The Division's Manhattan is more of a burrowing into reality, an exploration of its nastiest possibilities.
If tech companies keep burrowing into the car industry, they should get to know Anthony Foxx.
They might be a boon to neural scientists, burrowing into the brain to measure nerve signals.
We were promised whales leaping majestically out of basketball courts; Instead we critters burrowing into our couches?
In 2009, he married Ivanka, burrowing into a family that makes money by slapping its name on buildings.
Rickey Jackson, now a senior, almost failed his freshman year, burrowing into the school basement instead of attending class.
So yes, I'll always take a well-calibrated '90s homage as a way of burrowing into someone's inscrutable headspace.
Burrowing into the depths of himself, he created art that consisted of others watching him learn what art was.
It was a happy ending that sent me burrowing into my closets, hoping to find more expired booty to sell.
Around the corner from where Doaa was hit, another chemical warhead landed inside a home in September, burrowing into the lawn.
However, for the curious pups that like to go hunting for their fun or treats, they'll love burrowing into this DIY toy.
Political appointees wait out the Republican administration by "burrowing" into the civil service, returning to the nonprofits, or just ending the pretense.
I would start crying and clinging to my dad, usually burrowing into his neck, so we have lots of pictures of that.
They've been found burrowing into coral, and can play host to blood flukes, which are marine parasites that feed on threatened loggerhead turtles.
But it also featured a short tail, which the earlier research suggested was indicative of a creature capable of burrowing into the ground.
So I spent a few hours burrowing into one of those online rabbit holes that are a source of such deadline-endangering fascination.
I felt my feet burrowing into the warm wet sand underwater, and I dug my toes in so I could stay in one place.
Like Guccifer 2.0, the self-proclaimed hacker apparently responsible for burrowing into the Democratic National Committee computer network, then sending stolen emails to WikiLeaks.
At least 70 percent of the Tsimanes are infected with parasites — worms in their guts, invaders burrowing into their skin — at any given time.
The rats are still out there in the hundreds of thousands, dragging entire pizza slices down staircases, burrowing into snowdrifts, crawling on sleeping subway passengers.
Conservatives and some nonpartisan experts have complained that members of the Senior Executive Service are far less mobile than Congress envisioned, burrowing into particular agencies.
Using assorted scientists, tribesmen, urban adventurers and other locals as his guides, Hunt has spent years burrowing into the most storied holes in the grounds.
Slack, a recent technology IPO, exploded in the back half of last decade, accreting huge revenues while burrowing into the tech stacks of the startup world.
Burrowing into the numbers, PitchBookanalysts looked at the valuations of publicly-listed S&P 500 companies to estimate the hike in their purchasing power in recent years.
Claire DeWitt, with her metaphysical bent and haunted past, and Phoebe Sigler, burrowing into the depths of Inland Empire, are refreshingly now and timeless all at once.
The multiple viewpoints are essential to the experience; I felt like a squirrel, first burrowing into the trunk of the tree, then climbing up to its top.
Episode 5, "Chapter 70" Going into this episode, you need to remember how tired Claire is of feeling the puppet strings of the Shepherds burrowing into her back.
Hackers backed by the Chinese government have been burrowing into telecom networks in other parts of Asia in an effort to track Uighurs, China's mostly Muslim ethnic minority.
For example, golfers have had to contend with Brazil's native Garcia owls burrowing into the sand bunkers, as well as fairway visits from the world's largest rodent, the capybara.
She seems slightly lost in the re-creations, reaching for the general idea of the moments, sketching them in loosely instead of burrowing into them (as Davis always did).
Imagine someone burrowing into the past a first time, then starting over again, then again and again — or, to change the metaphor, opening a telescope in successive nested sections.
As a male, and as such womb-less, this wasn't a massive concern for me, but that didn't stop the image from burrowing into the deepest canals of my brain tissue.
And as such it is comforting to eat, in much the same way that burrowing into a nest on the couch to watch football or a three-hankie movie is comforting.
The sipuncula consists of a group of 320 marine species that are found in mostly shallow waters, with some burrowing into sand or mud, or found in the crevasses between rocks.
Burrowing into an atmosphere that can only be described as "shoegaze exotica," Max T lets his swooning arrangement build to the ticking pulse of a simple drum machine and billow into lush harmonic territory.
Then the doctor, Erik Waldman, looked into the boy's ear and saw a true vision of horror—a brown arachnid burrowing into the epidermal layer of the eardrum and feasting on the child's blood.
If the goal is to prevent all new non-status persons from burrowing into the homeland, then the government will need to hold all entrants in controlled locations until their legal status is finalized.
Many legal experts believe that Mueller will soon unveil indictments against hackers accused of burrowing into email accounts of the Democratic National Committee and the Hillary Clinton campaign that were then published by WikiLeaks.
CALIFORNIA RESEARCHERS ACCIDENTALLY FIND &aposFEISTY&apos RODENT THOUGHT TO HAVE GONE EXTINCT 30 YEARS AGO Last month, a rat was found dead after burrowing into an ATM in India and chewing through cash worth $18,500.
"This species spends life on the seafloor, activating a sticky mucus jacket and burrowing into the sediment to camouflage, leaving their eyes poking out to spot prey like shrimp and small fish," say the description.
You'd have to go back to March 1947, when J. Edgar Hoover charged that Moscow was burrowing into the pillars of the U.S. government – and that President Harry Truman was failing to take the threat seriously.
Because this is Black Mirror, it can also murder people by burrowing into their brains after tracking them down with secret facial-recognition capabilities, and can be hijacked to target the victims of Twitter shaming campaigns.
In sum, the malicious worm, which is widely believed to be the work of the US and Israeli governments, worked by burrowing into the plant and tampering with its centrifuges, and targeted systems made by Siemens.
"This species spends life on the seafloor, activating a sticky mucus jacket and burrowing into the sediment to camouflage, leaving their eyes poking out to spot prey like shrimp and small fish," writes E/V Nautilus.Cute!
In 2008 the Met had binned the covert SDS, created in 1968 and responsible for spying on murdered teenager Stephen Lawrence's family in the 1990s and burrowing into protest groups using close relationships with female activists.
Instead of encouraging the actors to use the jittery self-exposure they feel while performing as a way of burrowing into their characters' internal lives, he keeps them trapped within the limits of his own interpretation.
Under stress in the fifth year of severe drought, the ponderosa pines, the pinyons and the sugar pines lack the moisture needed to manufacture the sticky resin that prevents bark beetles from burrowing into their trunks.
Beautifully acted by a great cast (particularly Mr. Abe, who can make a sonata of frustration out of burrowing into a stale frozen treat with a spoon), "After the Storm" brings this intimate struggle to moving life.
But with an afternoon viewing, a cup of coffee, and an open mind, the film has a good shot at burrowing into the brain of the viewer, where it will haunt them for much longer than its runtime.
That focus appears to be working for Instagram — which we reported is burrowing into Snap's business in terms of both users and influencers — but Facebook's relentless pursuit of all possible cloning opportunities has now officially gone too far.
In the work of these three artists, each of whom broke important ground in depicting Baltimore to the world at large, there is a deep allegiance to the city's particularity, a burrowing into the character of the place.
If you harbor fears about the so-called internet of things, or IoT — that fancy term for all those chattering online devices currently burrowing into every crevice of our homes — then your concern likely has to do with privacy.
Imagine that its digestive tract and most of the rest of its organs have gotten pushed out the backdoor of the shell, forming a long streamer of flesh that it keeps safe by burrowing into the wood it eats.
This time, he's burrowing into the hidden places where road rap flourishes to figure out where the genre stands, how much you can even term it a separate genre today and to ask what next for the artists now associated with its name.
Back at the Watch House café in London, I go to pay my bill but my neighbour beats me to it, getting up from his seat, burrowing into his pocket and pulling out the right money to pay the £3.60 he owes.
After burrowing into the European network, called COREU (or Courtesy), the hackers had the run of communications linking the European Union's 28 countries, on topics ranging from trade and tariffs to terrorism to summaries of summit meetings, from the vital to the insignificant.
Just days before Mr. Trump's comments to The Times, the intelligence unit had downloaded the emails of John D. Podesta, Hillary Clinton's campaign chairman, and they were burrowing into the computer systems of the Democratic National Committee, whose emails they later made public.
She spoke of the necessity of small collectives that could act like ants in the arts ecosystem, burrowing into the ground to aerate the soil and make the ground fallow, in preparation for a later renewal after larger animals (symbolizing sizable institutions) have gone extinct.
To get your mind around this industry, imagine the orange-skinned president as some yuge creature trampling wildly forward, and thousands upon thousands of smaller creatures attached to its every orifice, grooming it and biting it, sucking its blood and burrowing into its tangled whips of blondish fur.
Although many horror films seek only to create momentary fear, the very best of the bunch — those that successfully manage to create King's conception of terror — break through the barriers of our rational minds, burrowing into our psyches in ways that can terrify us for the rest of our lives.
"Man on the Moon" keeps things interesting with some funky syncopated rhythms, swooping strings, and a chorus that has a way of burrowing into your brain and staying there until you realize you've been singing to your shopping cart and everyone else in the grocery story is patiently trying to ignore you.
Well, based on the trailer, we can expect a woman to have her face rubbed off onto a carpet, a drinking game involving a whole lot of fingers, a scary worm burrowing into a guy's head, a surprisingly gory game of peek-a-boo, and a whole lot of other stuff I'd rather not think about... including hand nipples.
The skin has the lacquered crackle of Peking duck, and once the bird has been carved, it comes back with all the parts, so you can gnaw on the feet if you wish, though there's more satisfaction to be had in burrowing into the fatty heart-shaped nugget where the tail feathers were once plugged in.
At least 280 people were killed and dozens of buildings turned into dust, Mexico City Mayor Miguel Angel Mancera told CNN affiliate Foro TV. Members pay a psychological toll Members of Los Topos, the Mexican navy and marines and other groups have been burrowing into the ruins after the country's second major temblor in less than two weeks.
Then she segued into her signature move: a 25-minute soliloquy on the convoluted schemes swirling around the Trump-Ukraine incident, burrowing into a dense network of connections among Paul Manafort, Senator Mitch McConnell, Rudy Giuliani, the Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska, the Ukrainian natural-gas billionaire Dmitry V. Firtash and the former Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovych.
Other symptoms like, skin irritation and itching is also caused by the larvae burrowing into the skin.
In the wild, they also prefer sandy and muddy areas, as they will hibernate by burrowing into the mud.
It mates during the night and the female deposits eggs near the base of the cactus. The larva feeds on the plant, burrowing into it and causing damage.
Sculpting is the process of removing material to achieve a desired outcome. Most commonly this entails burrowing into the ground or plant matter to create a nesting site.
After burrowing into the bark, larvae compose golden brown cocoons which stick out from the tree. Compared to the larval stage, the pupal stage is much shorter at two weeks.
Common skink burrowing into sand Species in the Scincus genus are distributed over an extensive belt of desert from the west coast of Africa, through the Sahara and into Arabia.
The adult insects, lacking mouthparts, do not feed. Adult males live for only a few days, but adult females can live longer, burrowing into the ground to lay their eggs.
In bivalves, the foot is adapted for burrowing into the sediment; page 4 in cephalopods it is used for jet propulsion, and the tentacles and arms are derived from the foot.
In a 2017 review of the family, David Hone and Holtz considered possible functions in digging for water sources or hard to reach prey, as well as burrowing into soil to construct nests.
In a 2017 review of the family, David Hone and Holtz also considered possible functions in digging for water sources or hard to reach prey, as well as burrowing into soil to construct nests.
Plum curculio beetles can cause irreparable damage to a fruit harvest. In badly damaged fruit, one can identify large scars and bumps due to feeding. Most internally damaged fruit (through burrowing into the fruit) drops prematurely.
Their legs covered in feathers down to the toes, and in winter the toes, too, have feathers or small scales on the sides, an adaptation for walking on snow and burrowing into it for shelter. Unlike other Galliformes, they have no spurs.
This species lives in shallow water, crawling and burrowing into the sand. It feeds on polychaete worms of the family Cirratulidae, mussels and slugs. Its color can vary from very dark to a pale pinkish white. The shell is thin, globose and fragile.
Behavioral responses to escape predation include burrowing into substrate and being active only through part of the day. Furthermore, insects may feign death, a response termed thanatosis. Beetles, particularly weevils, do this frequently. Bright colors may also be flashed underneath cryptic ones.
The sleepy goby occurs in the intertidal zone in estuaries, lagoons and coastal rivers, often amongst mangroves where it burrowing into the silty-sand substrate, it may also be found in the lower reaches of freshwater streams. It buries itself in the sand.
"Kyuukon" (球魂) translates into the literal term "soul sphere." However, another word with the same pronunciation (球根) means "bulb." This is evidenced by the single's cover for "Kyuukon," which depicts a plant bulb and its roots burrowing into the ground.
The original key art for the series prominently featured a worm, a vector of the vampiric virus, burrowing into a person's eye. Following complaints from members of the public, FX announced that they would replace the artwork on several of their billboards.
It dwells at a depth range of 9–336 metres, and leads a benthic lifestyle, burrowing into loose sand. Males can reach a maximum total length of 42 centimetres. The Hardtail conger feeds on other conger eels.Food items reported for Gnathophis cinctus at www.fishbase.org.
It has been found in western Guyana and south-eastern Venezuela at elevations of 600–1200 metres It can be distinguished from the similar-appearing O. pyburni by its longer toes and mottled thighs. The tadpoles exhibit the unusual behaviour of burrowing into the sand bottoms of shallow streams.
The Queensland lungfish is the most primitive of the lungfish, having evolved before Australia separated from Gondwana.Allen, et al., 2002, pp. 54–55 One of the smallest freshwater fish, peculiar to the southwest of Western Australia, is the salamanderfish, which can survive desiccation in the dry season by burrowing into mud.
The Heterenchelyidae or mud eels are a small family of eels native to the Atlantic, Mediterranean, and eastern Pacific. Heterenchelyids are bottom- dwelling fish adapted to burrowing into soft mud. They have large mouths and no pectoral fins, and range from in length. Currently, eight species in two genera are recognized in this family.
Climactichnites is an enigmatic, Cambrian fossil formed on or within sandy tidal flats around . It has been interpreted in many different ways in the past, but is now thought to be a trace fossil of a slug-like organism that moved by crawling to on-shore surfaces, or near-shore, or burrowing into the sediment.
The second > theorizes that a parasitic nematode, Parafilaria multipapillosa, triggered > the phenomenon. P. multipapillosa is widely distributed across the Russian > steppes and makes its living by burrowing into the subcutaneous tissues of > horses. The resulting skin nodules bleed often, sometimes copiously, giving > rise to a something veterinarians call “summer bleeding.”The Emperor and the > Parasite.
Amphibians and reptiles may avoid flames by burrowing into the ground or using the burrows of other animals. Amphibians in particular are able to take refuge in water or very wet mud. Some arthropods also take shelter during a fire, although the heat and smoke may actually attract some of them, to their peril.DeBano et al.
13: 45-63. It is a tropical, marine eel which is known from the Indo-Pacific region, including East Africa, Easter Island, the Ryukyu Islands, Australia, and Micronesia. It leads a benthic lifestyle, burrowing into sandy regions in reefs at a depth range of 1–40 m. Males can reach a maximum total length of 140 cm.
Green Carpenter Bee from far north Queensland, Australia Xylocopa bombylans, the peacock carpenter bee, is a species of carpenter bee found in Australia. It gets its common name by its habit of burrowing into wood. It was originally described by Danish naturalist Johan Christian Fabricius in 1775. Its specific epithet is the Latin ' "like a bumblebee".
Lepidogalaxias salamandroides is a species of small fish of Western Australia. It is the only member of the family Lepidogalaxiidae and genus Lepidogalaxias. Common names for this fish include salamanderfish and Shannon mudminnow. Although it is not a lungfish, it resembles lungfish in several respects, including its ability to survive dry seasons by burrowing into the sand.
Some smaller mammals, such as the groove-toothed rat, can live here by burrowing into the giant senecios and using their thick stem of dead leaves as insulation. The Mount Kenya mole-rat Tachyoryctes rex occurs at high altitudes, living in visible mounds. Leopards are resident in the alpine zone. Other mammal species are only occasional visitors.
Faxonius immunis is only found in slow-flowing bodies of water, such as streams, ponds, marshes and roadside ditches, in contrast to O. virilis which also lives in rivers with moderate flow. It can survive in areas with large fluctuations in the amount of available water, by burrowing into the ground when the surface waters recede.
Life history tactics of darters (Percidae: Etheostomatiini) and their relationship with body size, reproductive behavior, latitude and rarity. Journal of Fish Biology 37: 473-488. Once the eggs are laid, females will begin burrowing into the gravel, submerging herself and the eggs, as a form of protection. Males tend to exhibit territorial behavior during breeding season.
They are able to aestivate for multiple years if necessary, burrowing into mud and exuding a cocoon of dead skin cells. Known predators include the American alligator and the mud snake. Their spermatozoa possess a pair of flagella, and their courtship behavior is unknown. Mating occurs in February and March, with mothers guarding clutches of eggs that hatch about two months later.
Pests include microorganisms, insects, and rodents and are able to disfigure, damage, and destroy material culture. Both organic material and inorganic material are highly susceptible. Damage can occur from pests consuming, burrowing into, and excreting on material. The presence of pests can be the result of other deterioration mechanisms such as incorrect temperature, incorrect relative humidity, and the presence of water.
Kaikuzi grapples with Walumbe, who then retreats by burrowing into the Earth. Kaikuzi pursues Walumbe, yet soon tires of the task. Kaikuzi then orders that there be two days of silence so as to lure Walumbe out. Kaikuzi then returns to his pursuit of Walumbe who finally emerges at a place called Tanda (located on the southside of the road to Mityana).
Most of the damage to corn is caused by larval feeding. Hatchlings locate roots and begin feeding on the fine root hairs, burrowing into root tips. As larvae grow, they feed on and tunnel into primary roots. When rootworms are abundant, larval feeding and deterioration of injured roots by root rot pathogens can result in roots being pruned to the stalk base.
Blind skinks are native to Mexico, Southeast Asia, Indonesia, the Philippine Islands, and western New Guinea. They are small insectivorous lizards, with long, slender bodies, adapted for burrowing into the soil. They usually lay one egg with a hard, calcified shell, rather than the leathery shells typical of many other reptile groups. The family Dibamidae has two genera, Dibamus with 23 species and the monotypic Anelytropsis.
It is a tropical, marine eel which is known from the eastern Atlantic Ocean, including Mauritania and Namibia. It is known to dwell at an approximate depth of 40 metres, and inhabits lagoons and coastal waters. It leads a benthic lifestyle, burrowing into sand and mud. Males can reach a maximum total length of 140 centimetres, but more commonly reach a TL of 80 cm.
Ensis is a genus of medium-sized edible saltwater clams, littoral bivalve molluscs in the family Pharidae. Ensis, or razor clams, are known in much of Scotland as spoots, for the spouts of water they eject while burrowing into the sand, when visible at low tide. This term may also colloquially include members of the genus Solen. Ensis magnus are known as bendies due to their slightly curved shell.
Echiurus Echiurus echiurus has a holarctic distribution, extending southwards in the Atlantic Ocean as far as the North Sea and the Kattegat, burrowing into soft sediment, often at considerable depths. A subspecies Echiurus echiurus alaskanus occurs in southeastern Alaska, its range extending from Point Barrow, Alaska to Puget Sound, Washington. This subspecies inhabits muddy deposits that accumulate around boulders and pebbles in the lower intertidal zone and the shallow subtidal zone.
It has adapted to the colder winters by burrowing into leaf litter for warmth. Current reports sight the brown basilisk as far north as Fort Pierce, on the state's East Coast, where small groups have crept up the North Fork of the Saint Lucie River. Mainly it has been seen in Boca Raton and other cities in Palm Beach County. as seen in this photo taken in West Palm Beach, Florida.
The species rests on the bottom of the water using elongated pelvic and rounded caudal fins. These small and shallow pools may contain a population of around 150 individuals, are generally no larger than 600 square metres, and evaporate in the dry seasons. It is also unusual for its ability to survive desiccation by burrowing into sand, a process of aestivation, when the pools it lives in periodically evaporate.
Common snapping turtles generally hibernate for about six months from early October to mid-April. They live in lakes during their active months, then travel to small offshoot streams to hibernate. Hibernacula are about 100–150 meters away from the main body of the home lake. Most snapping turtles hibernate by burrowing into the banks of alder streams or vegetated streams, but some use other structures such as abandoned beaver dens.
Radiation accelerates her healing/regeneration process. Her cells are also capable of transforming a victim into a Tomie via an organ transplant. Multiple characters are even driven to dismember her corpse, unwittingly allowing more Tomie copies to grow and spread throughout the world. Even locks of her hair are dangerous; burrowing into its victim's brain to possess them, and eventually kill them when it grows wildly within the body.
The eggs take about four days to hatch. The young larvae feed on the underside of the leaf on which they hatch before moving on to other parts of the plant. They pass through five instars over a period of about twelve days, burrowing into the centre of the plant after about four days. If the apical meristem is damaged, multiple heads may be produced or the plant may die.
The sandburrowers or simply burrowers are a family, Creediidae, of fishes in the order Perciformes. They are native to coastal waters the Indian and Pacific Oceans. They are very small fishes; with the exception of the larger Donaldson's sandburrower, Limnichthys donaldsoni, most species reach only 3 to 7 cm in length. They live in shallow waters close to the shore, burrowing into sandy areas swept by currents or by surf.
The European corn borer, Ostrinia nubilalis, destroys corn crops by burrowing into the stem, causing the plant to fall over. Bt corn is a variant of maize that has been genetically altered to express one or more proteins from the bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis including Delta endotoxins. The protein is poisonous to certain insect pests. Spores of the bacillus are widely used in organic gardening, although GM corn is not considered organic.
They will feed on the leaves of Indigofera, which the species supports a host relationship with before burrowing into the plant tissue. The Karkloff blue is partially ant-dependent, as through a symbiotic relationship, some larvae are taken to the nests of species Camponotus natalensis for pupating. In its adult life stage, O. ariadne feed on nectar from eight recorded sources including Hebenstretia dura and Tephrosia polystachya. Adults are on wing from March to April.
Mysis relicta Some species are benthic (living on the seabed) and others pelagic (living in mid-water), but most are found close to, crawling on or burrowing into the mud or sand. Most marine species are benthic by day but leave the seabed at night to become planktonic. Locomotion is mostly by swimming, the pleopods being used for this purpose. Some mysids live among algae and seagrasses, some are solitary while many form dense swarms.
Flax weevil notches on flax leaves Adults are nocturnal and hide among the dead flax leaves at the base of a plant during the day, emerging at night to feed. Their feeding damage is smooth ovoid notching of the leaf edges; the asymmetrical notches are fibrous and rough, unlike the smooth notches left by the flax notch caterpillar Tmetolophota steropastis. Eggs are deposited at the bases of leaves. Larvae feed by burrowing into flax roots.
An increase in some small animal populations has led to some grasslands being degraded. These animals include the Himalayan marmots, the Brandt’s and plateau vole, and the plateau pika and zokor. They damage this environment mainly through their burrowing into the ground and gnawing at the grass and other plants. Both of these actions encourage soil erosion and make it more difficult for plants to firmly ground themselves to this poor terrain.
There is a ridge on the outer surface of the dactylus of males which is finely grained in texture, this is absent in females. The carapace is beige or yellow in background colour and is covered in red dots. The pereiopods have paddle- shaped tips which facilitate a skimming locomotion along the substrate and rapid burrowing into sand. In some specimens the paddles have large, dark blotches and sometimes smaller dark spots on the legs.
In other species, the maggots use an ambush technique, waiting for the host to pass and then attacking it and burrowing into its body. Adult Tachinids are not parasitic, but either do not feed at all or visit flowers, decaying matter, or similar sources of energy to sustain themselves until they have concluded their procreative activities. Their non- parasitic behaviour after eclosion from the pupa is what justifies the application of the term "protelean".
The blue-tailed differs in having the rump and tail blue rather than green and black. The undertail feathers are bluish rather than green in the blue-cheeked. The blue cheek patch is much smaller while the chestnut on the throat and breast darker and covering a larger area. They breed in April to May in India nesting colonially with closely placed nest holes in a vertical mudbank or even burrowing into gently sloping land.
Upon hatching, the caterpillars subsist and grow entirely on the foliage. Although some species drop off to pupate in the ground beneath, most remain in the clump attaching their chrysalis to the tips of denuded twigs or burrowing into the junction between mistletoe and the host tree to evade predators. L. exocarpi is a host plant for Ogyris aenone and is a popular food plant for nectar feeding birds when in full flower.Watson, D. (2011).
Megalodacne deposit eggs on the fungi on which they feed. Upon hatching, the larvae, like adults, also feed on the fruiting bodies of bracket fungi by burrowing into it... There are two kinds of larvae of Megalodacne depending on the species. In some species, the larvae are elongated and feed on fungi by drilling holes inside of it. In others, the larvae feed alongside adults by gnawing out shallow depressions on the fruiting bodies of fungi.
Hippoids are adapted to burrowing into sandy beaches, a habit they share with raninid crabs, and the parallel evolution of the two groups is striking. The whole body is almost ovoid, the first pereiopods have no claws, and the telson is long, none of which are seen in related groups. Unlike most other decapods, sand crabs cannot walk; instead, they use their legs to dig into the sand. Members of the family Hippidae beat their uropods to swim.
The Knox class had been criticized for deck wetness and there were a number of instances of damage to the forward weapons mounts in heavy seas. In 1979, the class began to receive "hurricane bows" beginning with . The modification heightened the bow section, adding bulwarks and spray strakes to prevent burrowing into on-coming seas and better protect the forecastle armament. The Knox class was the Navy's last destroyer-type design with a steam turbine powerplant.
He puts them in touch with Cortez of the Southern rats who can access waterways to Central America. Shade hastens to rescue his father, who they discover is now a captive of Goth's clan. On the way, both Chinook and the owl prince Orestes are captured by a small group of Vampyrum spectrum. While contemplating the loss of Chinook and Orestes, Shade notices something burrowing into Statue Haven and finds himself reunited with his mother and Marina.
This species can be found throughout the tropical waters of the Indo-Pacific region (from the east coast of Africa to the Pacific archipelagos), but is especially abundant in Hawai‘i. It can also be found on the shores of the Sinai Peninsula. H. mammillatus is found in reefs in depths from eight to 25 meters. It roams the subtidal zones of these areas and appears to prefer burrowing into hard sediments like limestone, coral, and basalt.
He tells Allie to continue without him, and although she is reluctant, she eventually escapes outside of the Wall. She continually travels away from New Covington, sleeping during the days by burrowing into the ground. But as she continues, the Hunger for human blood continues to get stronger and stronger. After finding two bikers, in which she kills because of her starvation, she encounters Caleb, a young boy who is lost, and helps him find his family.
Characteristic double holes left by P. ciliata burrowing into rock. The burrow of P. ciliata is U-shaped, and the presence of these worms can be recognised by the sets of small, double perforations they make. The worm is believed to burrow by abrading the substrate with its bristly chaetae, but there may also be some chemical action involved in burrowing. The tube is lined with mucus and fine grains of sediment and extends slightly above the surrounding material.
In March 2019, the HP3 began burrowing into the surface sand, but became stalled after several centimeters by what was initially suspected to be a large rock. Further analysis and testing with a replica model on Earth suggested the problem may be due to insufficient friction. In June 2019, more evidence for this was revealed when the support structure was lifted off of the HP3 mole. The Martian regolith appeared to be compressed, leaving a gap around the probe.
Cliona delitrix is a burrowing sponge that is also encrusting. It usually grows on a massive coral, not only covering its surface but also burrowing into its interior, but is sometimes found on some other calcareous substrate such as a shell or a limestone rock. It does not normally grow on branching corals. It can grow to a diameter of up to a metre (yard) and has several large openings called osculi, wide, surrounded by projecting rims and many small raised papillae wide.
The Infective larvae quickly undergo moulting to shed their sheath either upon ingestion by the host or upon burrowing into the host's skin. If ingested, they pass through the stomach into the intestine and attach themselves to the mucosa. If they have burrowed through the skin, they invade the subcutaneous blood vessels, are carried to the lungs, and then move to the intestine via trachea, oesophagus and stomach. In either case, the larvae develop into the final 3rd stage in the intestinal wall.
Paralichthys dentatus (Linnaeus, 1766), also called a fluke, is a member of the large-tooth flounder family Paralichthyidae. There are typically 5 to 14 ocellated (eye-like) spots on the body. Like most members of the left-eye flounders, they can change the color and pattern of their dark side to match the surrounding bottom and are also capable of rapidly burrowing into muddy or sandy bottoms. The teeth are quite sharp and well developed on both upper and lower jaws.
The gill membranes are fused, and the gill opening is either a slit or pore underneath the throat. The swim bladder and ribs are also absent. These are all believed to be adaptations for burrowing into soft mud during periods of drought, and swamp eels are often found in the mud underneath a dried-up pond. Most of the species can breathe air, allowing them to survive in low-oxygenated water, and to migrate overland between ponds on wet nights.
52 Week Thirty-Six When Skeets attacks Kandor, Supernova turns back into Booster Gold and battles Skeets using special items gathered from the planet. Rip Hunter and Booster then teleport away, angering Skeets even more."52" Week Thirty- Seven Upon discovering Mr. Mind burrowing into Skeets' shell, Rip Hunter uses T.O. Morrow and the severed head of Red Tornado as bait for the Venusian worm.52 Week Fifty-One Mr. Mind metamorphoses into a nigh-omnipotent imago form, a hyperfly feeding on universes.
During this time the mudfish stay very quiet, either hanging at the surface or burrowing into the substrate. Some choose to leave the water when it becomes low in oxygen, and remove themselves again if put back into the water. When the water dries out completely, Canterbury mudfish continue extracting oxygen from mouthfuls of air as well as absorbing it through their skin. Although their metabolism slows down, they remain active, frequently changing position, rolling onto their backs and grouping together.
Tanaids are small, shrimp-like creatures ranging from in adult size, with most species being from . Their carapace covers the first two segments of the thorax. There are three pairs of limbs on the thorax; a small pair of maxillipeds, a pair of large clawed gnathopods, and a pair of pereiopods adapted for burrowing into the mud. Unusually among crustaceans, the remaining six thoracic segments have no limbs at all, but each of the first five abdominal segments normally carry pleopods.
Evidence has also been seen for a chemosensory signaling response between the Iberian worm lizard and its environment. This phenomenon has been seen in the time it takes for the anti-predatory response of burrowing into the soil in familiar and unfamiliar locations. A delay is seen in the burrowing of B. cinereus upon predatory signaling in an unfamiliar location, but as soon as the B. cinereus is returned to its familiar habitat its burrowing response is greatly increased.Martin, Jose, Pilar López, and Andres Barbosa.
In 1998 a family of seven badgers was evicted from a sett they had dug into the barrow. A badger exclusion licence was obtained from English Nature, and English Heritage gave scheduled monument consent. The badgers were lured to a new sett outside of the property, and the barrow was covered in chain link fencing to prevent animals from burrowing into it again. Finds in the badger spoil from the old sett included struck flints, Neolithic and Bronze Age pottery, and part of a red deer antler.
They have tentacle ampullae and respiratory trees present, a kind of water lung attached to the cloaca. The ossicles, minute calcareous plates embedded in the skin and characteristic of each species, take the form of tables, anchors, fusiform rods and perforated plates but never wheels.Marine Species Identification PortalAn illustrated key to the sea cucumbers of the South Atlantic Bight Retrieved 2012-02-12. Like their relatives, they are adapted for burrowing into soft sediment, but they are relatively sedentary, rarely moving once they have excavated their burrow.
The larvae feed by burrowing into the fruit of Solanum species, including Solanum lycopersicum, Solanum melongena, Solanum aethiopicum, Solanum betaceum, Solanum quitoense, Solanum sessiliflorum, Solanum acerifolium, Solanum atropurpureum, Solanum crinitum, Solanum torvum, Solanum hirtum, Solanum lycocarpum, Solanum pseudolulo, Solanum viarum and Solanum sisymbriifolium, as well as Capsicum annuum. They feed on the flesh and seed of the fruit. Pupation takes place outside of the fruit. Larvae may fold over the edge of a leaf, or burrow into loose soil at the base of the plant.
Mound No. 2 is a flat-topped circle measuring by . A depression similar to the one in No. 1 is found atop Mound No. 3, a circle measuring by and the only mound composed partly of rock; surveyors in the 1960s deemed the depression evidence that there had formerly been a structure within the mound that had collapsed. No. 4 is long by wide and high; it has been damaged by rodents burrowing into its side. Mound No. 5 is in diameter and high.
Yabbies: most common food source Humans have been their greatest predator, with rakali requiring protection by legislation in 1938. They were hunted for their soft fur and considered a pest species. Populations are considered to have recovered and in all states considered of 'least concern' with the exception of Western Australia. Considered a pest in irrigation systems due to burrowing into banks and creating leaks, in a positive sense they have also been attributed to reduction of bank damage as they prey on freshwater crayfish (yabbies).
Ox warble fly (Hypoderma bovis) Myiasis can be caused by larvae burrowing into the skin (or tissue lining) of the host animal. Mature larvae drop from the host and complete the pupal stage in soil. They do not kill the host animal, thus they are true parasites. The equine botflies present seasonal difficulties to equestrian caretakers, as they lay eggs on the insides of horses' front legs, on the cannon bone and knees and sometimes on the throat or nose, depending on the species.
The Nakhsh Member is very rich in gypsum and is the only member of the Dam Formation to contain stromatolites. The bottom layer, largely made up of soft clays, is particularly fragile and chemical weathering of the clay surfaces has caused the underlying limestone to collapse in some areas, thus forming suitable abodes for certain desert mammals such as foxes and hyenas. There has also been instances recorded of mammals mechanically burrowing into these fragile surfaces. Its caves were first surveyed in 1983–84 by Peter Whybhrow.
Most forms are based on the sea creatures they absorbed when they just started their 'growth'. Their powers are: sending lasers in profusion from their bodies, thus being able to destroy large aircraft, burrowing into a victim's body and imploding it (unconfirmed), and creating a spherical void, which makes anything within its surface area to vanish. Antibody Coralians generally appear in response to deliberate attacks on the Scub Coral. They appear for 1246 seconds (20 minutes 46 seconds) - which is the amount of time the Seven Swell phenomenon is active.
As with most left-eye flounders they can change the color and pattern of their dark side to match the surrounding bottom, and are also capable of rapidly burrowing into muddy or sandy bottoms. The back, which may vary in overall color from light brown to dark gray, is marked with four large and quite conspicuous black "eye-like" spots edged with a much lighter color, two of them situated at each margin of the body. The teeth are sharp and well developed. The underside is pale pinkish, almost translucent in certain areas.
Vertebrate Zoology, 66 (2): 125-140. Members of genus Nothobranchius are found in mud pools on the plains of Africa, a habitat shared by no other fish except the lungfishes. Their life cycle is only a year long – and they die when the pools dry up, however the species survive because their eggs remain inactive (in diapause) in the dry bottom substrate throughout the dry season. (This is not true for lungfish, which are capable of surviving seasonal drying out of their habitats by burrowing into mud and estivating throughout the dry season.
Although deworming is the best treatment and prevention of bot flies, horse owners can take other steps to prevent bot fly egg ingestion. This can be done by manually removing the eggs from the horse's leg using specialized tools, such as bot knives. However, it is important to wash your hands after physically removing the eggs because there is a possibility of the larvae burrowing into the human skin. In addition to removing the eggs manually, there are a few management changes that can be made to decrease the amount of bot flies.
The scales are sharp, providing extra defense from predators. Pangolins can emit a noxious-smelling chemical from glands near the anus, similar to the spray of a skunk. They have short legs, with sharp claws which they use for burrowing into ant and termite mounds and for climbing. The tongues of pangolins are extremely long and - like those of the giant anteater and the tube-lipped nectar bat - the root of the tongue is not attached to the hyoid bone, but is in the thorax between the sternum and the trachea.
The lower valve has slits through which the byssal threads emerge which secure the animal to the seabed. This clam burrows into the substrate and this process tends to wear away the outer surface of the valves and smooth them off. They also may become distorted by burrowing into substrates of uneven hardness. The colour of the valves is generally greyish- white, sometimes with a hint of pink-orange, yellow or orange colour -this colouration can form a band near the top margin, especially on the interior surface.
" No Clean Singing also premiered the track 'Præternigma' in advance of the album's release, describing the music as "dense and enveloping, with writhing, grinding riffs generating a moving mass of ominous sound." The album was received positively by Metal Injection, Echoes and Dust, Invisible Oranges, CVLT Nation, and others. Steel for Brains highlighted the album, writing that "Thankfully Ævangelist make more than good on the promise indicated by the album's title. This music is parasitic in every good way, burrowing into every dark corner of each composition until the light has nowhere to escape.
Great Basin spadefoot toads have adapted to life in dry habitats. Desiccation is avoided by this terrestrial amphibian through burrowing into the ground. The toad use the hard, keratinized spade on each foot to dig a burrow, where it spends long periods during cold and dry weather. The toad is able to absorb water from the surrounding soil; even as the soil becomes increasingly dry in spring and early summer months, increased concentrations of urea in the toad's body allow it to continue to suck water out of the soil through osmosis.
Side and ventral views of an enrolled specimen of Bumastus beckeri from Iowa. The rounded smooth shape of Bumastus, as well as the almost complete effacement of its cephalon, is believed to have been an adaptation for burrowing. The presence of well-developed eyes also suggest that it may have kept them above the substrate by burrowing into sediments backward. They are situated in such a way that they provide the trilobite with a semicircular field of vision on each side, keeping them aware of movements near them.
Xylocopa aerata, the golden-green carpenter bee or green carpenter bee, is one of two species of carpenter bee found only in the conservation areas around Sydney, and in the Great Dividing Range in New South Wales in Australia. Its only other habitat as of 2020 is on Kangaroo Island in South Australia. The species is especially vulnerable to fire, and much of its habitat was burnt during the 2019-2020 bushfire season in Australia. The bee gets its common name by its habit of burrowing into wood.
Black shale is one of the preliminary indicators of anoxia and perhaps euxinia Black shales are organic rich, microlaminated sedimentary rocks often associated with bottom water anoxia. This is because anoxia slows the degradation of organic matter, allowing for greater burial in the sediments. Other evidence for anoxic burial of black shale includes the lack of bioturbation, meaning that there were no organisms burrowing into the sediment because there was no oxygen for respiration. There must also be a source of organic matter for burial, generally from production near the oxic surface.
The Coconut rhinoceros beetle (CRB) infestation has become an epidemic event of palm tree damage on Guam. The CRB infects palm trees by burrowing into the tips of the palms, effectively killing the plant by destroying the shoot apical meristem during the process. While the grubs and larvae of CRB do no actual harm to palms, they populate and grow within the damaged crowns of the palm trees, which is a specific mating habit of Guam CRBs. A possible solution to the crisis, which has been ecologically analyzed in Western Samoa, would be the introduction of CRB predators.
They are most abundant where no stripping has been done or where there is more or less of a tangled mass of leaves. They normally feed upon the dried leaf-sheaths themselves, also on the leaves. On the sheath they feed on the inner side towards the cane stalk, eating out between the strands of fibers, often burrowing into the substance of the leaf- sheath. Besides their normal feeding, however, they often eat off the surface of the rind for considerable areas, particularly at or just above the nodes and sometimes eat off the surface from the whole internode.
Pegs or ridges on the side of their abdomen are struck by a patch of fine pegs at the inner surface of their hind legs (femur) and this action makes a distinctive sound. These actions are also used in defence of a gallery by competing males. The female wētā looks as if she has a stinger, but it is an ovipositor, which enables her to lay eggs inside rotting or mossy wood or soil. Some species of Hemiandrus have very short ovipositors, related perhaps to their burrowing into soil and laying their eggs in a special chamber at the end of the burrow.
The lesser siren is vocal, unlike most salamanders, and will emit a series of clicks when it approaches others of its species, or a short screeching sound if handled. If the habitat dries up during the summer, lesser sirens are known to endure droughts by burrowing into the mud. If the mud dries out, they are capable of excreting a substance from their skin which protects them from dehydrating, and enables them to stay buried in dry mud for months until the water returns. Their small legs enable them to move on dry land for short periods of time.
On the other hand, medical uses of scorpion venom are being investigated for treatment of brain cancers and bone diseases. Ticks are parasitic, and some transmit micro-organisms and parasites that can cause diseases in humans, while the saliva of a few species can directly cause tick paralysis if they are not removed within a day or two. A few of the closely related mites also infest humans, some causing intense itching by their bites, and others by burrowing into the skin. Species that normally infest other animals such as rodents may infest humans if their normal hosts are eliminated.
Animals can respond to extreme heat, for example, through natural heat acclimation or by burrowing into the ground to find a cooler space. It is also possible to see in animals that a high genetic diversity is beneficial in providing resiliency against harsh abiotic stressors. This acts as a sort of stock room when a species is plagued by the perils of natural selection. A variety of galling insects are among the most specialized and diverse herbivores on the planet, and their extensive protections against abiotic stress factors have helped the insect in gaining that position of honor.
The fauna of the Nullarbor includes communities of crustaceans, spiders, and beetles adapted to the darkness of the Nullarbor Caves and the underground rivers and lakes that run through them. Mammals of the desert include the southern hairy-nosed wombat, which shelters from the hot sun by burrowing into the sands, as well as typical desert animals such as red kangaroos and dingoes. An elusive subspecies of the Australian masked owl unique to the Nullarbor is known to roost in the many caves on the plain. The grasslands of the Nullarbor are suitable for some sheep grazing and are also damaged by rabbits.
A manga panel showing a Parasite getting ready to attack a human being. Parasyte centers on a male 17-year-old high school student named Shinichi Izumi, who lives with his mother and father in a quiet neighborhood in Tokyo, Japan. One night, tiny worm-like aliens with drill-like heads called Parasites arrive on Earth, taking over the brains of their hosts by entering through their ears or noses. One Parasite attempts to crawl into Shinichi's nose while he sleeps, but fails as Shinichi wakes up, and enters his body by burrowing into his arm instead.
Marginal plants provide important habitat for both invertebrates and vertebrates, and submerged plants provide oxygenation of the water, absorb nutrients and play a part in the reduction of pollution. Marine habitats include brackish water, estuaries, bays, the open sea, the intertidal zone, the sea bed, reefs and deep / shallow water zones. Further variations include rock pools, sand banks, mudflats, brackish lagoons, sandy and pebbly beaches, and seagrass beds, all supporting their own flora and fauna. The benthic zone or seabed provides a home for both static organisms, anchored to the substrate, and for a large range of organisms crawling on or burrowing into the surface.
Azteca ants form Colonies in the inter nodes of Cecropia trees which are native to Mexico and South America. The Tree provides the ants with food and shelter and the ants protect the tree from other insects thus engaging in a mutualistic relationship. Queens form colonies by burrowing into the inter node of the tree and then sealing off the entrance hole with parenchyma cells, after which they begin to lay eggs to produce the first brood. Any queens which decide to engage in pleometrosis can easily see the filled in hole and will chew through it quickly and join the fellow queen in the inter node.
" "Reich is disarmingly likeable, with a penchant for self-deprecating jokes about being short [...] while burrowing into his subject with the rigour of a scholar," summarized Toronto Star critic Bruce DeMara. "He’s dynamic, obviously bright and it only feels a little over-the-top when his students give him a standing ovation at the end. [...] Reich is naturally funny [and] apparently genuinely likes to be among people." In the opinion of Slant Magazine writer Kalvin Henely, "Reich’s sleek presentation—his neat rhetoric and clean, simplified graphics that lucidly explain his ideas, along with a sense of humor about his diminutive height—makes him an effective, affable spokesman for the middle class.
Paul Revere's Copper Mill with Canton Viaduct in the foreground Copper rolling is the process of converting large blocks of copper into thin sheets by rolling them gradually down to size. These sheets of copper were used in the 18th and 19th centuries mainly to plate the bottoms of ships. This process of plating ship bottoms, referred to as “sheathing” or “coppering”, helped increase the speed and lifespan of ships. Copper was desired for this process because it reacts with seawater to create an oxide coating that prevents the build-up of barnacles, weeds, and other detritus, in addition to physically stopping worms from burrowing into and degrading the wood.
An individual emerging from a burrow in southern California Botta's pocket gopher is highly adaptable, burrowing into a very diverse array of soils from loose sands to tightly packed clays, and from arid deserts to high altitude meadows. They are able to tolerate such a wide range of soils in part because they dig primarily with their teeth, which are larger and with a thicker layer of enamel than in claw-digging gophers. In comparison, gophers digging with their claws are generally only able to dig in softer soils, because their claws wear down more quickly than teeth do in harder materials. Botta's pocket gophers are active for a total of about nine hours each day, spending most of their time feeding in their burrows, but are not restricted to either daylight or night time.
Robert Copsey of Digital Spy gave the song a positive review stating: > Built around a simple but relentless synth riff, 'Look What The Cat Dragged > In' has that knack of doing very little but still burrowing into your brain > face-first like an earworm. Giggs's deep, distinctive delivery gives a > semblance of weight to some very silly lyrics. There's stuff about gettin' > the laydeez ("Wanna' lean in ma cockpit / Feelin' ma chopstick"), > unprotected sex ("I done it bareback / I take chances"), boozing > ("Courvoisier / Fillin' up eight glasses") and the eternal boobs/bum debate > ("I'm a breast man but I rate arses"). It'd be a crime to take it too > seriously, but there's something fantastically grin-inducing about a rap > track so British yet so swaggering and comfortably assured .
The eggs are laid containing mature first instars, the female having incubated the eggs within her reproductive system until ready to hatch, a mode of reproduction known as ovolarviparity, more generally known as ovoviviparity. Deposition usually occurs on the ground and the eggs may hatch within seconds or a few minutes of being laid, whereupon the larvae hunt for a host beetle by burrowing into the soil. Other tachinids lay eggs directly onto potential hosts or food plants and therefore enjoy a higher success rate of infection; the number of eggs produced by Senostoma females is consequently higher than for some other genera, numbering somewhere between 1000 and 3000. The labrum of the larval mouthparts is sharp and functions as a cutting device, with which they penetrate the integument of the selected host, possibly helped by enzymes in their saliva.
People with delusional parsitosis believe that "parasites, worms, mites, bacteria, fungus" or some other living organism has infected them, and reasoning or logic will not dissuade them from this belief. Details vary among those who have the condition, though it typically manifests as a crawling and pin-pricking sensation that is most commonly described as involving perceived parasites crawling upon or burrowing into the skin, sometimes accompanied by an actual physical sensation (known as formication). Sufferers may injure themselves in attempts to be rid of the "parasites"; resulting skin damage includes excoriation, bruising and cuts, as well as damage caused from using chemical substances and obsessive cleansing routines. A "preceding event such as a bug bite, travel, sharing clothes, or contact with an infected person" is often identified by individuals with DP; such events may lead the individual to misattribute symptoms because of a more awareness of symptoms they were previously able to ignore.
Up and down the coast of the Eastern U.S., the bamboo clam, ensis directus, is prized by Americans for making clam strips although because of its nature of burrowing into the sand very close to the beach, it cannot be harvested by mechanical means without damaging the beaches. The bamboo clam is also notorious for having a very sharp edge of its shell, and when harvested by hand must be handled with great care. On the U.S. West Coast, there are several species that have been consumed for thousands of years, evidenced by middens full of clamshells near the shore and their consumption by nations including the Chumash of California, the Nisqually of Washington state and the Tsawwassen of British Columbia. The butter clam, Saxidomus gigantea, the Pacific razor clam, Siliqua patula, gaper clams Tresus capax, the geoduck clam, Panopea generosa and the Pismo clam, Tivela stultorum are all eaten as delicacies.

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