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Topic Animals:: PAGE #19
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541. Moth (umbratica)
:: Bats and nocturnal moths take to the wing while butterflies settle and flowers begin to close their petals
542. Donkey (sceccu)
:: Because of them hundreds of other horses donkeys and mules will be saved and will know love
543. Merlin (Merlin)
:: The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds says that nests of species such as shorteared owls merlins red grouse meadow pipits skylarks twite and curlews will have been wiped out
544. Roundworm (roundworm)
:: Canine heartworm is a serious and potentially fatal parasitic condition transmitted by mosquitoes in which roundworms develop in the heart and major blood vessels of dogs
545. Rattlesnake (rattlesnake francese)
:: Most rattlesnakes are peaceable retiring animals that flee for the underbrush when they encounter humans
546. Raven (corbu)
:: Her hood had been left back and her glossy raven hair had been tied up with a deep lilac ribbon
547. Gander (jars)
:: There is a growing school of thought that what is sauce for the goose may be poison for the gander
548. Whitebait (whitebait)
:: Wild puffins normally eat live whitebait sprats and sand eels which they dive in the sea for said Mrs Platts
549. Rat (surci)
:: He fought a handful of amateur and charity fights earning him some credit as a middleaged gym rat
550. Slider (cursore)
:: Neonatal sliders in North America generally remain in the nest over the winter before emerging the following spring
551. Krait (traiteur)
:: According to a study conducted by SPCA in the area there are kraits cobras and vipers in the area
552. Capercaillie (Pone)
:: There were 20000 capercaillies in Scotland in the 1970s but 20 years later the number had fallen to fewer than 2000
553. Wildcat (steppe)
:: Although Krajicks book about a pair of wildcatting prospectors is set mostly in Canadas Northwest Territories during the 1990s the hostility and paranoia on display are the same as at the Namibian mine
554. Clutch (clu clutch)
:: He was a scrappy aggressive competitor and dangerous in the clutch
555. Ferret (uélh)
:: James has kindly offered to induct me into the wiles and ways of the shooting gent starting with an invitation to go ferreting for rabbits
556. Fetlock (fetlock)
:: Longer hair around the fetlocks may well help to protect the heels from reinfection once cured however whilst treating Mud Fever it is advisable to keep the hair as short as possible
557. Dalmatian (Dalmatian)
::
558. Ewe (Ewe)
:: Although many ewes have already dropped their lambs some producers have ewes lambing through to August
559. Nightingale (usignolo)
:: It is surprising that despite all the pollution increased lighting and noise I can still hear the nightingales sing and spot an odd fire fly or two amid the bushes
560. Nightjar (Cayenne)
:: The nocturnal owls nightjars and allies often are poorly known and very few species have been studied in detail
561. Otter (lontra)
:: Other animals spotted in Greater Manchester include otters stoats and weasels
562. Pastern (fiocca)
:: For polo of course it is I want to have a horse whose pasterns arent too long and has good strong bones in the legs and feet I like a round big spined horse rather than pointedspined one
563. Crab (n'aranciu)
:: Special occasions call for a gumbo and vegetable soup with crab or salted meat calalou
564. Whiting (ragnotti)
:: There is no reason to suppose that any of these kingfish or king whiting actually came from as far east or north as Cape Cod or even from anywhere in southern New England waters for that matter
565. Spider (Paul Armagnac)
:: To survive the winter they depend on food sources such as berries spiders and insects
566. Pilchard (pilchard)
:: He noted that fresh pilchards are simply grilled with pepper and salt which is still the best way of cooking sardines the junior version of pilchards
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