Synonymer & Anagram | Engelska ordet ESCA
ESCA
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4
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Nej
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Exempel på hur man kan använda ESCA i en mening
- The frontmost spine, the illicium, has a flap of flesh, the esca, at its tip and is used as a lure to attract prey to within reach of the cavernous mouth.
- Despite having thin skinned berries, Pedro Ximénez is highly susceptible to the viticultural hazard of botrytis bunch rot as well as downy mildew, esca and eutypa dieback.
- Some of them resemble fish, some shrimp, some polychaetes, some tubeworms, and some simply a formless lump; one genus, Echinophryne, has no esca at all.
- These fishes also have a bioluminescent bulb at the tip on the illicium, lack any fleshy growths along the centre of the back, do not have upward pointing mouths, there are teeth on the upper denticular bone,, the esca has no small tooth-like structures, they have large eyes and large olfactory organs with forward opening nostrils located at the end of the snout.
- The triplewart seadevil is the only species in the genus Cryptopsaras, this name is a combination of kryptos, which means "hidden" or "secret", with psarus, meaning "fisherman", an allusion to the very small illicium being almost completely concealed within the tissue of the esca.
- Bertella, like other oneirodids, is a small, globular-bodied fish with a large head and jaws, and a bioluminescent lure (esca) on a stalk (illicium) attached to the head.
- It is the only species in the family Neoceratidae, and is unique amongst the deep-sea anglerfish in lacking an illicium and esca (the "fishing rod" and "lure"), and in having large teeth placed on the outside of its jaws.
- Gigantactis have a very long illicium that is not as mobile as the illicia of other Ceratioid taxa and is vibrated rather than waved; the vibration and bioluminescence of the esca lure the prey.
- The distinctive lure of Thaumatichthys is achieved by an "upside-down" orientation of the illicium (the "fishing rod"): its base is embedded in the skin fold connecting the anterior ends of the premaxillaries, and the short illicium projects down and back so that the esca at the tip hangs down from the roof of the mouth.
- Like other anglerfishes, black seadevils possess an illicium and esca; the former being a modified dorsal spine—the "fishing rod"—and the latter being the bulbous, bioluminescent "fishing lure".
- Early hypotheses about anglerfish behavior posited that their illicium and esca, the extended dorsal fin spine and bulbous apparatus that protrude from the snout, are used for luring prey.
- Chaunax coffinfishes are only distantly related to the frogfishes of the family Antennariidae but have a similar lifestyle as ambush predators, luring prey to within striking distance of their large mouth with the illicium and esca and useing their pectoral and pelvic fins to walk along the bottom.
- Unlike almost all other deep-sea anglerfishes, the illicium bears no bioluminescent esca (the "lure") at the tip.
- In contrast to most other deep-sea anglerfishes, the illicium does not bear a bioluminescent esca at the tip.
- Lamplight was named after a giant lamp suspended over the town, (SCP-5005-1; in actuality a cybernetic esca for a colossal deceased anglerfish), and was founded by a poet named Jean-Antoine Delacroix when he accidentally discovered the location while attempting suicide by blindly teleporting into antimatter at the end of the multiverse.
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