Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Pantherophis obsoletus" ¶ 6
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Juveniles and are
Juveniles are similar but slightly lighter, with tawny coloration on the head, and no long wing plumes.
Juveniles lack the adults ' large parotoid glands, so they are usually less poisonous.
Juveniles look like adult females, but the underside streaks are wider ; the yellow of their bare parts is paler.
Juveniles are very shy and will flee quickly into a hideout if a human comes closer than about.
Juveniles are also preyed on by tuna and dolphins ..
Juveniles are targeted by a number of fish, cephalopods and birds ; Litopenaeus vannamei juveniles experience 90 % mortality in the 6 – 12 weeks they spend in Mexican lagoons, and this is thought to be due almost entirely to predation.
Juveniles are a spotted brown and white in colouration, with patches of orange gradually appearing.
Juveniles may display the courtship dance, but until the turtles are 5 years of age, they are not mature and are unable to mate.
Juveniles are similar to adults except that their upperpart feathers have pale fringes.
Juveniles are banded vertically like pilotfish, and follow large objects or animals.
Juveniles are browner, and less grey, than in calidus, and paler, sometimes almost sandy, than in anatum.
Juveniles are shiny black with narrow yellow bands ( can be mistaken for a banded krait, but readily identified with its expandable hood ).
Juveniles are mostly brown until first breeding after the second or third winter.
Juveniles are largely dark and take about four or five years to acquire the adult plumage.
Juveniles are largely dark.
Juveniles have lighter greys and browns amidst the starker blacks and whites of their plumage ; two or three year old birds of both sexes closely resemble and are difficult to distinguish from adult females.
Juveniles are spotty and streaked all over ; the moustache is dark initially, though juvenile males can show some red feathers by early June or usually by July or August.
Juveniles are duller, and lack the adult's white crown spots.
Juveniles and nonbreeding adults of the two species are often indistinguishable even to trained observers, if they cannot be observed up close or in mixed flocks.
Juveniles are similar to females, but usually have less yellow, particularly on the shoulders.
Juveniles are generally much browner, with scaled upper parts and streaked buffy thighs and undertail coverts.
Juveniles have a plain head and a greyer back but are unmistakable due to the yellow wing stripe.
Juveniles are yellower below than adults.

Juveniles and with
Juveniles remain close to their mothers, but they also have more interactions with other members of their community.
Geddy, along with his band mates played and sang along with Max Webster on the song " Battle Scar " from the Universal Juveniles ( 1980 ) album.
Rush joined with fellow Toronto-based rock band Max Webster on July 28, 1980 to record " Battle Scar " for their 1980 release, Universal Juveniles.
Juveniles have a darker, unfaded color, white patches in the remiges which may be divided by darker feathers, and a large amount of white on the tail with a black terminal band.
Juveniles in play behavior have been observed gripping knotholes in trees with their talons and, using its tail and wings for balance, inserting its head into a tree cavity.
Juveniles with white plumage
* Juveniles have a less deeply-forked tail, with a dark subterminal band ;
Juveniles have dark horn-colored bills with dark tips, and a grey head and collar.
Juveniles have a distinctly different appearance to the adults, the abdomen is grayish to black with white stripes running across it and is spotted with yellow and orange.
Juveniles are very similar to adults, but with a duller black cap and bib, more greyish upperparts and paler underparts ; they moult into adult plumage by September.
Juveniles are similar to winter adults but browner with buff fringes to the wing-coverts and scapulars and a grey-brown tip to the tail.
Juveniles have shorter bills with a dark underside, and a strong white on the wing and mantle feathers.
Juveniles resemble adult females in autumn plumage, though with a lighter, less distinct cheek patch.
Juveniles are duller, with the head sides, neck and underparts streaked brown and white, tan-splotched back and wing coverts, and greenish-yellow legs and bill.
Juveniles resemble young Black-crowned Night-Herons, being mainly brown flecked with white or gray.
Juveniles are brown above with two whitish " V " shapes on the back.
Juveniles have a light brown dorsal surface with little light blue spots.

Juveniles and brown
Juveniles have brown colored eyes until their 3rd year, their eye color changes to white.
Juveniles are grey-brown, and by their first winter resemble adults though often retain some brown juvenile feathering especially on the head in the early part of the winter.
Juveniles and adults have a barred tail, with dark brown or black barring.
Juveniles are brown overall.
Juveniles are similarly shaded, but are mottled with brown.
Juveniles are brown overall with a brownish olive back.
Juveniles have a brown crown and the sexes are alike but males have slightly longer wings and tarsi.
Juveniles are dark brown or black and also striped and have blue tails.
Juveniles have light stripes on the sides and the back enclosing a broad black or brown stripe.
Juveniles younger than 6 months have a brownish iris ; a distinctly smaller and straighter beak ; a fluffy appearance ; brown head, neck, upper back, wings and tail ; a white belly ; and dark legs.
Juveniles have a brown crown, back and tail.
Juveniles are brown with little gloss, and have short tails.
Juveniles are feathered on the face and the plumage is dingy brown.
Juveniles have brownish gray head and neck and the rest brown ; they live in freshwater environments.
Juveniles have short black feathers on the back of the head down to the neck, shorter bills and brown eyes.
Juveniles have brown patterns on their wings, and a dark beak.
Juveniles and adult dark morphs are harder to distinguish from their relatives, and more subjective or difficult-to-observe criteria, such as the colder brown plumage and blue bill base, must be used.
Juveniles are more copper-coloured above and browner below than the females, and the flank markings are brown blotches.

0.204 seconds.