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Poaching and which
Poaching is particularly suitable for delicate food, such as eggs, poultry, fish and fruit, which might easily fall apart or dry out.
This was followed by the Night Poaching Act 1828 and Night Poaching Act 1844, the Game Act 1831, and the Poaching Prevention Act 1862, which made it an offence to illegally shoot game using a firearm.
Poaching continued to reduce the animal's population, which reached its lowest number of 23 in 1902.

Poaching and been
Poaching has been controlled but water supply is a continuing effort.

Poaching and for
These included An Elopement à la Mode and The Pickpocket: A Chase Through London, made by Alf Collins for the British branch of the French Gaumont company, Daring Daylight Burglary, made by Frank Mottershaw at the Sheffield Photographic Company, and Desperate Poaching Affray, made by the Haggar family, whose main business was exhibiting films made by others in their traveling tent theatre.
Poaching, like smuggling, has a long counter-cultural history, dispassionately reported for England in " Pleas of the Forest ", transgressions of the rigid Anglo-Norman Forest Law.
Poaching of peacocks for their meat and feathers ; and accidental poisoning by feeding on pesticide treated seeds are known threats to wild birds.
Poaching: Mountain gorillas are not usually hunted for bushmeat, but they are frequently maimed or killed by traps and snares intended for other animals.
Poaching for meat is also particularly threatening in regions of political unrest.
Poaching for rhinoceros horn became the single most important reason for the decline of the Indian rhino after conservation measures were put in place from the beginning of the 20th century, when legal hunting ended.
Poaching, mainly for the use of the horn in Traditional Chinese Medicine has remained a constant and has led to decreases in several important populations.

Poaching and
: Boiling Blanching Braising Coddling Double steaming Infusion Poaching Pressure cooking Simmering Steaming Steeping Stewing Vacuum flask cooking

Poaching and .
Poaching is the process of gently simmering food in liquid, generally milk, stock or wine.
* About. com Poaching, Simmering, & Boiling
Poaching is the illegal taking of wild plants or animals ; the law concerned may be e. g. the law of property or local or international conservation and wildlife management laws.
See also the Night Poaching Act 1828 and Game Act 1831.
Poaching is largely a threat to northern populations, while southern populations are threatened mostly by habitat loss.
Poaching is conducted by organized groups within Chile ; the group members trap the flamingos and export them to Europe, the United States, and other oversea destinations.
Hooked: Pirates, Poaching, and the Perfect Fish.
* WGBH Forum Network: Hooked ; Pirates, Poaching and the Perfect Fish G. Bruce Knecht, senior reporter, Wall Street Journal
Poaching of tigers and their wild prey species is considered to be driving the decline, although heavy snows in the winter of 2009 could have biased the data.
Poaching is under control, and the estate is proving to be a significant source of employment in the area.

absence and fires
LZ Carolyn's garrison was reduced by the absence of several line companies on patrol, and the withering defensive fires of the battalion's COMPANY C and E were unable to prevent the onrushing battalions from storming through the wire and into the LZ from both directions.
The practice is actually quite common in the absence of fires, as well.
Western junipers, which have extensive root systems, thrive in the dry climate ; in the absence of periodic fires they tend to displace grasses and sagebrush and to create relatively barren landscapes.
Tracks on the ground, misplaced vegetable patches, an absence of water buffalo, smoke from cooking fires in the jungle, too many farmers working the fields — all could indicate enemy troops in a vicinity.
The reasons for this is the availability of good stone material and the absence of large forests in the vicinity, as well as numerous fires before the 16th century.

absence and which
This is the primary function of the imagination operating in the absence of the original experiential stimulus by which the images were first appropriated.
Mark stopped the car and switched off the lights and they sat looking at the water, which, there being no moon out, at first could be distinguished from the sky only by an absence of stars.
The new Council was itself inescapably of political meaning, which was most clearly revealed in the absence of any U.N.F.P. members and the presence of several Istiqlal leaders.
For expository purposes, this is best treated as a model which spells out the conditions under which an important industry affected with the public interest would find it profitable to raise wages even in the absence of union pressures for higher wages.
Psychical blindness is a condition in which there is a total absence of visual memory-images, a condition in which, for example, one is unable to remember something just seen or to conjure up a memory-picture of the visible appearance of a well-known friend in his absence.
In the absence of a truly adequate conceptuality in which the gospel can be expressed, the unavoidable need to demythologize it makes use of whatever resources are at hand -- and this usually means one or another of the various forms of `` folk religion '' current in the situation.
The absence of a tax base meant that there was no way to pay off state and national debts from the war years except by requesting money from the states, which seldom arrived.
A simple form of AM, often used for digital communications, is on-off keying: a type of amplitude-shift keying in which binary data is represented by the presence or absence of a carrier.
In Central and South America, the alligator family is represented by five species of the genus Caiman, which differs from the alligator by the absence of a bony septum between the nostrils, and the ventral armour is composed of overlapping bony scutes, each of which is formed of two parts united by a suture.
Another example is the adiabatic flame temperature, which is the temperature that would be achieved by a flame in the absence of heat loss to the surroundings.
Alfred, according to Asser, insisted upon reviewing contested judgments made by his ealdormen and reeves, and " would carefully look into nearly all the judgements which were passed in his absence anywhere in the realm, to see whether they were just or unjust.
Antibacterial resistance may impose a biological cost, thereby reducing fitness of resistant strains, which can limit the spread of antibacterial-resistant bacteria, for example, in the absence of antibacterial compounds.
The length of coast-line is and the absence of deep indentations of the shore is shown by the fact that Europe, which covers only, has a coastline of.
There was some resistance to his accession as count, which was suppressed with the help of his mother Blanche of Castile who was acting as regent in the absence of Louis IX.
In the third century, this " concern for propriety " begins to be displaced by the concept of ' power ' to do so which means that in the absence of such a man it is " literally impossible " for a Eucharist to be celebrated.
The absence of a turret also meant that tank destroyers could be manufactured significantly cheaper, faster and more easily than the tanks on which they were based and fou8nd particular favor when production resoureces were lacking.
Withdrawal-related psychosis from antipsychotics is called " supersensitivity psychosis ", and is attributed to increased number and sensitivity of brain dopamine receptors, due to blockade of dopaminergic receptors by the antipsychotics, which often leads to exacerbated symptoms in the absence of neuroleptic medication.
The burial rites of the Italian Boii show many similarities with contemporary Bohemia, such as inhumation, which was uncommon with the other Cisalpine Gauls, or the absence of the typically western Celtic torcs.
Naveh states, " The striking feature of the blitzkrieg concept is the complete absence of a coherent theory which should have served as the general cognitive basis for the actual conduct of operations ".
This behaviour resulted in a return on assets for building societies which was at least as high as Plc banks and, in the absence of distribution, led to rapid accumulation of reserves ".

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