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  Encyclopedia of Keywords > Forest Floor > Leaf Litter   Michael Charnine

Keywords and Sections
VEGETATION
SHADE
RAIN FORESTS
DARK CHOCOLATE
DEBRIS
PREDATOR
SPECIES
TROPICAL AREAS
LIVE
SEEDS
BARK
SOILS
SOIL
LOGS
FOREST FLOOR
LEAF LITTER
Review of Short Phrases and Links

    This Review contains major "Leaf Litter"- related terms, short phrases and links grouped together in the form of Encyclopedia article. Please click on Move Up to move good phrases up.

Vegetation Submit/More Info Add phrase and link

  1. It takes insects such as ants, leafhoppers and wasps in the coral rubble and leaf litter, also taking some vegetation. (Web site)

Shade Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. The undisturbed soil, soil cover, and vegetation provide shade, leaf litter, woody material, and reduce the delivery of soil eroded from the harvested area.

Rain Forests Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Primitive blind snakes (Anomalepididae) are small wormlike snakes that live in leaf litter on the floor of rain forests in Central and South America.

Dark Chocolate Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Behind the primary fruits are distinctive vineyard characteristics of dark chocolate and warm earth and leaf litter.

Debris Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. This helps to remove leaf litter and other debris that would otherwise accumulate on the ground. (Web site)

Predator Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. The Corroboree frog is a sit and wait predator which feeds primarily in leaf litter and around fallen logs.

Species Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Most species are commonly found on old straw, compost, peat, leaf litter, rotting wood, damp soil, and other moist substrates.
  2. Truffles fruit throughout the year, depending on the species and can be found buried between the leaf litter and the soil. Move Up

Tropical Areas Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. The small, sometimes brightly colored, worm-like carnivorous creatures have lobed appendages and live in leaf litter in tropical areas. (Web site)

Live Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Tardigrades may live in salt water, fresh water or terrestrially among mosses and leaf litter. (Web site)
  2. Turbellarians are mostly predators, and live in water or in shaded, humid terrestrial environments such as leaf litter. (Web site) Move Up
  3. Most are predators or scavengers, and terrestrial species are mostly nocturnal and live in shaded humid locations such as leaf litter or rotting wood. (Web site) Move Up

Seeds Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. In fact, some chaparral plants require the leaf litter and shade provided by older chaparral stands for their seeds to germinate successfully. (Web site)
  2. In fact, seeds of many chaparral plants actually require 30 years or more worth of accumulated leaf litter before they will successfully germinate. Move Up

Bark Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. These spiders live in crevices, under bark, rocks and leaf litter and often in houses. (Web site)

Soils Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Many species are free-living saprobes (users of carbon fixed by other organisms) in woody substrates, soils, leaf litter, dead animals, and animal exudates. (Web site)

Soil Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Soil, decaying plant substrates, decomposing cellulose (hay, straw), leaf litter, and seeds.
  2. Leaf litter also shelters the soil from the impact of falling raindrops, which is a significant agent of erosion. Move Up
  3. The top layer of leaf litter that is not decomposed protects the soil from the pounding action of rain, without this the soil can become far less permeable. (Web site) Move Up

Logs Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. The hairy, fleet, wolf spiders are very common outdoors under leaf litter, rocks, and logs. (Web site)
  2. These spiders live outside beneath stones and logs and within leaf litter, mulch and heavy ground covering such as ivy. Move Up

Forest Floor Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. These are the fungi that break down leaf litter on the forest floor.
  2. These frogs inhabit leaf litter on the forest floor (Pombal et al., 1994). (Web site) Move Up
  3. They are small, less than 4 centimetres in length, terrestrial frogs found mostly in leaf litter on the forest floor. (Web site) Move Up

Leaf Litter Move Up Add phrase and link

  1. Outdoors, eliminate potential breeding habitats such as wood piles, leaf litter, and rocks where spiders may live near your house.
  2. Centipedes are usually associated with damp, dark places such as under stones, leaf litter, logs, bark, or soil crevices. (Web site) Move Up
  3. Where it is found outdoors: Stachybotrys is found in soils, decaying plant debris, decomposing cellulose, leaf litter and seeds. Move Up

Categories Submit/More Info

  1. Forest Floor
  2. Logs Move Up
  3. Wolf Spiders Move Up
  4. Centipedes Move Up
  5. Encyclopedia of Keywords > Nature > Matter > Soil Move Up
  6. Books about "Leaf Litter" in Amazon.com

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  Short phrases about "Leaf Litter"
  Originally created: April 04, 2011.
  Links checked: June 29, 2013.
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