Synonyms for denticulatus or Related words with denticulatus

brevicornis              costatus              depressus              longicollis              bifasciata              laticeps              inconstans              parallelus              cincta              dilatatus              consobrina              laticollis              cognatus              taeniata              fenestrata              consimilis              dissimilis              convexus              bifasciatus              nasuta              schmidti              marshalli              michaelseni              flavicornis              reducta              congoensis              strigata              striatulus              signatus              latipennis              longispina              ocellata              fumosa              distinctus              oblongus              alluaudi              nigriventris              rostratus              spinifer              immaculatus              arcuatus              interrupta              decorus              flavipennis              faldermann              binotatus              wehncke              kiesenwetter              crassicornis              cancellata             



Examples of "denticulatus"
The spotted wolffish can be distinguished from the northern ("A. denticulatus") and Atlantic wolffish ("A. lupus") by its dark spots.
Dysoptus denticulatus is a species of moth in the Arrhenophanidae family. It is known only from southern Brazil.
Omoglymmius denticulatus is a species of beetle in the subfamily Rhysodidae. It was described by R.T. & J.R. Bell in 1982.
The pencil cardinalfish ("Epigonus denticulatus") is a species of deepwater cardinalfish found around the world at depths of . This fish can reach up to in TL.
The species was originally described in 1768 as "Fucus denticulatus" by Nicolaas Laurens Burman and in 1917 transferred to the genus "Eucheuma" by F.S. Collins and A.B. Hervey.
Crenigomphus denticulatus is a species of dragonfly in the family Gomphidae. It is endemic to Ethiopia. It is threatened by habitat loss.
The specific name is derived from the Latin denticulatus (with small teeth), in reference to the denticulate apex of the saccular process in the male valva.
Two varieties of "A. fimbratus" have been described: "A. fimbratus var. fimbratus" and "A. fimbratus var. denticulatus". The small variations are found in the tepals.
Charles Hedley (Proc. Linn. Soc. N.S.Wales, 1902, p. 16) suggests, that "Clanculus atropurpureus" and "Clanculus samoensis" , appear to be synonyms of Clanculus denticulatus .
Clanculus denticulatus, common name the toothed clanculus, is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Trochidae, the top snails.
The thorntooth grenadier or javelin fish, "Lepidorhynchus denticulatus", is a rattail, the only member of the genus Lepidorhynchus, found around southern Australia and New Zealand, at depths of between 200 and 1,000 m. Its length is between 20 to 55 cm.
"Clairvillia biguttata" can reach a length of . The thorax is shining black. Also the abdomen is mainly black, but the first three tergites are reddish with a black longitudinal stripe. Males show erect hairs on the dorsal surface of abdominal tergites three and four. These flies are parasites of "Coriomeris denticulatus" (Coreidae).
Acmispon denticulatus (previously "Lotus denticulatus")is a species of legume known by the common name riverbar bird's-foot trefoil. It is native to western North America from British Columbia to California to Utah, where it grows in moist spots in a number of habitat types. It is an annual herb growing erect or spreading to about 40 cm in maximum length. It is lined with leaves each made up of a few alternately arranged oval leaflets 1 to 2 cm long, sometimes slightly hairy in texture. The inflorescence is made up of one or two whitish to yellowish pealike flowers located in leaf axils. The fruit is a hairy legume pod up to about 1.5 cm long.
The northern wolffish ("Anarhichas denticulatus"), or rock turbot, is a large marine fish of the Anarhichadidae family. Other common names include the bull-headed catfish, blue catfish, broad-headed catfish, jelly wolffish, and the Arctic wolffish. Inuit in the Western Arctic (Bathurst Inlet) do not distinguish between the northern wolffish and the Bering wolffish ("A. orientalis"), calling both by the name "akoak" or "akoaksaluk" ("old woman fish").
Immature common threshers fall prey to larger sharks. Aside from observations of killer whales feeding on common threshers off New Zealand, adults have no known natural predators. Parasites documented from the common thresher include the protozoan "Giardia intestinalis", the trematodes "Campula oblonga" (not usual host) and "Paronatrema vaginicola", the tapeworms "Acanthobothrium coronatum", "Anthobothrium laciniatum", "Crossobothrium angustum", "Hepatoxylon trichiuri", "Molicola uncinatus", "Paraorygmatobothrium exiguum", "P. filiforme", and "Sphyriocephalus tergetinus", and the copepods "Dinemoura discrepans", "Echthrogaleus denticulatus", "Gangliopus pyriformis", "Kroeyerina benzorum", "Nemesis aggregatus", "N. robusta", "N. tiburo", "Nesippus orientalis", and "Pandarus smithii".
Despite its relatively small size, the sharpnose sevengill shark is considered a top predator in the ecosystem it inhabits. At the Great Meteor Seamount in the eastern Atlantic, this species feeds primarily on teleosts and cephalopods, and to a lesser extent on small cartilaginous fishes. Off Tunisia, crustaceans are the second-most common prey taken after teleosts. Off Australia, this species consumes mostly teleosts, with smaller individuals taking mainly "Lepidorhynchus denticulatus" and larger individuals taking increasing numbers of snake mackerels and cutlassfishes. It is a strong-swimming species, with feeding and activity level increasing at night. This species may be preyed upon by larger sharks. Known parasites of the sharpnose sevengill shark include nematodes in the genera "Anisakis" and "Contracaecum", and the cestode "Crossobothrium dohrnii".
In southeastern Spain, reproductive individuals are consumed by many different species of herbivores. Some floral buds do not open because they are galled by flies ("Dasineura" sp., Cecidomyiidae). Several species of sap-suckers (primarily the bugs "Eurydema oleraceae", "E. fieberi", "E. ornata", and "Corimeris denticulatus") feed on the reproductive stalks during flowering and fruiting. In addition, stalks are bored into by a weevil species (presumably "Lixus ochraceus", Curculionidae), which consumes the inner tissues, whereas another weevil species ("Ceutorhynchus chlorophanus", Curculionidae) develops inside the fruits, living on developing seeds and acting as predispersal seed predators. The stalks are browsed by Spanish ibex ("Capra pyrenaica", Bovidae), which consume flowers and mostly green fruits. Dispersed seeds are consumed by woodmice ("Apodemus sylvaticus", Muridae), several species of birds ("Fringilla coelebs", "Serinus serinus", and "Carduelis cannabina" Fringillidae, among others), several species of medium-sized granivorous beetles ("Iberozabrus" sp. Carabidae, among others), and ants ("Lasius niger", "Tetramorium caespitum", "Cataglyphis velox" and "Leptothorax tristis"). These animals feed on the seeds from late August to early April. Seedlings and juveniles are sometime injured by ibex, sheep, wild boars ("Sus scrofa", Suidae), hares ("Lepus granatense", Leporidae), and voles ("Pitimys" spp., Arvicolidae), although most seedlings die due to summer drought and seed quality.
Young researcher Harry Govier Seeley was commissioned to bring order to the pterosaur collection of the Sedgwick Museum in Cambridge. He soon concluded that it was best to create a new genus for the Cambridge Greensand material that he named "Ornithocheirus", "bird hand", as he in this period still considered pterosaurs to be the direct ancestors of birds, and assumed the hand of the genus to represent a transitional stage in the evolution towards the bird hand. To distinguish the best pieces in the collection, and partly because they had already been described as species by other scientists, he in 1869 and 1870 each gave them a separate species name: "O. simus", "O. woodwardi", "O. oxyrhinus", "O. carteri", "O. platyrhinus", "O. sedgwickii", "O. crassidens", "O. capito", "O. eurygnathus", "O. reedi", "O. cuvieri", "O. scaphorhynchus", "O. brachyrhinus", "O. colorhinus", "O. dentatus", "O. denticulatus", "O. enchorhynchus", "O. xyphorhynchus", "O. fittoni", "O. nasutus", "O. polyodon", "O. compressirostris", "O. tenuirostris", "O. machaerorhynchus", "O. platystomus", "O. microdon", "O. oweni" and "O. huxleyi", thus 28 in total. As yet Seeley did not designate a type species.
Ancient stone inscriptions have also been traced here. The stone inscriptions dates the temple’s existence to the first century AD. The temple, which is in height, has a quadrilateral pyramidal shape with width narrowing towards the top of the temple tower. The top is surrounded by a white cupola. The sloping roof over the cupola is supported by wooden pillars. The roof is made up of copper plates adorned by plated ball with a spire. An image of Garuda (a divine bird in human form with a beak and wings to fly, which is the "vahana" or vehicle of Vishnu). On the festive days of Ram Navami, Vasant Panchami and Baisakhi, which are special occasions at this temple, the god is placed on a stone thrown for worship. A stairway from the temple of Deva Prayag of Panch Prayag, leads to the confluence of Bhagirathi and Alakananda rivers where a distinct demarcation of the churning muddy stream of Alakananda mix with the saffron clear flows of Bhagirathi is seen (see picture in infobox) to evolve as Ganges, the holiest river for Hindus. Brahmins and pilgrims feed the fish specie "Cyprinus denticulatus" ( length) at this site.
In southeastern Spain, reproductive individuals are consumed by many different species of herbivores, although more information is required. Some floral buds do not open because they are galled by flies ("Dasineura" sp., Cecidomidae). Several species of sap-suckers (primarily the bugs "Eurydema oleraceae", "E. fieberi", "E. ornata", and "Corimeris denticulatus") feed on the reproductive stalks during flowering and fruiting. In addition, stalks are bored into by a weevil species (presumably "Lixus ochraceus", Curculionidae), which consumes the inner tissues, whereas another weevil species ( presumably "Ceutorhynchus", Curculionidae) develops inside the fruits, living on developing seeds and acting as predispersal seed predators. The stalks are browsed by Spanish ibex ("Capra pyrenaica", Bovidae), which consume flowers and mostly green fruits. Dispersed seeds are consumed by woodmice ("Apodemus sylvaticus", Muridae), several species of birds ("Fringilla coelebs", "Serinus serinus", and "Carduelis cannabina" Fringillidae, among others), several species of medium-sized granivorous beetles ("Iberozabrus" sp. Carabidae, among others), and ants ("Lasius niger", "Tetramorium caespitum", "Cataglyphis velox" and "Leptothorax tristis"). These animals feed on the seeds from late August to early April. Seedlings and juveniles are sometime injured by ibex, sheep, wild boars ("Sus scrofa", Suidae), hares ("Lepus granatense", Leporidae), and voles ("Pitimys" spp., Arvicolidae), although most seedlings die due to summer drought and seed quality.