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streamside
noun
The land bordering a stream.
Exact(51)
As with the earliest rods made from streamside branches, the first longer rods were made of wood, which would continue as the dominant rod material well into the 19th century.
Reservoir operations have disrupted fisheries by altering the temperature and flow patterns of streams and by disrupting riparian (streamside) vegetation communities.
Many species are semiaquatic, frequenting streamside and spring habitats throughout their lives.
The neuropteran family Sisyridae may have evolved from the closely related family Osmylidae whose larvae probe streamside mosses for prey.
Wood turtle, (Clemmys insculpta), a woodland streamside turtle of the family Emydidae, found from Nova Scotia through the northeastern and north-central United States.
Beautiful demoiselles bounce above streamside vegetation like iridescent yo-yos.
Those of some streamside species are buoyant, achieving dispersal by floating until they become waterlogged.
The victorious Streamside army poured over its surface, and some pressed on to explore the newly conquered land beyond.
During the next day, and for days to follow, Trailhead foragers slipped out for brief periods to search for whatever scraps of food had been overlooked by the Streamside patrols combing the area.
But this tactic did not fool the Streamside scout and her front-line nest mates, who pushed even harder and mounted increasingly conspicuous displays.
Similar(1)
Another race of this species, the bronze frog (R. c. clamitans), is found in such places as swamps and streamsides of the southeastern United States.
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