The main function of the colon is to conserve water within the body by extracting it from the bowel contents. |
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Thousands of Western Bay people are being urged to conserve water until the weekend after felled pine trees smashed a main water pipe. |
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Mike already has a layer of wood chip mulch in place around his plants to keep down weeds and conserve moisture. |
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You've got to be kidding if you think this administration wants people to conserve energy. |
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The trust aims to conserve the garden and is currently restoring the Victorian kitchen garden. |
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To conserve moisture or develop a xeriscape, a landscape requiring little water, it is essential to have soil with good water retention. |
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He used Mediterranean and dry-climate plants such as lavender, salvia, santolina, and other plants that conserve moisture. |
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Members are reminded to conserve water during the dry weather and be alert for leakages and report them to the area representative. |
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The Trust also works to conserve historic features from limekilns to stone sheepwashes. |
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The slowdown in building has coincided with the first steps to conserve traditional architecture. |
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To conserve water and energy, wait until you have a full load before running your dishwasher or washing machine. |
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Council chief executive Glenn Snelgrove is urging residents to conserve water to stop the reservoirs from running dry. |
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The good news is that there's a lot boaters can do to conserve fuel on their own, without having to trade in their ski boats for sailboats. |
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There will be working models and sectional views to explain how important it is to conserve and tap rainwater. |
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Their self-possession allowed them to conserve the air and wait for the rescue operation. |
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Research by Ponganis and Kooyman suggests emperor penguins are metabolically adapted to conserve oxygen while swimming. |
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Keep window blinds and shades closed during hot weather to conserve energy, and open on sunny days during cold months to allow in solar heat. |
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While she tried to conserve money by walking rather than riding on trolley cars, she worried about people's perceptions of her frugality. |
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The quickest and easiest way to conserve moisture in the garden is by cultivating. |
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Several landowners are taking action to monitor, conserve and enhance the blue-eyed grass populations on their ground. |
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Apply a three inches layer of shredded hardwood mulch on and around the planting to conserve moisture. |
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The article under-reported opportunities to conserve forests, a precious resource threatened by wood consumption. |
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Sharipov undocked the spacecraft manually as a precautionary measure to conserve energy. |
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Activating the built-in sleep mode on your PC's display will help conserve electricity and save more money than you might think. |
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The volunteers have helped conserve over 8,000 threatened plants in 350 botanical gardens. |
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Scientists are shifting their attention from natural history studies to questions about how best to conserve isolated and declining populations. |
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We need to recycle because we need to conserve the Earth's natural resources. |
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Bob turned off the invisibility and the stabilizers, which keep the ship from rolling away, off to conserve energy. |
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And just as caulk is the first and best way to conserve heat, stopping leaks and drips is the first way to save water. |
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Of course they can conserve these things only by handing them down, by passing them on to their children, or to somebody's children. |
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We played hangman and tic-tac toe in the dry sand to conserve water for writing. |
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Six ducks and 5,000 grass and silver carp have been introduced into the reborn lake to conserve its ecology. |
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For many years he supported all moves to conserve salmon stocks, but the numbers continued to fall. |
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Over the last 18 years trawlermen have been told to cut catches and limit days at sea, as efforts to conserve stocks have become more desperate. |
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As the firefight continues, the commander orders his men to conserve ammunition. |
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It is better to pre-treat and pre-soak heavily soiled clothing and use a warm wash, of around 50 Celsius degrees, to conserve energy. |
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The Board and district commissions are charged to protect and conserve the lands and environment of the state. |
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For example, thick, waxy, succulent leaves indicate arid environments in which the plant must conserve water. |
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Without hunting, there would be less incentive for farmers to conserve wildlife habitat. |
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In effect these new finances represent the inducement required to persuade developing countries to conserve their genetic resources. |
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While trying to conserve water the kidney concentrates these drugs thus compounding their toxicity. |
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Hunters argue that hunting and other field sports conserve the countryside and contribute to it remaining the way we expect it to be. |
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They are also cultural and political catalysts that protect and conserve heritage and history of the land and people for posterity. |
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But the society needs help to protect and conserve them along with numerous mammals that visit the area. |
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As a result, their main impulse is to conserve wilderness from destruction by humans. |
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Our psychophysical health is strictly dependent on the environment, hence the importance to protect and conserve it. |
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This museum is helping to conserve the cultural memory and disappearing traditions. |
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This Project endeavours to make children more aware of their immediate environment, and the steps to be taken to protect and conserve it. |
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The Army says it is consolidating the cases stemming from the abuse scandal to conserve resources. |
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Despite an acute water scarcity in many parts of India, the Government has yet to legislate effectively to conserve groundwater resources. |
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In fact, sustainable utilisation can be a powerful tool in motivating communities to conserve a resource. |
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They try to keep still, to conserve their resources of blubber and mother's milk. |
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Civic sense, he says, will have to be built from the grassroots in order to conserve water resources and keep them clean as well. |
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Today began well with Greek yoghurt and strawberry conserve on almond muesli and became even more lovely as the day went on. |
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She won a hamper including organic porridge, Cornish strawberry conserve and Gloucester Old Spot Bacon. |
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Imagine a snow-white bowl of yoghurt topped with this glistening, exotic conserve. |
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Most of these are ubiquitous but some, like artichokes and asparagus, are also highly commercialized, especially in conserve. |
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I buttered it and spread a liberal portion of raspberry conserve to compensate for the charcoal-y bits. |
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The whole point of a conservation area is to conserve, not to dig it up whenever it is convenient. |
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There seems to be a culture that now associates using artificial lures and flies with the need to conserve our stocks for the future. |
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The Denver Zoo's Department of Conservation works to conserve corsac foxes and other carnivores through their Mongolia country program. |
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Using non-toxic shot will help conserve the health of Ontario's game bird populations and their habitats. |
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The Johnston Road project requires the developer to conserve five pre-war buildings of historic value. |
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The goal is to conserve gopher tortoises by managing a conservation site of relocated tortoises and residents as a single viable population. |
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Such wider knowledge is firmer purchase on the worldly things and neighbors God has given us to honor and conserve. |
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He also invented the tail rope system which Poe describes in this tale, to conserve more gas by lifting or lowering the guide rope accordingly. |
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In some cases deciduous trees will react by dropping their leaves and going into dormancy to conserve moisture. |
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It sent its last picture 13 years ago, just before shutting down its camera to conserve power. |
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The DoH said doctors, pharmacists and other health workers were being asked to take every possible step to conserve stocks for patients with the greatest need. |
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The decision having been taken to clean and conserve the painting, it was removed from its frame and stretcher, rolled up, and transported to the conservation studios. |
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The fact is that, even as we engage in this desperate struggle to conserve a dying language, other parts of our culture, affecting far more people, are being starved of funds. |
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Financial transactions can be delayed so conserve your resources for now. |
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A gene bank will be developed to conserve the world's plant diversity. |
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The findings give new urgency to protect and conserve coral reefs, which have come under increasing threats from the likes of dynamite fishing, pollution and climate change. |
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At Belmont, jockeys must not let their horse run too hard too early, and conserve some energy for the half-mile-long backstretch. |
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The sample guide included here has been condensed to conserve space. |
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As she ascended through the angelic ranks and was granted more power, Paris would have more energy, and she would learn how to conserve that energy. |
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New licensing fees based on boat lengths were also implemented, which would presumably conserve stocks by discouraging licence holders from buying bigger vessels. |
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This means that they draw far less power and they can be used with small portable devices which have mostly been using monochrome low-resolution displays to conserve power. |
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Many birds and some antelopes, notably the dik-dik and the saiga, sport noses that give them an exceptional ability to regulate brain temperature and conserve water. |
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Combine the mayonnaise, yoghurt and apricot conserve or chutney. |
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Many efficient models conserve the energy used to heat water with a special booster inside the machine, which heats just a small volume of water to sanitize your dishes. |
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How will indigenous Amazonians both use the resources of their territories to satisfy their current needs and conserve them for future generations? |
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The organization has argued in the past, and again this year, that all boats, including kayaks, must be banned from the river to protect and conserve fish and their habitat. |
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They are used to increase public health and conserve scarce resources. |
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As part of the energy recovery process to conserve diminishing fossil fuels, hazardous wastes are being disposed of in cement kilns, another type of incineration process. |
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Families, organisations and schools are being urged to take part in a new award for Cumbria which aims to encourage people of all ages to discover and conserve wild places. |
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Some products currently made offshore would be made locally to conserve costs of transport, although information industries would remain footloose. |
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Farmers and other landowners can help to protect and conserve wildlife. |
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Similarly, the Mende rice cultivators in Sierra Leone live from the forest but do not see themselves as standing over it, either to exploit or to conserve it. |
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They were cryogenically frozen during the travel to conserve resources. |
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They were taken around different micro watershed areas, sholas and grasslands and shown the steps being taken by the Forest Department to conserve water resources. |
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Through our museums and galleries we have an obligation to conserve and restore the great works of art handed down to us by previous generations of benefactors. |
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Delegates from 90 countries will discuss ways to conserve habitats, protect the migratory routes birds take and the use of satellite technology to monitor stocks. |
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When we combine reduced air travel with other forms of cutbacks in oil consumption, we will help to reduce our dependence on Middle Eastern oil and conserve the planet. |
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The finding that mangroves serve as crucial nurseries for coral reef fish highlights another reason to conserve these rapidly disappearing habitats. |
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The day targets anyone interested in the Land for Wildlife scheme, which encourages land owners to conserve bushland for native wildlife conservation. |
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The spicy fruit conserve known as mostarda is eaten with meat and game. |
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The Project will help to conserve the area's internationally important limestone country with its unique limestone pavement, blue-moor grassland and lime-rich wetlands. |
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Until a sufficient amount of rain falls to increase the water levels in the dams, everyone will need to do their part to conserve this precious resource. |
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Specifically, the new view was that the public had a responsibility to protect wetland fauna and flora for its own sake and not just conserve it for a sustained yield. |
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The most innovative varieties are more likely to be spoken by those with weak network ties, while those with dense, multiplex networks tend to conserve local varieties. |
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In other words, particle interactions should conserve parity. |
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Check greenhouses and cold frames for lost, loose or broken glass, repair them as soon as possible in order to conserve heat and protect plants from draughts. |
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In cold climates, the gray wolf can reduce the flow of blood near its skin to conserve body heat. |
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The land was originally set aside to conserve jewels like the Harding Icefield, the largest ice field entirely within the United States. |
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In Uganda, 8000 people have been relocated to conserve carbon sinks, in the form of forests. |
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Cover crops crossing whole fields not only feed birds and insects, they conserve soil and soil nutrients. |
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The race is a celebration of the miracle of migration and an effort to conserve and protect the migratory flyways of birds. |
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The dealership, which opened last summer, features a number of innovative technologies designed to conserve resources. |
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The Cotswold Voluntary Wardens Service was established in 1968 to help conserve and enhance the area, and now has more than 300 wardens. |
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Cato the Elder once advised cutting his rations in half to conserve wine for the workforce. |
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To conserve film stock, each scene in the film was rehearsed extensively to ensure that the first or second take could be used in the final edit. |
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Plans are now in place in both the Republic and Northern Ireland to conserve most of the remaining raised bogs on the island. |
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During prolonged dry periods the foliage is dropped to conserve water and prevent death from drought. |
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As air flows radially inward at low levels, it begins to rotate cyclonically in order to conserve angular momentum. |
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The bog acids, with pH levels similar to vinegar, conserve the human bodies in the same way as fruit is preserved by pickling. |
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An additional feature of anaerobic preservation by acidic bogs is the ability to conserve hair, clothing and leather items. |
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When the camel exhales, water vapor becomes trapped in their nostrils and is reabsorbed into the body as a means to conserve water. |
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These two major anatomical characteristics enable camel to conserve water and limit the volume of urine in extreme desert conditions. |
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For these reasons, the spinet was normally only a domestic instrument, purchased to save money and conserve domestic space. |
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The trust will conserve this section of the route until the funding is available. |
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The few surviving bacteria conserve their energy and stored nutrients during the passage through the stomach by shutting down protein production. |
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However, this number may decrease the longer the fasting period is continued in order to conserve protein. |
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These carry out photosynthesis and may help to conserve moisture by partially enclosing the gas exchange surfaces. |
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In dry summers, the water supply had to be cut off at night to conserve stocks. |
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The female lays two to four eggs within a month, and relies on the size of the nest to conserve heat. |
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The Apennines also conserve some intact ecosystems, which have survived to the human intervention. |
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For example, a single landowner may be required to conserve a wildlife corridor as mitigation for developing the site. |
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The goal was to educate the next generation on how to conserve water and the vital role the water cycle plays in nature. |
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To conserve water, native plants are used liberally in landscapes around homes and all plants with like water needs are grouped as xeriscapes. |
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Districts may also employ additional tactics to conserve resources. |
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Doing so lets them conserve cash and maintain flexibility in pricing. |
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Where it is not moving, a retractable kickstand automatically deploys to conserve power, it added. |
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Permanent magnets, however, conserve power relative to the their electro-magnetic counterparts. |
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The goal is to conserve their natural beauty and improve accessibility for visitors. |
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At this she clapped a savory conserve into the pouch, directing me not to show it till our halt for noonmeat. |
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In addition to their streamlined bodies, some can slow their heart rate to conserve oxygen. |
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Furthermore, as a means to conserve traditional livestock, cryoconservation of animal genetic resources have been put into action. |
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The Leatherback Trust was founded specifically to conserve sea turtles, specifically its namesake. |
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The flexible ribcage allows lung collapse, reducing nitrogen intake, and metabolism can decrease to conserve oxygen. |
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The same adaptations that conserve heat while in water tend to inhibit heat loss when out of water. |
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This approach effectively privatizes fish stocks and creates incentives for farmers to conserve their stocks. |
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Pinnipeds conserve heat with their large and compact body size, insulating blubber and fur, and high metabolism. |
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The stranded pup cries at first, and then becomes sedentary to conserve body fat. |
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The A3 road to Rotterdam was cancelled in 1970 in order to conserve the Groene Hart. |
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When driving on a highway, convoys are also useful to conserve fuel by drafting. |
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Zoos play a major role in creating awareness among common people about the need to conserve nature. |
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To conserve energy, heterothermic bats during long migrations may go into a torpid state while roosting in the daytime, and flying at night. |
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In species that feed only sporadically, the entire intestine enters a reduced state between meals to conserve energy. |
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Adopted in Bonn, Germany in 1979 and coming into force in 1985, the Bonn Convention worked to conserve migratory species and their habitats. |
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In some cities such as Hong Kong, sea water is extensively used for flushing toilets citywide in order to conserve fresh water resources. |
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The measurement has been adopted by rainforest conservation charity Size of Wales, aiming to conserve an area of rainforest equating to the area of Wales. |
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English pronouns conserve many traits of case and gender inflection. |
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To get the most from nature, CSIRO research shows farmers need to conserve native vegetation on the farm and revegetate on-farm areas like fencerows. |
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In 1986, scientists did a review of calculations and data after which they determined, in order to conserve cod fishing the total allowable catch rate had to be cut in half. |
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Bipedal species have a larger field of vision than quadrupeds, conserve more energy and have the ability to manipulate objects with their hands, which aids in foraging. |
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Many mammals, in the absence of sufficient food requirements in an environment, suppress their metabolism and conserve energy in a process known as hibernation. |
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Survival expert Ray Mears may be among its fans, but it has taken conserve maker Mondo Berry to turn little-known sea buckthorn and aronia berries into a modern hit. |
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The Yorkshire Dales Rivers Trust YDRT has a remit to conserve the ecological condition of the River Nidd from its headwaters to the Humber estuary. |
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The Devon Bat Group was founded in 1984 to help conserve bats. |
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For example, they use their wings to cover the naked skin of the upper legs and flanks to conserve heat, or leave these areas bare to release heat. |
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In an effort to conserve energy citywide, Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa will announce today that traffic signals will be powered by light-emitting diodes. |
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If not, the archaeological and Assyriological communities will need to develop a rescue programme designed to recover, conserve and eventually return these materials to Iraq. |
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One theory is that standing on one leg allows the birds to conserve more body heat, given that they spend a significant amount of time wading in cold water. |
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An innovative project to try and remedy this situation involves landholders in upstream areas being paid by downstream water users to conserve forests. |
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In Valencia and Silverstone Hamilton finished fourth after holding off Massa whilst managing high tyre wear in the former and conserve fuel in the later. |
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So it's very important that owners of CFC equipment stop leaks, conserve CFCs and begin planning immediately for conversion or replacement of CFC units. |
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In 1988, the Tower of London was added to the UNESCO list of World Heritage Sites, in recognition of its global importance and to help conserve and protect the site. |
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The Forest of Belfast is a partnership between government and local groups, set up in 1992 to manage and conserve the city's parks and open spaces. |
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Many of the festival's famous rain dances, where revellers soak each other with buckets of water, were scrapped in Mumbai after a call by Bollywood actors to conserve water. |
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After the invasion of Russia in 1812, the number of French troops in Spain vastly declined as Napoleon needed reinforcements to conserve his strategic position in Europe. |
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