A glaucousshore plant with long creeping stolons (sand-binder).
Stout glaucous sand-binder with pairs of spikelets sessile in the notches of the rachis, and all fertile.
Eucalyptus, above fifty species of them, and the tallest growing trees of New Holland; foliage very diversified, generally of a hard glaucous texture.
The tree seldom exceeds thirty feet, and is a branchy glaucous evergreen, and said to be of great longevity.
From the centre of the root arise several shining glaucous leaves a foot long, two inches broad at base, and narrowing to a point.
It is a spreading shrub, about 6 feet high, with rotundate, glaucous leaves, on long petioles.
The long, narrow leaves are pale green above and glaucous beneath, and make the shrub of interest, both on account of their evergreen nature and brightness of tint.
It is a dwarf spreading shrub, with intensely glaucous leaves and white flowers.
It has very glaucous foliage, and large flowers, which vary according to the variety from pure white to rose.
Leaves obovate in shape, notched, and thickly covered with a whitish powder, which imparts to them a pleasing glaucous hue.
The ternate leaflets are of a glaucous blue colour, marbled with dull green, and very delicately veined.
And she stood looking at him--charming in her glaucous blue, the glint of rich red that peeped from under the new white hat, and her slightly frightened smile.
The two women stood watching the figure in the mushroom-white hat and the glaucous blue velvet that idled forlornly along the pavement.
The Glaucous Gull, a large, handsome, and powerful bird, resembles in many of its habits the species last described, but it has not been known to breed in even the most northerly of the British Isles.
A hundred years later Brunnich gave it the name of Glaucous Gull; but it is still called Burgomaster by the Dutch, and by Arctic voyagers generally.
The leaves are minutely and sharply serrate, smooth on both sides, glaucous underneath, with the midrib whitish; on short petioles.
European trees, cultivated for ornament and use; leaves always glaucous beneath; stamens always 2.
Leaves sharply double-serrate, the ends of the primary veins forming the apex of the larger teeth, glaucous beneath; nuts with a narrow thick margin 1 A.
This variety is distinguished by its glaucous twigs and by the body of the fruit being glabrous at maturity.
The under surface of the leaves of the sugar maple in the northern part of its range are green, while those of the southern part of its range are quite glaucous beneath.
All of the trees seen in Indiana have leaves more or lessglaucous beneath.
The glaucous long-peduncled, large-flowered Statice is limited to the east side of Kaloo.
On July 21, a parasitic jaeger was flying with three glaucous gulls, and demonstrating its usual flight tactics of gliding, climbing and swooping as it accompanied the gulls.
A large flock of 188 glaucous gulls, on this date, was in the environs of Barrow Village and the Arctic Research Laboratory.
One other jaeger chased a glaucous gull for one-fourth of a mile and finally having caught up with it dove at the gull several times, each time almost making contact.
On August 3, a glaucous gull on three occasions inspected but did not touch a freshly killed pectoral sandpiper floating on the surface of the water.
The glaucous gulls were seen in only small numbers at Barrier Lake (July 29-Aug.
At Topagaruk (July 5-10) glaucous gulls fed on the refuse pile at camp.
Towards evening the glaucous sea-tint vanishes,--the water becomes blue.
A handsome shrub with glaucous leaves, the branchlets terminated by bright-yellow poppy-like flowers.
The leaves are also of a glaucous hue, equalling in that respect many of the plants now sold from nurseries under the name of Douglasi glauca.
The young bark of this species is covered with a thick glaucous or vivid blue-white 'bloom.
Some of the green or glaucous varieties of both Cupressus and Thuya will come fairly true from seed, from 40 per cent.
All the species should be raised from seeds, and any green or glaucous varieties can also be propagated in the same way if seeds can be obtained.
It is by this peculiarity that the yellow-wort, a gentian with glaucous foliage and blossoms like "patines of bright gold," mainly wins its popularity.
In the Beaufort, red phalaropes, oldsquaws, and glaucous gulls are the most common species.
Timing of annual molt in the glaucous gulls of northern Alaska.
Glaucous gulls and black guillemots are also associated with the advancing ice edge (Watson and Divoky 1972).
Disturbance studies of breeding black brant, common eiders, glaucous gulls and Arctic terns at Nunaluk Spit and Phillips Bay, Yukon Territory.
The most common is the glaucous-winged gull (Larus glaucescens); the glaucous gull is less frequently seen.
The moult of remiges and rectrices in great black-backed gulls Larus marinus and glaucous gulls L.
The breeding ecology of the glaucous winged gull (Larus glaucescens) on Mandarte Island.
This is a perennial glaucous grass with stoloniferous and rhizomiferous stems bearing ordinary erect leafy branches, and the branches come out piercing through the leaf-sheath (extravaginal).
During the day I saw several very beautifulglaucous gulls.
The ivory gull positively looked like ivory as it stood on the ice, and the glaucous gull, with its great spread of snow-white wings, was beautiful.
The eggs are very similar to those of Rapae, resembling ribbed and striated sugar loaves; and the larvae are of the same rich glaucous green, but may be identified by the black spiracles surrounded by yellow rings.
In colour they are of a beautiful glaucous green, hardly distinguishable at times from the leaves on which they rest.
Again, in summer when the rusty appearance which follows the flowering time is put off, the new terminal sprays have a blue-green or glaucous hue like the pine and juniper.
It was a Glaucous gull--the famous Burgomaster of the Arctic Sea, probably a female in immature plumage.
Much like the preceding, but taller, the leaves entire, and the glaucous black berries not nearly so sweet.
A small currant, two to four feet high, with pendent racemes of flowers andglaucous black fruit.
Much like the preceding, but with glaucous leaves and rose-colored larger flowers.
Easily recognized by the nearly black, not glaucous berries, and finely serrate leaves.
From related species its dull purple glaucous fruit and dull green leaves, serrate only near the apex, easily distinguish it.
The leaves in the former are smooth above and glaucous beneath; in the latter pubescent on both sides.