The moth is out in July, earlier or later in some seasons; it affects woods in which there is plenty of heather or bilberry, and may often be seen resting on tree trunks, especially those of the pine.
The moth is out in August and September, and although it does not seem to care much about the collector's sugar when spread on tree trunks in the usual way, it seems to accept it freely enough when daubed on the foliage.
The moisture, however, is abundant within the stumps or tree trunks, and the mycelium develops abundantly there.
These usually grow on stumps, logs, or tree trunks, etc.
He sought seclusion in a room to which access could only be had by a staircase of palm-tree trunks, and where his sole couch consisted of a mat, of which the rough fibre made dents in his flesh.
When the walls were seven cubits high, the Faithful covered the building with a flat roof, made of palm-tree trunks, thatched with lathes and palm-leaves.
The ceiling was supported inside by columns of date-tree trunks, and the floor was sprinkled with gravel.
The moths are not often seen in the day time, but a few species are sometimes met with at rest on tree trunks, palings, etc.
Bodding argued with the natives of the Santal Parganas, India, who said that cut and shaped stones had fallen from the sky, some of them lodging in tree trunks.
Others which escaped attention may have been climbing on tree trunks or logs, or may have been foraging on the ground but close to hiding places into which they darted undetected.
The skink spends much of its time in inactivity underground or otherwise concealed and sheltered, and when it does move about it takes advantage of natural travel-ways over rock surfaces, tree trunks, and logs.
Besides the bewildering tangle caused by these lianes, the rain forest is further impeded by hosts of epiphytes or plants that are mechanically attached to tree trunks, branches, or anything else that will raise them to the light.
No apparently impossible twisting or bending of tree trunks or reaching out of stems of vines but is to be found in the inexorable struggle of stems to fulfill their task of giving the plant its chance to reach “a place in the sun.
And as if this were not enough, certain other plants, such as the Boston ivy, have small disks which attach themselves to bare walls or tree trunks.
It grows most commonly on the shady side of tree trunks, being most luxuriant near the ground, where the supply of moisture is most constant.
The members of this order are minute unicellular plants, growing either in water or on the damp surfaces of stones, tree trunks, etc.
It is truly wonderful to think that on a floating mass of tree trunks, merely bound together by a primitive barrier or outside ring, men should live for weeks, and a horse should have its stabling.
The corn and rye when cut are put on pine-tree trunks to dry.
Standing on the little barley patch which surrounded the house, we saw a sort of wigwam composed of loose fir-tree trunks.
Those found in houses are small; but I have seen others of great size, in crevices of tree trunks in the forest.
In almost every hollow part the road was crossed by a brook, whose cold, dark, leaf-stained waters were bridged over by tree trunks.
A great number of hammocks were seen slung between the tree trunks, and the litter of a numerous household lay scattered about.
Desiring to accomplish as much of the journey as possible by sea, he embarked on a brigantine and ten native barques dug out of tree trunks, and first landed in the country of his ally Careca, cacique of Coiba.
Vasco Nuñez embarked with about one hundred men on board a brigantine and in some native barques dug out of tree trunks, called by the islanders of Hispaniola canoes, and by the people of Uraba, uru.
While coasting along its shores, the Admiral met two of those barques dug out of tree trunks of which I have spoken.
All at once four uru, that is to say, barques dug out of tree trunks, attacked him on the flank, and overturned his boat.
Collected from mosses and lichens on tree trunks (Princis, 1952).
Collected from lichens and mosses on tree trunks (Princis, 1952).
In Puerto Rico, cockroaches are probably the principal food of the scorpions which live in old houses, on tree trunks, etc.
Three individuals were found on tree trunks; the fourth was on a thick vine about one meter above the ground.
Anolis lemurinus bourgeaei is about twice the size of Anolis humilis uniformis and is usually observed on buttresses of large trees or on the lower two meters of tree trunks.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "tree trunks" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.