तोबड़ा Meaning in English
तोबड़ा शब्द का अंग्रेजी अर्थ : tobra
, the bag out of which a horse eats its corn
ऐसे ही कुछ और शब्द
भोजपत्रअमेरिकी स्वतंत्रता की लड़ाई
झुमका
धृष्ट पुस्र्ष
सर्वश्रेष्ठता
इंजील
सेक्स का मूल तथ्य
कलौंजी
बुशरेंजर्स
दलाली
साम दाम दंड भेद
गुल्ली
बरोठा के गवाक्ष
उछाल के केंद्र
रेटिना के केंद्रीय धमनी
तोबड़ा इसके अंग्रेजी अर्थ का उदाहरण
Burials at Rose Hills Memorial Park Leptobrachella is a genus of frogs in the family Megophryidae.
Members of Leptobrachella are found throughout Asia including on Borneo and the Natuna Islands.
Leptobrachella are small frogs that are not easily seen as they are well camouflaged on the ground.
The tadpoles of Leptobrachella are unusual in their vermiform or eel-like appearance.
This body shape is interpreted as an adaptation to a fossorial life style: Leptobrachella tadpoles live in the gravel beds of small streams.
In Leptobrachella mjobergi where more detailed observations have been made, tadpoles have unusually mobile head and trunk.
There are 83 species recognised in the genus Leptobrachella:.
Bacteria described in 1919 Eastern spadefoot toads (Leptobrachium, also known as large-eyed litter frogs) comprise a genus of the family Megophryidae in the order Anura, and are found in southern China, northeast India, Southeast Asia, and islands of the Sunda Shelf as well as the Philippines.
In identifying species, iris colour is a valuable diagnostic morphological characteristic (see Leptobrachium bompu for an example of a blue-eyed species); the iris has uniform colour in some species, whereas in other species the upper half is coloured and the lower half is dark.
The sister taxon of Leptobrachium is a clade that includes Scutiger and Oreolalax.
Two subgenera, Leptobrachium and Vibrissaphora, are recognized; the latter was originally described as a genus, with Vibrissaphora boringii as the type species.
These subgenera (or genera) were originally separated by presence (in Vibrissaphora, hence the common name moustache or spiny toad) and absence of nuptial spines on the upper labium in males during the breeding season (in Leptobrachium).
These clades can be referred to as subgenera Leptobrachium and Vibrissaphora, but their contents differ from the earlier, purely morphological definition (Vibrissaphora contains all spiny species, but also non-spiny ones).