हीथलैंड Meaning in English
हीथलैंड शब्द का अंग्रेजी अर्थ : heathland
ऐसे ही कुछ और शब्द
हीथरीहीथ्स
आतपन
गरम करने का साधन
ताइपन
ताकीपन
तापकारी
तापन
हीटिंग
गरम करने की पद्धति
हीटिंग प्लांट
हीटिंग प्लँट
तापन प्रणाली
हीटिंग सिस्टम
हीटपरड
हीथलैंड इसके अंग्रेजी अर्थ का उदाहरण
This frog is associated with a wide variety of habitats, including coastal swamps, lagoons, dams, ditches, and garden ponds in forest, heathland, wallum country, and cleared farmland.
Woolacombe has low cliffs at either end of the beach which are home to the rare maritime heathland as well as sand dunes behind the beach.
Today Boxted can be easily reached from Colchester along Boxted Straight Road, which is often mistaken for a Roman road, but is in fact a relatively modern road based upon an old heathland track; many other local roads are much older.
Of particular significance are the heathland areas which support rare species including slowworms, grass snakes and adders.
The moor is described by Natural England as "the largest example of limestone heathland in the Peak District National Park" and "the best of only a very few remaining areas of this unusual type of vegetation".
2006 establishments in Ohio The New Forest is an area of forest and [(habitat)|heathland] in England.
The red-capped parrot occurs in the Southwest Australia ecoregion in dense to open forest and woodland, and heathland in coastal regions.
Almoravid dynasty Bidston Hill is of heathland and woodland that contains historic buildings and ancient rock carvings.
The major habitats in the moss are bog, heathland, woodland and acidic grassland, subject to varying degrees of wetness depending on the local drainage.
2"nbsp;km (3/4"nbsp;mi) east of the junction on the A380 road known as Ashcombe Cross, which is at the centre of several areas of woodland and heathland, including Grammarcombe Wood, Haldon Forest and Ideford Common.
The flora of the area is typical of the Cheshire Plain, but is well wooded and with small areas of heathlands still surviving in isolated pockets, mainly around Astbury Mere and out towards Somerford.
The Common was an area of heathland where, in centuries past, villagers could graze their cattle, but over the last century or so, birch trees have overrun many areas, so that much of the Common is covered by trees.
Current work at Lindow Common is aiming to start selective removal of birch trees, in order to promote regrowth of heather (Calluna vulgaris) to return the area to heathland.