| habitat |
the environmental conditions in which a plant or animal lives
Ãâó: home.ica.net/~drw/glossh-k.htm
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| habitat |
The kind of environment inhabited by a particular species.
Ãâó: www.prairiefrontier.com/pages/glossary.html
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| habit |
general appearance of the plant. HALOPHYTE a plant that grows in salty soil. HELIOTROPIC growing towards sunlight. HETEROPHYLLOUS having leaves of different form. HIRSUTE hairy, with long distinct hairs. HISPID with rough hairs or bristles. HYDATHODE water-secreting pore on leaf (Craussulacae have them for the rapid absorption of water). HYGROCHASTIC applied to plants in which the opening of the fruits is caused by the absorption of water (98 percent of mesems have hygrochastic capsules).
Ãâó: www.succulents.co.za/botanical_terms.shtml
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| habit |
The aesthetic equivalent of that which is known in physics as "entropy"; the basic category in aesthetics. "Aesthetic" means "experienceable," and "habit" is anaesthesia: we do not perceive what we are accustomed to. Accordingly, habit as the basic category of aesthetics is a measure of experience, of perception, and of being perceived: the more unusual, the more perceptible (shocking), and the older, the less experienceable.
Ãâó: www.equivalence.com/labor/lab_vf_glo_e.shtml
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| habit |
The general appearance of a crystal as a result of the nature and prominence of crystal forms (ie, faces or sets of faces) (Gonz?ez et al., 1992). "Habit" is a term best applied to invidividual crystals that have grown without their growing surfaces encountering any pre-exisiting solid. Cf. fabric.
Ãâó: www.gly.uga.edu/speleoatlas/SAglossary1.html
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