संज्ञा • पत्ते की खाद | |
leaf: पत्ता पत्ती पत्ते | |
mould: ढाँचा फफूँद | |
leaf mould मीनिंग इन हिंदी
leaf mould उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
अधिक: आगे- It causes the brown leaf mould of Canavalia species.
- The resulting leaf mould can be used as a mulch or for potting.
- This species is usually found rooted in leaf mould under the protection of shrubs.
- Due to its shallow roots, the iris prefers a mulch of peat, well decayed leaf mould or similar.
- Found living on decaying organic material, such as old tree stumps, logs, leaf mould, compost heaps, and other organic debris in fields, woods, and along the roadsides.
- It is rarely grown in the UK . To grow in the UK, William Rickatson Dykes recommends to plant the iris, on a 5 cm layer of sand, over garden soil with added leaf mould ( or compost ).
- Stag beetle larvae, which are blind and shaped like a letter " C ", feed on rotting wood in a variety of places, tree stumps, old trees and shrubs, rotting fence posts, compost heaps, and leaf mould.
- The men were taught how to use the jungle according to author Paul Ham " . . . to'melt'into the foliage; to retrace their steps at night; to use camouflage properly; to detect human presence by crushed twigs and disturbed leaf mould; to move silently over undergrowth.
- The resemblance between " Peripatus " and " Aysheaia " ( an early Cambrian animal from the Burgess Shale ) would be striking ( both are classified in the Tardipolypoda, Tardigrada, and Onychophora ), were it not that " Aysheaia " was a marine animal, while " Peripatus " lives in tropical leaf mould.
- Thank you Jessica, StuRat and Lenticel for the info so far . My problem is that a few weeks ago the flowers all dropped very quickly as they do each year, and I get a 1 to 2 inch mat of dying petals covering our flowerbed if left they form a thick mat that is very solid and can be picked up in lumps for some days . Some plants will not grow in this situation, is this due to the the amount of petals smothering the soil ( leaf mould-helpful ) Have you got a clue, or am I just a sloppy gardener or have toxines have any thing to do with it?