快好知 kuaihz


milkweed造句
1. They obtain their unpleasant flavour from the milkweed plant. 2. And, it seemed, the milkweed invited only the monarch to dine on it. 3. Since most other animals avoid milkweed, the monarch caterpillars usually have the leaves all to themselves. 4. The females lay their eggs on milkweed and the caterpillars feed on these plants until they pupate, prior to emerging as butterflies. 5. As protection against herbivores such as caterpillars, the milkweed produces chemical deterrents on its leaves. 6. The milkweed and monarch, shoulder to shoulder, lock into a single system, an evolution toward and with each other. 7. The butterfly and the milkweed, although competitors in a way, can not live apart. 8. Thank you for listening to my Milkweed. 9. The ornamental plant of milkweed family was liken by people with its unusual of flower, its elegant of vine. 10. Oval milkweed somehow returned to the restored barren although it grows nowhere else in the state. 11. Butterflies of the milkweed family sit on a tree branch in Bangalore. 12. Milkweed is a tough old plant, sending gray-green javelins up in thick stands that can tower head-high by fall. 13. Cattails, dried milkweed pods, and other weeds may be gathered and painted for decorations. 14. For the monarchs, Mr Harris brought down from Atlanta a special tall-growing variety of milkweed I had never seen before. 15. In defending itself so thoroughly against the monarch , the milkweed became inseparable from the butterfly. 16. The caterpillars of the monarch butterfly, surprisingly, are able to feed on milkweed without taking any of these precautions. 17. In the spring, surviving monarchs fly north, stopping at fields of milkweed to lay eggs. 18. Overall a monarch butterfly is no more or less striking than its host, the milkweed pod. 19. A dry, single-chambered fruit that splits along only one seam to release its seeds, as in larkspur and milkweed. 20. A caterpillar indulges in butterfly weed, a form of protective milkweed which provides a natural resistance to disease. 21. A flat-topped or rounded flower cluster in which the individual flower stalks arise from about the same point, as in the geranium, milkweed, onion, and chive.