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Definition of recolonize in English: recolonize(British recolonise) verb riːˈkɒlənʌɪzriˈkɑləˌnaɪz [with object](chiefly of a plant or animal species) colonize (a region or habitat) again. (多指动植物种类)重新移植于,重新移生于(地区,栖息地) a setback to the peregrine's attempts to recolonize this part of Scotland Example sentencesExamples - It was subsequently recolonized by animals and plants in an evolutionary process that has been watched quite carefully.
- Wood can also provide scratching posts for wombats and protects seeds and seedlings of other plants, which can then recolonise an area.
- Elsewhere in North America during the past two decades, the raven has recolonized portions of its former range and increased in abundance.
- After each volcanic eruption, the volcanic texture of the ash would have been obliterated when the swamp plants recolonized the ash, turning it into soil.
- This week he looks at the aftermath of the Ice Age, which saw the land recolonised by flora and fauna.
- Many species of birds are also recolonising Handa.
- He has spent the past few years among a strange subculture of hunters and outdoorsmen who truly believe, contrary to the stance of state and federal wildlife managers, that cougars have begun to recolonize the East.
- About 15,000 years ago, they began to recolonize all temperate areas and some species have only recently reached their modern range limits.
- The British troops were seen, rightly as it turned out, to be the advance guard of a Dutch attempt to recolonise Indonesia.
- Results of the recolonization experiment hinted that corridors may potentially influence the rate at which certain insect species recolonize grassland fragments.
- When the settlers moved to Pennsylvania and Ohio, the birds could still live in Kentucky or Arkansas - and might even start recolonizing the forests that returned to the farmed-out regions of New England.
- Beavers can rapidly colonize excellent habitat or recolonize habitat where beavers have been removed.
- When sites are recolonized, populations are founded by a very limited number of genotypes.
- Finally, mangrove vegetation recolonized the area and the overlying soil developed.
- The drive to recolonise Africa is also reviving old colonial-era regions.
- Some sturgeon survive in the rivers of the Northeast, where they have recolonized the Hudson.
- On land, the evidence for a dramatic increase in fern species just above the boundary suggests the presence of wildfires, for ferns are usually the first plants to recolonize an area devastated in this fashion.
- Areas cleared of rhododendrons will be recolonised with plants such as bluebells, wood sorrel and honeysuckle.
- Following this protection, otters from 11 populations gradually recovered and recolonized their former range in southwest Alaska and some other portions of their historic range.
- It is morally wrong for western powers to recolonise territory in this way, and their soldiers should refuse to engage in a war of recolonisation.
Derivativesnoun riːkɒlənʌɪˈzeɪʃ(ə)n Ecological theory predicts that isolated habitat patches will experience greater rates of species loss and lower rates of recolonization compared to less isolated habitats. Example sentencesExamples - The late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries were periods of recolonization in Ukraine, particularly in the provinces of Kiev and Bratslav.
- Participants allow the recolonization of the gray wolf on their private lands and will not use lethal controls on coyotes, wolves and other predators.
- However, Donard suggested that the Mediterranean region has undergone several episodes of extinction and recolonization and present-day populations of France have a much more recent origin.
- These facts suggest that the availability of nesting sites and food are not limiting factors to raven recolonization of the region.
Definition of recolonize in US English: recolonize(British recolonise) verbriˈkɑləˌnaɪzrēˈkäləˌnīz [with object](chiefly of a plant or animal species) colonize (a region or habitat) again. (多指动植物种类)重新移植于,重新移生于(地区,栖息地) a setback to the peregrine's attempts to recolonize this part of Scotland Example sentencesExamples - He has spent the past few years among a strange subculture of hunters and outdoorsmen who truly believe, contrary to the stance of state and federal wildlife managers, that cougars have begun to recolonize the East.
- Elsewhere in North America during the past two decades, the raven has recolonized portions of its former range and increased in abundance.
- Some sturgeon survive in the rivers of the Northeast, where they have recolonized the Hudson.
- Following this protection, otters from 11 populations gradually recovered and recolonized their former range in southwest Alaska and some other portions of their historic range.
- Many species of birds are also recolonising Handa.
- Finally, mangrove vegetation recolonized the area and the overlying soil developed.
- It is morally wrong for western powers to recolonise territory in this way, and their soldiers should refuse to engage in a war of recolonisation.
- On land, the evidence for a dramatic increase in fern species just above the boundary suggests the presence of wildfires, for ferns are usually the first plants to recolonize an area devastated in this fashion.
- The drive to recolonise Africa is also reviving old colonial-era regions.
- Areas cleared of rhododendrons will be recolonised with plants such as bluebells, wood sorrel and honeysuckle.
- After each volcanic eruption, the volcanic texture of the ash would have been obliterated when the swamp plants recolonized the ash, turning it into soil.
- When the settlers moved to Pennsylvania and Ohio, the birds could still live in Kentucky or Arkansas - and might even start recolonizing the forests that returned to the farmed-out regions of New England.
- Results of the recolonization experiment hinted that corridors may potentially influence the rate at which certain insect species recolonize grassland fragments.
- This week he looks at the aftermath of the Ice Age, which saw the land recolonised by flora and fauna.
- It was subsequently recolonized by animals and plants in an evolutionary process that has been watched quite carefully.
- When sites are recolonized, populations are founded by a very limited number of genotypes.
- Beavers can rapidly colonize excellent habitat or recolonize habitat where beavers have been removed.
- The British troops were seen, rightly as it turned out, to be the advance guard of a Dutch attempt to recolonise Indonesia.
- Wood can also provide scratching posts for wombats and protects seeds and seedlings of other plants, which can then recolonise an area.
- About 15,000 years ago, they began to recolonize all temperate areas and some species have only recently reached their modern range limits.
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