habitat |
dzīvotne |
|
habitat (1. The locality in which a plant or animal naturally grows or lives. It can be either the geographical area over which it extends, or the particular station in which a specimen is found. 2. A physical portion of the environment that is inhabited by an organism or population of organisms. A habitat is characterized by a relative uniformity of the physical environment and fairly close interaction of all the biological species involved. In terms of region, a habitat may comprise a desert, a tropical forest, a prairie field, the Arctic Tundra or the Arctic Ocean) |
dzīvotne |
|
habitat destruction (Destruction of wildlife habitats by increasing pressure for land by fast-growing human populations, pollution and over-exploitation. Whole species or populations of plants and animals have disappeared causing a loss of genetic resource that is not only regrettable from an aesthetic or philosophical point of view but also threatens man's food supply. Habitat loss takes several forms: outright loss of areas used by wild species; degradation, for example, from vegetation removal and erosion, which deprive native species of food, shelter, and breeding areas; and fragmentation, when native species are squeezed onto small patches of undisturbed land surrounded by areas cleared for agriculture and other purposes) |
dzīvotņu iznīcināšana |
|
habitat of a species |
biotops |
|
Habitats Directive |
Dzīvotņu direktīva |
|
haematology (The branch of medical science concerned with diseases of the blood) |
hematoloģija |
|
hail (Precipitation in the form of balls or irregular lumps of ice, always produced by convective clouds, nearly always cumulonimbus) |
krusa |
|
half-life (The time required for one-half the atoms of a given amount of radioactive material to undergo radioactive decay) |
pussabrukšanas periods |
|
haloform (A haloalkane, containing three halogen atoms, e.g. iodoform, CHI3; a haloform reaction is a reaction to produce haloforms from a ketone. For example, if propanone is treated with bleaching powder, the chlorinated ketone so formed reacts to form chloroform) |
haloforma reakcija |
|
halogen lamp |
halogēnlampa |
|
halogen lamp |
volframa halogēnlampa |
|
halogenated biphenyl (Halogen derivatives of biphenyl) |
halogenēts bifenils |
|
halogenated compound (A substance containing halogen atoms) |
halogenizēts savienojums |
|
halogenated hydrocarbon (One of a group of halogen derivatives of organic hydrogen and carbon containing compounds; the group includes monohalogen compounds (alkyl or aryl halides) and polyhalogen compounds that contain the same or different halogen atoms) |
halogenēts ogļūdeņradis |
|
halogenated phenol (Halogen derivatives of phenol) |
halogenēts fenols |
|
halogenated pollutant (An organic compound bonded with one of the five halogen elements (astatine, bromine, chlorine, fluorine, and iodine). Several of these compounds contribute to reductions in the concentration of ozone in the stratosphere) |
halogenēts piesārņotājs |
|
halogenated terphenyl |
halogenēts terfenils |
|
handicraft (A particular skill performed with the hands) |
mājamatniecība |
|
handicraft business (The profession, commercial firm or trade involving the production and distribution of articles that are made through the skilled use of one's hands) |
amatnieku uzņēmējdarbība |
|
harbour (Area of water next to the coast, often surrounded by thick walls, where ships and boats can be sheltered) |
osta |
|