eider|eiders in English

noun

[ei·der || 'aɪdə]

eider duck, any of several species of large sea duck from which eiderdown is obtained

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Below are sample sentences containing the word "eider|eiders" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "eider|eiders", or refer to the context using the word "eider|eiders" in the English Dictionary.

1. 12 Eider ducks bobbed offshore, dodging the ice floes.

2. The approximately 180,000 birds of north-western Europe's shelduck population also spends their moulting season from July to September in the Wadden Sea, as do about 200,000 eider; and about 1,000 pairs of eiders use the mudflats of the North Sea as a breeding area.

3. Apex Tungsten Ammunition has been a true Game Changer for Trophy Pacific Eiders and King Eiders bringing our 1 shot kill percentages up to nearly 90% while using Apex with Aleutian Island Waterfowlers Island X

4. In August 2013 several people died in Siorapaluk from eating kiviak that was made from eider rather than auk.

5. Steller's Eiders responded to overflying Great Black-backed GullsLarus marinus by “spooking” — flushing from feeding and aggregating on open water.

6. 15 The particular larva around which a mussel pearl forms lives in its adult stage in the eider duck.

7. The director, cinematographer and biologist Joel Heath spent seven years on the project, writing biological articles on the eider.

8. Eider plays tie Bowfins ball', ýchneíder Play; to ? nd There a he cenfrr of comfr ro i 5 we do nor we v e knocked clean o cen Pin

9. Completed during the reign of Christian VII of Denmark in 1784, the Eiderkanal was a 43-kilometre (27 mi) part of a 175-kilometre (109 mi) waterway from Kiel to the Eider River's mouth at Tönning on the west coast.

10. We examined the hypothesis that Steller's eiders, Polysticta stelleri (Pallas, 1769), in good body condition avoided nutritious and abundant prey that were intermediate hosts of acanthocephalans, while birds in poor condition accepted the long-term costs of parasitism to minimize the short-term risk of starvation.