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  2. Gardening - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gardening

    Gardening is the process of growing plants for their vegetables, fruits, flowers, herbs, and appearances within a designated space. [1] Gardens fulfill a wide assortment of purposes, notably the production of aesthetically pleasing areas, medicines, cosmetics, dyes, foods, poisons, wildlife habitats, and saleable goods (see market gardening ).

  3. Carson Sink - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carson_Sink

    Carson Sink is a playa in the northeastern portion of the Carson Desert in present-day Nevada, United States of America, that was formerly the terminus of the Carson River. Today the sink is fed by drainage canals of the Truckee-Carson Irrigation District. The southeastern fringe of the sink, where the canals enter, is a wetland of the Central ...

  4. Climate-friendly gardening - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Climate-friendly_gardening

    Climate-friendly gardening. Climate-friendly gardening is a form of gardening that can reduce emissions of greenhouse gases from gardens and encourage the absorption of carbon dioxide by soils and plants in order to aid the reduction of global warming. [1]

  5. Cleaning station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cleaning_station

    Cleaning station. A reef manta ray at a cleaning station, maintaining a near stationary position atop a coral patch for several minutes while being cleaned. A rockmover wrasse being cleaned by Hawaiian cleaner wrasses on a reef in Hawaii. Some manini and a filefish wait their turn. A cleaning station is a location where aquatic life congregate ...

  6. False cleanerfish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/False_cleanerfish

    The false cleanerfish ( Aspidontus taeniatus) is a species of combtooth blenny, a mimic that copies both the dance and appearance of Labroides dimidiatus (the bluestreak cleaner wrasse), a similarly colored species of cleaner wrasse. It likely mimics that species to avoid predation, [2] as well as to occasionally bite the fins of its victims ...

  7. Japanese kitchen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_kitchen

    The Japanese kitchen ( Japanese: 台所, romanized : Daidokoro, lit. 'kitchen') is the place where food is prepared in a Japanese house. Until the Meiji era, a kitchen was also called kamado ( かまど; lit. stove) [1] and there are many sayings in the Japanese language that involve kamado as it was considered the symbol of a house.