| 释义 | 
		Definition of chamise in English: chamise(also chamiso) nounPlural chamisos, Plural chamises(t)ʃəˈmiːzSHaˈmēs An evergreen shrub with small narrow leaves, common in the chaparral of California, US. 石楠形绣线菊 Adenostoma fasciculatum, family Rosaceae Example sentencesExamples -  He investigated the question of herb suppression within chamise chaparral.
 -  Soil under chamise shrubs was collected (with leaf litter removed) and heated at various temperatures then watered.
 -  Analysis of chamise, sampled from southern California shrublands, indicates that the ratio of dead to live components is not related reliably to age of shrub canopy.
 -  Interestingly, of the six native fire-followers exposed to chamise leachate, none showed significant differences in germination rates from the control.
 -  The region's ubiquitous chaparral, those lion-colored hills of chamise, oak and manzanita, is an incitement to fire.
 -  At the higher elevations, manzanita is the abundant shrub, while midslope shrubs include chamise, coffeeberry, redberry, and two kinds of mountain mahoganies.
 -  Following a fire, Chamise sprouts rapidly from its basal burl (root crown) and soon outgrows most competitors.
 -  In one series of experiments, eight test plots were established under the chamise canopy to examine the effect of four factors: animal activity, soil heating, additional nutrients, and heating plus nutrients.
 -  Each species was then subjected to three different treatments: aqueous leachate from chamise foliage, powdered charred chamise wood, and leachate and charred wood.
 -  In California's Santa Ynez Mountains, the striped insects tend to be more common on a plant called chamise while the unstriped ones predominate on blue lilac.
 
 
 OriginMid 19th century: from Mexican Spanish chamiso.    Definition of chamise in US English: chamisenounSHaˈmēs An evergreen shrub with small narrow leaves, common in the chaparral of California. 石楠形绣线菊 Adenostoma fasciculatum, family Rosaceae Also called greasewood Example sentencesExamples -  At the higher elevations, manzanita is the abundant shrub, while midslope shrubs include chamise, coffeeberry, redberry, and two kinds of mountain mahoganies.
 -  Following a fire, Chamise sprouts rapidly from its basal burl (root crown) and soon outgrows most competitors.
 -  In one series of experiments, eight test plots were established under the chamise canopy to examine the effect of four factors: animal activity, soil heating, additional nutrients, and heating plus nutrients.
 -  Each species was then subjected to three different treatments: aqueous leachate from chamise foliage, powdered charred chamise wood, and leachate and charred wood.
 -  Interestingly, of the six native fire-followers exposed to chamise leachate, none showed significant differences in germination rates from the control.
 -  He investigated the question of herb suppression within chamise chaparral.
 -  Soil under chamise shrubs was collected (with leaf litter removed) and heated at various temperatures then watered.
 -  The region's ubiquitous chaparral, those lion-colored hills of chamise, oak and manzanita, is an incitement to fire.
 -  In California's Santa Ynez Mountains, the striped insects tend to be more common on a plant called chamise while the unstriped ones predominate on blue lilac.
 -  Analysis of chamise, sampled from southern California shrublands, indicates that the ratio of dead to live components is not related reliably to age of shrub canopy.
 
 
 OriginMid 19th century: from Mexican Spanish chamiso.     |