Clevelandia (other)
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Clevelandia (other)
Clevelandia may refer to: * Clevelândia, a municipality in Brazil * Clevelândia do Norte, a village in Amapá, Brazil * '' Clevelandia beldingii'', a plant in the broomrape family Orobanchaceae * ''Clevelandia ios The arrow goby (''Clevelandia ios'') is a species of goby native to marine and brackish waters of the Pacific coast of North America from British Columbia to Baja California. This species grows to a length of SL, though most do not exceed TL ...'', a fish in the family Gobiidae {{disambiguation, genus ...
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Clevelândia
Clevelândia is a municipality in the state of Paraná in the Southern Region of Brazil. Its name is an homage to American president Grover Cleveland. The municipality contains part of the buffer zone of the Mata Preta Ecological Station The Mata Preta Ecological Station ( pt, Estação Ecológica da Mata Preta) is an ecological station in the state of Santa Catarina, Brazil. It preserves fragments of Atlantic Forest vegetation, including endangered plant and animal species. Loc ..., a fully protected area created in 2005. See also * List of municipalities in Paraná References Municipalities in Paraná {{ParanáBR-geo-stub ...
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Clevelândia Do Norte
Clevelândia do Norte is a district of the Brazilian city of Oiapoque, Amapá, by the Oyapock River. History In 1922 an agricultural outpost called the Núcleo Colonial Cleveland was transformed into a political and criminal concentration camp during the presidency of Arthur Bernardes (1922–1926). Many Brazilian anarchist militants were sentenced to hard labour here. Of the 946 prisoners interned at Clevelândia between 1924 and 1927, 491 died. Many of the survivors returned to São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro permanently sickened with malaria. Since 1940, the 34th Infantry Battalion of Selva is stationed at Clevelândia do Norte. Vila Brasil The village of Vila Brasil is located in the district on the Oiapoque River opposite Camopi, French Guiana. The village is inside the Tumucumaque Mountains National Park. Vila Brasil was founded in the 1930s as a tiny hamlet around the post of the Indian Protection Service. In the 1980s, it developed into a commercial centre catering to t ...
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Clevelandia Beldingii
''Castilleja beldingii'' is a species of hemiparasitic plant in the broomrape family, formerly the only species in the genus ''Clevelandia'', it was moved to the genus '' Castilleja'', the 'indian paintbrushes', in 2009. Taxonomy Edward Lee Greene first described it as ''Orthocarpus beldingi'' in 1885, but he later reclassified it in the monotypic genus ''Clevelandia'' in the ''Bulletin of the California Academy of Sciences'' in 1886. The spelling was later correct to ''beldingii''. However, Greene reclassified it invalidly, the German taxonomist Karl August Otto Hoffmann rectified this and published Greene's name correctly in Adolf Engler's classic ''Die natürlichen Pflanzenfamilien'' in 1893. After molecular phylogenetic work, Tank ''et al'' moved it to the large genus '' Castilleja'' in 2009. The lectotype was collected in the Sierra La Victoria by the American ornithologist Lyman Belding during his expedition to Baja California in 1883. It was only designated as su ...
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Clevelandia Ios
The arrow goby (''Clevelandia ios'') is a species of goby native to marine and brackish waters of the Pacific coast of North America from British Columbia to Baja California. This species grows to a length of SL, though most do not exceed TL. This fish can also be found displayed in public aquaria. This species is the only known member of its genus. Description The arrow goby is a small, pale grey, translucent fish which grows to in length. It has two dorsal fins; the first is the shorter and has 4-5 spines while the dorsal fin has 15-17 soft fin rays. The anal fin is about equal in length to the second dorsal fin and has 14-17 fin rays. Like other gobies, the caudal fin is rounded and the pectoral fins form a cone which the goby uses to prop the anterior part of its body above the substrate. Its scales are minute, and the mouth extends beyond to the eye. The dorsal fins have short horizontal stripes and the body is pale brownish-grey in colour with darker mottling. Di ...
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