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Etymology edit

(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

Adjective edit

estuarine (comparative more estuarine, superlative most estuarine)

  1. Of or pertaining to an estuary.
    • 1977, Sewell H. Hopkins, Sam R. Petrocelli, Limiting Factors Affecting the Commercial Fisheries in the Gulf of Mexico, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Estuarine Pollution Control and Assessment: Proceedings of a Conference, Volume 1, page 179,
      The shellfishes, by far the most valuable part of gulf coast commercial fisheries, are even more estuarine than the finfishes.
    • 1980, Joseph T. Kelley, “Sediment Introduction and Deposition in a Coastal Lagoon, Cape May, New Jersey”, in Victor S Kennedy, editor, Estuarine Perspectives, Academic Press, page 379:
      The small lagoons of southern New Jersey receive an insignificant input of freshwater from watersheds of Cape May Peninsula compared to larger, more estuarine bays to the north (Kran 1975).
    • 2000, Stephen J. M. Blaber, “Tropical Estuarine Fishes: Ecology, Exploitation and Conservation”, in Science, Blackwell, page 80:
      Some species are more estuarine than others, for example Pseudotolithus typus replaces P. senegalensis as conditions become more estuarine and Pentanemus quinquarius replaces Galeoides decadactylus.
  2. (geology) Formed in an estuary by alluvial deposition.

Derived terms edit

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Latin edit

Adjective edit

estuārīne

  1. vocative masculine singular of estuārīnus