Sea Star Time-lapse
Hole-in-the-Wall - Mora Beach
Olympic Peninsula, Washington
This is one day of shots, not edited. The first scene is tiny barnacles on a rock with little black snails.
Sea Star Time-lapse
Hole-in-the-Wall - Mora Beach
Olympic Peninsula, Washington
This is one day of shots, not edited. The first scene is tiny barnacles on a rock with little black snails.
National Geographic - Toxic nudibranchs—soft, seagoing slugs—produce a brilliant defense
Nudibranchs crawl through life as slick and naked as a newborn. Snail kin whose ancestors shrugged off the shell millions of years ago, they are just skin, muscle, and organs sliding on trails of slime across ocean floors and coral heads the world over.
Found from sandy shallows and reefs to the murky seabed nearly a mile down, nudibranchs thrive in waters both warm and cold and even around billowing deep-sea vents. Members of the gastropod class, and more broadly the mollusks, the mostly finger-size morsels live fully exposed, their gills forming tufts on their backs. (Nudibranch means "naked gill," a feature that separates them from other sea slugs.) Although they can release their muscular foothold to tumble in a current—a few can even swim freely—they are rarely in a hurry. (more in the Feature Article...
Plants have an important part in our lives, from the clothes on our back to the food that we eat. Plant Cultures invites you to discover more about South Asian plants and the stories they have inspired.
Plant Cultures - Exploring Plants & People
(Note: Wasn't sure whether too post this here or somewhere else. I guess this is as good a place as any.)
A Fantastic Flickr set with macro shots of Spider and Insect Eyes
This is a Swedish page, but the pictures are self-explanatory :
take a warm blanket,check full screen and get enchanted - don't forget to replay :
Stunning photography! Tristan Campbell is an extraordinary and modest photographer who's categories include landscapes, seascapes, skies, trees, sunsets, sunrises and more. You won't be disappointed!
"There are approximately 10,000 bird species on this beautiful planet. Here at 10,000 Birds we expect to not only see but eventually photograph or write about every single one! (I know, we have ambitions bigger than Saturn, but it does no harm to dream…)"
"Anyway, your hosts are developing a serious interest in photography. We’ve consequently begun to amass a rather large collection of photos, and rather than squirrel them away on our hard-drives we’ve decided that you may like to see them instead."
Some Tasmanian bugs :
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nz-FYhiQFY4
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I hope this vid complies with the strong rules of this thread ;)
Had these two links before in an other thread; I think, they belong in here :
http://www.nationalgeographic.com/geographyaction/habitats/
http://commtechlab.msu.edu/sites/dLc-me/zoo/index.html
buglox
Here is a link to The Giants Causeway, a natural rock formation, formed 60 million years ago!, and proposed as the eight wonder of the world, to be named by Lisbon in 2010?
http://www.lookaroundireland.com/scenicinteractive/giantscauseway.htm
I love those owls...
http://www.birdsofthebay.com/p566008957/
http://blog.birdsofthebay.com/
didIsayIlovetheowlslox
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