Per Chris Grinter, on August 15, 2011% RECUSATIO: Hoc autem non solum – sed et in magnis et pulchris familia Australia Xyloryctidae a tinea (Philarista sp.). Sed varius nunc paucis istis et repraesentativis fuerunt, super rubum MacRae habet atque in paucis imagines eorum Scarabei. Nescio quo pacto mihi videtur . . . → Lege plus: Lune Moth
Per Chris Grinter, on August 1st, 2011% Chiricahua multidentata (Geometrinae)
This Monday’s moth is a spectacular species from the mountains of Arizona – Chiricahua multidentata, a Geometrid. The only known location for this species is at the very top of the Chiricahua mountains above 9,000 feet (which was just bruned to a crisp). Hopefully the fire was not . . . → Lege plus: Lune Moth
Per Chris Grinter, July 18,, 2011% Peius 'volventes pila et post a photo cum Arctiinae hodie Ctenucha brunnea. Hoc tinea potest esse commune in via procera gramina beaches a San Francisco LA – licet in his decennis velut a tinea huius numeri sunt declinando habitat in interitum, et in litore herbam incursio (Ammophila Arenaria). Autem . . . → Lege plus: Lune Moth
Per Chris Grinter, die 20 mensis Iunii, 2011% Ego cum ista series et pila conantur plus iusto volvens. Et de singulis hebdomadis ingens dolor collectis quatenus hic novae Academiae Scientiarum ad California. Hoc mihi edem… Saltem pauci centum annos,.
Grammia . . . → Lege plus: Lune Moth
Per Chris Grinter, die 19 Aprilis, 2011%
Source: Vicipaedia
Ita fit, ut ratio nova Richard Branson; salvum facere anulum herbae lemuri (Lemuri catta) Donec a Britannicae Virginis Insulae interponeret. Articulus ostendit quomodo opera Branson annos consumpsit millions of libras et vertere in insula “the most ecologically . . . → Lege plus: Richard Branson stultus est
Per Chris Grinter, April 6,, 2011% CALLIDE – coeptus est: quia non pauca adhuc superest, plena imaginibus * in quaestione de larvae (Volo in tempore paucorum dierum,!). In volutpat, ego fuit extra cum a Berkeley amet alumni in monte de Hamilton et PhD candidatus Meghan Culpepper collegit pauca et quaedam sunt species Scaphinotus larvae! Itaque exemplum . . . → Lege plus: Mysterium Revelaed
Per Chris Grinter, on June 9th, 2010%
This recent article in the American Naturalist has taken a second look at some of the famously inflated species estimates, some going high as 100 million (Erwin, 1988). Estimates conducted by the authors indicate that projections above 30 million have probabilities of <0.00001. Their estimated range is more likely to be between 2.5 et . . . → Lege plus: Aestimationes Global species Diversity
Per Chris Grinter, on April 1, 2010% Sequentia sancti series aquamoth, this time with video from Science Friday! Etiam, Wordpress quia non habeo ut link embed… Thanks Ted, instar is sicco!
Per Chris Grinter, on March 25th, 2010% I came across the full-text PDF of the amphibious moth article and extracted the tree showing the radiation of this species group and probable evolution of the amphibious traits. Interesting to note the case shape, and each moth is endemic to its own volcano in the Hawaiian archipelago.
This is a Bayesian analysis of . . . → Lege plus: Aquamoth pars 2
Per Chris Grinter, die 24 Martii, 2010%
Another amazing animal from Hawaii – a completely amphibious caterpillar (published in the March 22 PNAS). While there are a few aquatic Lepidoptera, all of them have gills that keep them restricted to the water (cuius estis, we are talking only about the larval stage). If their stream dries up, so does the caterpillar. . . . → Lege plus: Aquamoth!
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Scepticismo
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