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Here is an animation by Lisa Roberts describing the development of Euphausia superba. Music by Sophie Green. Check out CreatureCast.org for more little stories about animals, and AntarcticAnimation.com for more work by Lisa Roberts. This video is released under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives license.
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American Robin foraging on the lawn in front of the National Gallery. 31 March 2010.
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Spread-winged Trio: Common Sootywing - Pholisora catullus, Common Checkered-Skipper - Pyrgus communis, Hayhurst's Scallopwing - Staphylus hayhurstiiDuration: 80 seconds
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South Pacific Ocean, Duration 11 seconds
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Coral Sea, Duration 16 seconds
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Dicotylichthys punctulatus is not the primary subject of the video clip; the primary subject is Monodactylus argenteus (Diamondfish). Coral Sea, Duration 31 seconds
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South Pacific Ocean, Duration 15 seconds
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Coral Sea, Duration 14 seconds
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Coral Sea, Duration 13 seconds
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Naso brevirostris is not the primary subject of the video clip; the primary subject is Labroides dimidiatus (Cleaner wrasse). Coral Sea, Schooling, Duration 7 seconds
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Giannis D Wreck, near Hurghada, Egypt
[taxonomy:binomial=Cheilinus undulatus]
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Here is an episode of CreatureCast made by Natividad Chen, an undergraduate in Casey Dunn's Invertebrate Zoology class at Brown University. The video was made as a final project and is released under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 license.
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American Robin bathing in the fountain of the National Museum of the American Indian. 10 May 2011.
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Late Season Southern Visitors: Sachem - Atalopedes campestris, Fiery Skipper - Hylephila phyleus, Long-tailed Skipper - Urbanus proteus, Clouded Skipper - Lerema accius, Ocola Skipper - Panoquina ocolaDuration: 189 seconds
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South Pacific Ocean, Shot at night, Duration 11 seconds
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Coral Sea, Duration 14 seconds
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Coral Sea, Duration 8 seconds
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South Pacific Ocean, Duration 14 seconds
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Coral Sea, Duration 5 seconds
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Coral Sea, Duration 28 seconds, Shot includes Pomacentrus coelestis (Neon damsel)
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Naso brevirostris is not the primary subject of the video clip; the primary subject is Pseudanthias squamipinnis (Scalefin anthias). South Pacific Ocean, Duration 28 seconds
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This is just a test. Please excuse the shaky camera.
I am testing a cheap USB microscope to film nocturnal critters under infrared light. The lighting is provided (for now) by an infrared flashlight on top of the aquarium. I've been testing several angles and definitely I need a snoot or something similar.
[taxonomy:kingdom=Animalia]
[taxonomy:phylum=Arthropoda]
[taxonomy:subphylum=Crustacea]
[taxonomy:class=Malacostraca]
[taxonomy:order=Tanaidacea]
[taxonomy:order=Amphipoda]
[taxonomy:class=Ostracoda]
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Maybe you've tasted chestnuts roasting over an open fire, but have you ever heard of the tragedy of the American chestnut? This species, Castanea dentata, is effectively extinct -- thanks to the forces of the ruthless fungus Cryphonectria parasitica, agent in the now infamous chestnut blight.Shara Azad from Erika Edwards' Plant Diversity course at Brown University (Biol0430) investigates what happened to those thousands of acres of American chestnut forests and what glimmers of hope there may be in the future. Music is by Mobster - freemusicarchive.org/music/Mobster/My_Sleep/02_-_Deep_forest.Special thanks to the Brown University Science Center and the Granoff Center for the Arts.
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Turkey Vulture swooping past the look-out tower.