Features – Page 3 – Research News https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/science/topic/our-stories/features/page/3/
from the Florida Museum of Natural History
2018 Mud in your shoes and a squirming turtle in hand
from the Florida Museum of Natural History
2018 Mud in your shoes and a squirming turtle in hand
from the Florida Museum of Natural History
2018 Mud in your shoes and a squirming turtle in hand
from the Florida Museum of Natural History
Now rotate your hand 90 degrees to give a thumbs-up
Florida Museum of Natural History
2020 I’ve been called eccentric for sticking my hand
Around the globe,scientists are ringing alarm bells about coral bleaching—when corals expel their symbiotic, food-producing algae due to heat stress, they can starve and die—one of the most alarming aspects of this to marine invertebrate researcher Gustav Paulay is that our heating planet may be kil
tows, brushing of rubble, light traps, baited traps, hand
from the Florida Museum of Natural History
2005 A trendy holiday gift within a decade may be a hand-held
from the Florida Museum of Natural History
Now rotate your hand 90 degrees to give a thumbs-up
Scientists determine how animals are related by comparing the characteristics they share or don’t share. It behooves you to know that horses belong to a group of mammals called ungulates, which are animals with hooves, or hard coverings that protect their toes and are an amazing feature for running.
This appendage serves almost like a hand on their face
Bluntnose Stingray Dasyatis say This medium sized stingray (growing to 39 inches wide at most) has the classic rounded diamond shaped disc but a distinctively blunt snout, with a tail one and a half times its body length bearing a serrated venomous spine. It is yellowish to light gray on top
Upper right-hand tooth band from female bluntnose stingray
Our biological research initiatives concerning sharks, skates and rays are numerous and diverse, ranging from studies on relative abundance and distribution, to systematics and evolutionary relationships. Diversity of chondrichthyan fishes is a major focus of research at the FPSR, where scientists a
All PacBio, HiC, 10x data in hand. assembly in progress