Caridea – Invertebrate Zoology https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/iz/resources/guam-reefs/caridea/
Caridea
5 Bibliography Adventures in Spineless Science Blog Discover Invertebrates Links
Caridea
5 Bibliography Adventures in Spineless Science Blog Discover Invertebrates Links
Cephalopoda
5 Bibliography Adventures in Spineless Science Blog Discover Invertebrates Links
An Expedition to Indonesia by Lawrence M. Page; compiled by J. Grosso and G. E. Sheehy In an expedition sponsored by the All Catfish Species Inventory (ACSI), Larry Page, Andres Lopez, and Robert Robins from the Florida Museum of Natural History traveled to the island of Sumatra, Indonesia, in late
Exhibits + Public Programs Collaboration Digitized specimens Books References + Links
About 35,560 species of extant fishes are known, and approximately 15,292 species, or 43% of all fish species live in freshwater. This diversity is extraordinary when we realize that freshwater fishes occupy less than 0.01% of Earth’s water volume (~97% is oceanic; ~3% is brackish), and that thousa
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Florida Museum of Natural History
List of previous webinars (from 2020) and links to recordings Contact Info McGuire
Mississippian Period (Fort Walton & Safety Harbor) Types
Oklahoma) Caribbean Pottery Publications Florida Pottery References Useful Links
Education and public outreach initiatives are important components of the smalltooth sawfish recovery plan. In this section, you will find information useful in further educating and answering common questions the public may have on the conservation status of sawfish. Signs and Brochures Saw
Sawfish Classroom Activities Links National Marine Fisheries Service – Smalltooth
O ur invertebrate paleontology lab is located within one of the most comprehensive research centers of paleontology in North America: the Florida Museum of Natural History, recognized internationally for research on fossil invertebrates, vertebrates, and plants. As a major and rapidly growing resear
Related Links UF Geological Sciences UF Biology UF Anthropology Paleontological
ORANGEFIN MADTOM Noturus gilberti Jordan & Evermann 1889 Identification: The Orangefin Madtom has a slender body and a flat head with the upper jaw projecting beyond the lower jaw. The body is olive or brown above and pale yellow or white below. The fins are dark with light yellow or white e
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WIDEMOUTH BLINDCAT Satan eurystomus Hubbs & Bailey 1947 Identification: The Widemouth Blindcat is one of four species of North American catfishes that lack eyes and dark pigments. These species are white or pink in color and are found in aquifers in Mexico and in the Edwards Plateau in Texas
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