View allAll Photos Tagged ECOLOGY

Living, learning and loving the outdoors.

Acclaimed international artist Luba Lukova will give a lecture on Oct. 21, 2009 at OSU. Her exhibit is currently on display at the Fairbanks Gallery on campus. October 2009. contributed image. See story: oregonstate.edu/ua/ncs/archives/2009/oct/internationally-...

 

taken using werra film camera. highway from prague to budapest

The French actor Lambert Wilson during his visit to Haiti. The UN Stabilization Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH) organised Mr. Wilson’s trip, which will span Port-au-Prince to areas in the south of the country to see UN-supported environmental and cultural programmes.

 

UN Photo/Igor Rugwiza

30 April 2013

Haiti

Photo # 551021

Students are getting to work on their Human Ecology Class projects. This semester we have a wide variety of projects going on such as film advocacy, star charting, soap making, trailblazing, dive platform construction, up-cycling, and more.

 

Rufous Antpitta (Grallaria rufula) hopping along the rainforest floor at the Tapichalaca reserve in southeast Ecuador.

Ecology New Life Concept Illustration

Junior Ecology Group members testing out Mick Bustin's "Ecology Hunt", which has been devised for the forthcoming school visits

I don't recall the exact name of this building in Baddeck, but it was all about educating folks about the local ecology. A fellow there told me that Bras d'Or Lake has a similar root as Labrador. I think the old map he showed me had it as La Bras d'Or.

The BSS building has five floors with these study nooks.

Monitoring long-term alpine ecology plots on Mt. Dunderberg on the Bridgeport Ranger District of the Humboldt-Toiyabe National Forest for the Global Observation And Research In Alpine Environments (GLORIA) Project. This plot location was established in 2004 and is resurveyed every five years by agency personnel and volunteers working with the GLORIA group. Panoramic featuring Mono Lake on the left, Mt. Dunderberg summit near the middle, and sections of the Hoover Wilderness from the center to the right. Forest Service photo by Tim Kellison.

Monitoring long-term alpine ecology plots on Mt. Dunderberg for the Global Observation And Research In Alpine Environments (GLORIA) Project. This plot location was established in 2004 and is resurveyed every five years by agency personnel and volunteers working with the GLORIA group. Photo displays surveyors collecting data, mostly volunteers, with Mono Lake in the background. Forest Service photo by Tim Kellison.

Thank you, Kim and Matt's Urban Ecology Center Wedding in Milwaukee WI, Valo Photography, info@valophotography.com

Students are getting to work on their Human Ecology Class projects. This semester we have a wide variety of projects going on such as film advocacy, star charting, soap making, trailblazing, dive platform construction, up-cycling, and more.

 

Students are getting to work on their Human Ecology Class projects. This semester we have a wide variety of projects going on such as film advocacy, star charting, soap making, trailblazing, dive platform construction, up-cycling, and more.

 

Students are getting to work on their Human Ecology Class projects. This semester we have a wide variety of projects going on such as film advocacy, star charting, soap making, trailblazing, dive platform construction, up-cycling, and more.

 

This is a picture of two geese I found walking next to Lake St. Benedict. Geese, like many animals, are important to our environment because of there ability to fertilize the soil. When geese eat plants the seeds are sometimes consumed as well. The seeds are then dispersed when the goose poops. This is good for the environment because it spreads out the location of plants and gives the soil nutrients. #BenU #Ecology #BIOL180 #Fall2019 #image1

Students are getting to work on their Human Ecology Class projects. This semester we have a wide variety of projects going on such as film advocacy, star charting, soap making, trailblazing, dive platform construction, up-cycling, and more.

 

(Behind UNCW campus) I spotted this Buck Moth (Quercus laurifolia) caterpillar behind UNCW campus. The Buck Moth spends much of its juvenile stage on Oak trees canopies feeding on leaves. Normally this feeding is not life-threatening for the oak but year after year of heavy feeding will damage the tree. Six to eight weeks after hatching the caterpillars drop from the tree and look for places to pupate. At this point Buck Moth Caterpillars rely on their spines to protect themselves from predators. The spines are hollow and connected to a poison sac and can cause painful stings. These spines are known as constitutive defenses.

Students are getting to work on their Human Ecology Class projects. This semester we have a wide variety of projects going on such as film advocacy, star charting, soap making, trailblazing, dive platform construction, up-cycling, and more.

 

If I remember correctly these trucks haul about 25 tons of waste probably making 3 to 4 runs a day depending on traffic and Landfill conditions.

Students are getting to work on their Human Ecology Class projects. This semester we have a wide variety of projects going on such as film advocacy, star charting, soap making, trailblazing, dive platform construction, up-cycling, and more.

 

Students are getting to work on their Human Ecology Class projects. This semester we have a wide variety of projects going on such as film advocacy, star charting, soap making, trailblazing, dive platform construction, up-cycling, and more.

 

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