View allAll Photos Tagged ECOSYSTEMS
Ecosystems: Redesigning Global Value Chains in a Post- COVID World | Commonwealth Business Forum - CHOGM Rwanda 2022
USACE Louisville District and MSD hosted a public meeting for the Three Forks of Beargrass Creek Ecosystem Restoration Study on Nov. 14, 2019 to gain public input on recommendations for improving the watershed.
1 año de la cátedra SMART Global Ecosystems
Photo by Pilar Valbuena/iuFOR
More information on iuFOR, please visit sostenible.palencia.uva.es
More information on Máster en Gestión Forestal Basada en Ciencia de Datos, please visit sostenible.palencia.uva.es/content/master-en-gestion-fore...
If you use one of our photos, please credit it accordingly and let us know.
You can reach us through our Flickr account or at: instituto@forest.uva.es.
This was a gorgeous hike. Further up the trai is the state champion shagbark hickory. Sumter National Forest, Long Cane Scenic Area on Long Cane Trail, Abbeville County, South Carolina
Just before the official start of Fall Quarter this past September, 20 students spent two weeks exploring the forests of central and southern Oregon as part of an intensive field course with Professor Jerry Franklin. (All photos by Dave Herman)
The Muddy Hollow Trail departs from Limantour Beach area and meanders by an estuary into the hills of Pt. Reyes National Seashore. California
In order to create the ecosystem that will be responsible for the overwhelming preponderance of net new jobs in Delaware’s future, we will need to inspire entrepreneurship in all segments of our community. This panel features successful Delaware entrepreneurs who share their entrepreneurial journey’s to inspire entrepreneurship in Delaware.
Cooperation and Communication are a good way to feed your heavier creatures and still have more than one animal in the game.
Tiny, bright orange hatchling spiders appeared today on the flower blossoming tip of one of my garden rue plants. This wee family is of a group of spiders called dysdera crocata, woodlouse hunters. They seek and prey on sowbugs, also known as pillbugs, which are little grey isopods, armored insects who roll up into tiny balls when threatened.
On the left side of the photo may be seen two ova, eggs, of the black swallowtail butterfly which will soon develop into small black and white caterpillars. A higher larval stage instar, or caterpillar, is partially hidden at far upper right behind the stem of one of the rue blossoms.
Snapstick’s technology is built on a standard Linux operating system, and can be built into new hardware boxes, or ported to a variety of existing hardware platforms to deliver a unique Internet TV experience. The end-product is a box with Snapstick’s software platform, connected to a TV through a standard HDMI port. The Snapstick system seamlessly connects your Internet devices and TV over a WiFi network.
Snapstick is currently in discussions with several hardware, systems and consumer electronics companies who are bringing the product to market.
To learn more about Snapstick, or to explore partnership opportunities, please contact us at info@snapstick.com.
Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation with Mangrove Ecosystems
Introducing Mangrove Ecosystems Strategies to the Climate Change Agenda
29 April 2024, CIFOR-ICRAF Bogor Campus
Photo by Bima Satria Yudha/CIFOR-ICRAF
If you use one of our photos, please credit it accordingly and let us know. You can reach us through our Flickr account or at: news@cifor-icraf.org and a.sanjaya@cifor-icraf.org
Kailaasa is the Enlightenment Ecosystem. #OnenessSwami #Nithyananda #Enlightenment #HinduSampradaya #innerawakening #Integrity #Authenticity #Responsibility #Enriching #Causing #EnlightenmentScience #CosmicScience #Hinduism #Kailaasa #KailaasaTheHinduNation www.bit.ly/OnenessSwamiFB www.bit.ly/OnenessSwamiYT Instagram - as Oneness Swami TikTok as Oneness Swami 🎉😂Going viral on TikTok www.kailaasa.org Kailaasavasi.kailaasa.org
Local residents remove rock from a river in Dumaguete to sell - a practice that's illegal in the United States because it kills water ecosystems, but is a part of these people's only survival mechanisms. Removal of the rocks causes sediment to settle at the bottom of the river, and causes the water to get absorbed into the soil, perpetually shortening the river's chances of survival, and causing torrential floods during wet periods.