View allAll Photos Tagged EVOLUTION
I took a photo today of fog rolling over the South Downs National Park.....somehow it evolved into this.....I hope you like it... :-)
© All rights reserved Steve Fitch. Please do not use this image on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit written permission
... un petit café s'il vous plait ! Moulin à café de mes parents
qu'ils utilisaient encore dans les années 1955
- Il n'est pas meilleur bonheur que celui d'apprécier les petites choses de la vie - Bruno Guilliard
Pour voir plus d'images de ma 1 ère galerie www.flickr.com/photos/131526630@N02
hair DOUX – Nansi new @ Tres Chic
head Genus Project – Genus Head – Baby Face W001
skin Session - Sara for Genus new @ eBENTO
bikini Blueberry - Sunny cloud
scales Izzie's - Mermaid makeup new @ Summerfest 2019
shoes CandyDoll - Ayashe cherry
pose Kokoro Poses - Nara bonus pose 6 new @ eBENTO
Marble statue of Charles Darwin (1809-1882). In Hintze Hall in the Natural History Museum, South Kensington, London. The life-sized statue weighs 2.2 tonnes. Unveiled in 1885, created by Sir Joseph Boehm.
Visitors of the Ars Electronica Center in Linz are in for a real treat: With Deep Space EVOLUTION the can embark on journeys through the universe, can experience virtual anatomy, play interactive games with the help of laser-tracking, explore gigapixel images of world-famous paintings, etc.
Find out more about the Ars Electronica Center: ars.electronica.art/center/en/
En esta fotografia muestro la evolución del amanecer,como va comiendole terreno sobre el plano a la oscuridad(creare un album para mostrar esta evolución con una serie de fotografias tomadas el mismo dia
Older style 30-pin connector for the first types of Apple devices, superseded by the later Lightning connector.
For Macro Mondays task of ‘Pins’.
Just to confuse everybody who claim that I have a recognisable style: A cartoon from Glennz made in real Lego.
Toy Project Day 2550
It’s not hard for the snail kite to plan its daily menu. The endangered raptor eats only one food: apple snails, and a lot of them—10,000 a year per bird. Catching the freshwater snails is a laborsome venture that involves waiting until the snail comes to the surface to breathe and—at the exact right moment—swooping down to grab it. Employing its perfectly adapted curved beak, the kite then extracts its escargot and repeats the process 27 more times, every day.
This specialist bird has been hit hard by habitat declines and other changes in the Florida wetlands it calls home. From 2000 to 2007, scientists noticed a steep decline in the number of snail kites, owing in part to two major droughts that left their wetlands parched. The decline was also affected by the rarity of the apple snail, which lives in a very particular habitat and has a relatively short lifespan. Without its snails, the snail kite's chances of survival were looking poor—until an unlikely invader found its way to Florida.
It turns out there is more than one variety of apple snail. The non-native South American apple snail likely made its way to the Sunshine State via the pet trade, possibly when a rash aquarium owner released the species into the wild. The South American snail, which can grow to nearly the size of a tennis ball, quickly outpaced its native cousin, which is only the size of a ping-pong ball. It lays more eggs, lives longer, and can adapt to more diverse habitats than the native variety, and so spread widely all over the Florida wetlands.
You may sense where this story is going. A recent study in Nature Ecology & Evolution found that the snail kite has rapidly evolved so as to be able to forage on this new, larger prey. The bills of the raptor, says Robert Fletcher, coauthor of the study and associate professor in the department of wildlife ecology and conservation at the University of Florida, have increased in size since the invasion of the South American snail.
“Bill size and shape are heritable, meaning that birds with larger bills pass the trait onto their offspring, and larger-billed birds have a higher survival rate,” says Fletcher. Parent kites that are able to handle the larger apple snail bring it back to their young, who are more likely to grow stronger, survive, and breed in turn. The first couple months of life are the most dangerous for young snail kites, who are just learning how to forage on their own and aren’t yet skilled at it. “Bigger-bill snail kites seem to survive much better during this time,” says Fletcher. The result: Numbers of large-bill snail kites have tripled in the past decade.
I found this Female at Three Lakes Wildlife Management Area, Prairie Division, in Osceola County, Florida.
29. Evolution
122 in 2022
The apparent evolutionary success of Grevillea (Proteaceae family) might have been triggered by the highly efficient use of key nutrients. Research suggests that Grevillea plants have a selective advantage in nutrient-poor ecosystems and that this property likely contributed to Grevillea’s evolutionary success.
This could explain the rapid diversification over a relatively short evolutionary time period of Grevillea, an Australian plant genus with 452 recognised species/subspecies and ‘only’ 11 million years of evolutionary history.
[Source: www.nature.com/articles/srep17132]
Created for Treat This 124 in the Kreative People Group www.flickr.com/groups/1752359@N21/discuss/72157665885952891/
Many thanks to Xandram for the source image which you can see in the first comment box below or here
www.flickr.com/photos/xandram/25555449740/
All other photos and textures are my own
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Yes, I know about "how cute" and "who can resist?" We had her over a couple of times and she does know us. Even more, she seems to see us as part of her family. In fact, I believe that she regards herself as a "child" belonging to a family of humans. She made it perfectly clear that she has certain expectations in terms of participating in our social life, eating our kind of food - almost asking for equality and fair play. Now my question is, how does evolution work in this case? Did dogs evolve to bond with humans? Did humans develop affinity to dogs? Or, is there a process of mutual co-evolution or even co-assimilation?
Fuji X-E2 plus Mitakon Speedmaster at F0.95.
The evolution of pastakind in one picture.
Exploring the theme "Macro - Begins with the Letter P"
This photo has been taken using a 50mm Pentax M lens mounted reversed with an inversion ring.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
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