View allAll Photos Tagged Ecosystem
Quite a brightly coloured fungus collection here, on a tree stump. Paging the fungus expert....cos I haven't a clue what they are
Chrysocephalum apiculatim
Common name: Common Everlasting, Yellow Buttons
Photographer: Lorraine Oliver
For more information go to PLANTnet
plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&am...
This site is supported by:
The Grassy Box Woodlands Conservation Managment Network www.gbwcmn.net.au/node/3
NSW Department of Environment, Climate Change and Water www.environment.nsw.gov.au/
ESP10 - 10 years advancing ecosystem services science, policy and practice for a sustainable future.
22 October 2019, Hannover Congress Centre
The hustle and bustle of Melbourne coupled with Melbourne's biggest ScaleUps. Photos by Tim Carrafa.
The hustle and bustle of Melbourne coupled with Melbourne's biggest ScaleUps. Photos by Tim Carrafa.
Goodenia hederacea
Common Name: Forest Goodenia, Ivy Goodenia
Photographer: Lorraine Oliver
For more information go to PLANTnet
plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&am...
This site is supported by:
The Grassy Box Woodlands Conservation Managment Network www.gbwcmn.net.au/node/3
NSW Department of Environment, Climate Change and Water www.environment.nsw.gov.au/
The hustle and bustle of Melbourne coupled with Melbourne's biggest ScaleUps. Photos by Tim Carrafa.
The hustle and bustle of Melbourne coupled with Melbourne's biggest ScaleUps. Photos by Tim Carrafa.
The hustle and bustle of Melbourne coupled with Melbourne's biggest ScaleUps. Photos by Tim Carrafa.
Cesar Harada & Owen Hodgkinson designing and building the nomadic ecosystem floats :
2009/11/25 design from this page :
sites.google.com/a/opensailing.net/www/labs/instinctive_a...
Students in one of my classrooms were studying water cycles so we built ecosystems in a bottle. The top was soil from the Long Island Sound and vegetation. The bottom was Long Island Sound water and algae. The systems were connected by a wick. Students polluted the top of the ecosystem and observed what happened to the water and algae below.
The hustle and bustle of Melbourne coupled with Melbourne's biggest ScaleUps. Photos by Tim Carrafa.
The hustle and bustle of Melbourne coupled with Melbourne's biggest ScaleUps. Photos by Tim Carrafa.
Maryland Environmental Service, on behalf of the Maryland Port Administration, works with local organizations and schools to place hatchling terrapins in classrooms. The juvenile turtles from the Paul S. Sarbanes Ecosystem Restoration Project at Poplar Island live in classrooms from fall through the following spring.
Students provide all care to the terrapins. They collect growth data, observe behaviors, learn care and husbandry protocol, and research the natural history of our state reptile. Head starting allows the hatchlings to grow to the size of a 2-3 year old wild juvenile terrapin in just 6 months.
After caring for the hatchlings, students bring the terrapins back to Poplar Island where they are released to the Bay. This hands-on learning experience engages students to take action and better understand the restoration of the Chesapeake Bay.
Mangrove canopy photo taken during Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR) study on above-ground and below-ground biomass in mangrove ecosystems, part of Sustainable Wetlands Adaptation and Mitigation Program (SWAMP). Kubu Raya, West Kalimantan, Indonesia.
Photo by Sigit Deni Sasmito/CIFOR
Related research publication on mangrove:
Mangroves among the most carbon-rich forests in the tropics
www.cifor.org/online-library/browse/view-publication/publ...
Carbon storage in mangrove and peatland ecosystems
www.cifor.org/online-library/browse/view-publication/publ...
For more information about CIFOR’s wetlands research visit: cifor.org/swamp
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: cifor-mediainfo@cgiar.org and m.edliadi@cgiar.org
This photo was taken during a site visit for the GEF Blue Forest project www.gefblueforests.org
For any form of publication, please include the link to this page: www.grida.no/resources/11106
This photo has been graciously provided to be used in the GRID-Arendal resources library by: Rob Barnes
The hustle and bustle of Melbourne coupled with Melbourne's biggest ScaleUps. Photos by Tim Carrafa.
The hustle and bustle of Melbourne coupled with Melbourne's biggest ScaleUps. Photos by Tim Carrafa.
The hustle and bustle of Melbourne coupled with Melbourne's biggest ScaleUps. Photos by Tim Carrafa.
A photo of bushes and a man-made bicycle rack. The difference in the abiotic component in this terrestrial ecosystem and an abiotic component in aquatic ecosystem is that the pavement (which is non-living) doesn't contribute to the life cycle of any organisms in this area. The bushes may help support the life of different insects and organisms by providing shelter and food.
Building a platform that communicates with your enterprise ecosystem to deliver context-aware intelligence has never been easier.
self-portrait at the University Museum of Natural History. I occasionally need author portraits for various publishing activities and had a little session at the OUM trying to get one with an interesting background. While I don't normally write about butterflies, their colourful diversity reflects my work in other ways ...