View allAll Photos Tagged ResearchMethods
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November 10th, 2010
Spent the entire day and night working on a research methods project for school. Catrina, thank you, I appreciate all of your help.
I'm never opening up a newspaper again.. or talking about gender equality in news coverage.
Nikon D3s | 50mm 1.4 AF-D | 1/50 | f/2.8 | ISO 1600
Ian and Mandy sampling daisy flowers on a flank of Mount Faust for the Lincoln University course, Ecol393, Field Ecology Research.
Alison Stewart and Simon Fowler's Malaise trap, for insect sampling
attached to a trunk of
Fuchsia excorticata, tree fuchsia, kotukutuku (Plant, Onagraceae), New Zealand: Endemic
by a stream
Reynolds Valley
Below 160 Reynolds Valley Road
Okuti Valley
Banks Peninsula
Canterbury
New Zealand
Laura Molles (Lincoln University) radio tracking kiwi in the Hawdon. The pattern of beeps from the transmitters broadcasts their recent activity patterns. Laura listens carefully to the signals and jots down the data.
One of the moths that came into a light trap in the evening at the Boyle River Outdoor Education Centre.
Lepidopterist Brian Patrick runs a light trap for moths in Ernle Clark Reserve and shows locals some of the many moths that live there.
The first Bug Night in Ernle Clark Reserve, organised by Friends of Ernle Clark Reserve, the Canterbury Museum, and the Canterbury branch of the New Zealand Entomological Society.
Laura Molles (Lincoln University) radio tracking kiwi in the Hawdon. There's a pair of tagged kiwi in this forest,
One of the moths that came into a light trap in the evening at the Boyle River Outdoor Education Centre.
One of the moths that came into a light trap in the evening at the Boyle River Outdoor Education Centre.
Indi shares the hallmarks of a non-directed interview and how to guide these conversations accordingly. © JohnnyHolland.org