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Q&A with artist Julya Hajnoczky

Article content So the exhibition is called “Habitats.” In my work as a visual artist, I’m really interested in exploring the ways that humans interact with nature and I’m also really interested in the interconnections that exist in ecosystems. I guess you could call my work photography, it’s a little bit of an unconventional process that I use. So I go out to different places I’ve been exploring, mostly in Western Canada. I study those places and just sort of have some time getting to know them. And while I’m there I collect small amounts of natural materials from the place and it’s just sort of a sampling of the representative species I guess that might give you an idea of the landscape. I arrange them on a very high resolution flatbed scanner. And that’s what I used to take those photographs.

Raptor Center faces budget crisis as it marks milestone

Raptor Center faces budget crisis as it marks milestone Support Local Journalism Pandemic fallout hits renowned bird-of-prey rehab facility Since 1972, the California Raptor Center at UC Davis has rehabilitated thousands of injured and orphaned birds of prey. Each year, the center takes in roughly 300 sick or injured raptors and returns about 60% of them to the wild. The center also provides hands-on training and education to school programs, ecological organizations and the university community. “We have multiple generations In Davis that have learned about the outdoor world from the Raptor Center,” said Dr. Michelle Hawkins, the center’s director. “Parents tell us the Raptor Center made such an impression on them that they are bringing their children here.”

Branching worm with dividing internal organs growing in sea sponge

 E-Mail IMAGE: Fragment of the anterior end of an individual living worm (Ramisyllis multicaudata) dissected out of its host sponge. Bifurcation of the gut can be seen where the worm branches. The. view more  Credit: Ponz-Segrelles & Glasby The marine worm Ramisyllis multicaudata, which lives within the internal canals of a sponge, is one of only two such species possessing a branching body, with one head and multiple posterior ends. An international research team led by the Universities of Göttingen and Madrid is the first to describe the internal anatomy of this intriguing animal. The researchers discovered that the complex body of this worm spreads extensively in the canals of their host sponges. In addition, they describe the anatomical details and nervous system of its unusual reproductive units, the stolons, which form their own brain when detached for fertilization, allowing them to navigate their environment. The results were published in the

Branching worm with dividing internal organs growing in sea sponge

Branching worm with dividing internal organs growing in sea sponge
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