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Wells Reserve at Laudholm announces June programs
Portsmouth Herald
Tuesday, June 1, 7-10 a.m.
Bird Banding Demonstration. Visit the bird banding station at the Wells Reserve at Laudholm, where scientists from the Biodiversity Research Institute and the Maine Medical Center Research Institute study bird migration, breeding activities, life spans, and vector ecology. Free with site admission. 342 Laudholm Farm Road, Wells. 207-646-1555 wellsreserve.org
Tuesday, June 1, 10 a.m to 12.p.m
Explore the Shore. The treasures we find on the beach can tell us stories about the land, the ocean, and the beach itself. While strolling Laudholm Beach, we will explore questions about the sand, the wrack line, and found objects. Free with site admission. Register at 207-646-1555 ext 110 or caryn@wellsnerr.org. For more information, wellsreserve.org/calendar
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IMAGE: This endemism of the terrestrial malacological fauna in Catalonia was described more than a hundred years ago in the Montserrat mountain. view more
Credit: Vicenç Bros
A study published in the journal
Scientific Reports reveals the genetic structure of the land snail Xerocrassa montserratensis and it provides new scientific tools for the improvement of the conservation of this endemic and threatened species in Catalonia. This land mollusc, identified in the late 19th century in the Montserrat mountain, has a reduced geographical distribution limited to the province of Barcelona, and it is a protected species in the area of the natural parks of Montserrat and Sant Llorenç del Munt i l Obac.
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IMAGE: Scanning electronic microscope images of gyrogonites of the new species Mesochara dobrogeica (above) and the utricles of the new Clavator ampullaceus var. latibracteatus variety (below) found in the region of. view more
Credit: Cretaceous Research
A study published in
Cretaceous Research expands the paleontological richness of continental fossils of the Lower Cretaceous with the discovery of a new water plant (charophytes), the species Mesochara dobrogeica. The study also identifies a new variety of carophytes from the Clavator genus (in particular, Clavator ampullaceus var. latibracteatus) and reveals a set of paleobiographical data from the Cretaceous much richer than other continental records such as dinosaurs .
Date Time
Researchers find biogeographical affinity in Cretaceous flora from two islands of old Tethys Ocean
Scanning electronic microscope images of gyrogonites of the new species Mesochara dobrogeica (above) and the utricles of the new Clavator ampullaceus var. atibracteatus variety (below) found in the region of Dobrogea (Romania).
Palaeographic map of Tethys Ocean during Lower Cretaceous (Berriasian, 140 million years) with the distribution of some species of charophytes found for the first time in the paleo-island of Hateg (Romania).
A study published in Cretaceous Research expands the paleontological richness of continental fossils of the Lower Cretaceous with the discovery of a new water plant (charophytes), the species Mesochara dobrogeica. The study also identifies a new variety of carophytes from the Clavator genus (in particular, Clavator ampullaceus var. latibracteatus) and reveals a set of paleobiographical data from the Cretaceous much richer than other continental