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- Forest Products Commission
- Forest Products Commission

... For fauna like the Quokka, species decline is predominantly due to fox predation. Therefore, one important management strategy is the implementation of additional fox baiting before, during and after harvesting disturbance where species vulnerable to fox predation may be located. Part of this fox ba ...
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... Barking Owl (Ninox connivens) Barking Owls are found throughout Australia, except for the central and arid regions. The species has a wide, but sparse distribution in NSW where it inhabits eucalypt woodland, open forest, swamp woodlands and, especially in inland areas, timber along watercourses. It ...
Suggested Guidelines For Reptile Enrichment
Suggested Guidelines For Reptile Enrichment

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PowerPoint - New Mexico FFA

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Word File - UNESCO World Heritage Centre
Word File - UNESCO World Heritage Centre

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Managing and Directing Natural Succession

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No Slide Title

... Guidelines for use This presentation was created by staff of The Nature Conservancy's Wildland Invasive Species Team. It describes many of the consequences of non-native plant species invasions in wildlands. If you use this presentation unaltered, please include the first page which gives us credit ...
Population and Community Ecology
Population and Community Ecology

... 5. Some organisms can fill multiple trophic levels. For example, in the food web shown on the previous page, squid can be secondary consumers (if you follow this food chain within the food web: phytoplankton  copepods  squid) or tertiary consumers (if you follow this food chain within the food web ...
Chapter 10 Notes Cornell
Chapter 10 Notes Cornell

... An exotic species is a species that is not native to a particular region. Even familiar organisms such as cats and rats are considered to be exotic species when they are brought to regions where they never lived before. Exotic species can threaten native species that have no natural defenses against ...
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... A. A relationship between two species where both species benefit. B. A relationship between two species where neither species benefits C. A relationship between two species where one species benefits and the other is not affected D. A relationship between two species where one species benefits and t ...
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... the angiosperm are composed of small isolated plants that float on the water surface. While both can reproduce sexually, they also reproduce asexually by fission, and it is this process that we will follow. Azolla exists symbiotically with a blue-green cyanophyte. Do you think this would have any ef ...
Bio 152 L. R. Fox INTERSPECIFIC COMPETITION Review from your
Bio 152 L. R. Fox INTERSPECIFIC COMPETITION Review from your

... 2. As competition gets weaker (the effect of S1 on S2 declines) and α21 gets smaller, the slope of the line for S2 moves to the right along the x-axis (see above). Once interspecific competition gets so weak these lines cross (but only in the way shown below!!), both species can survive because FOR ...
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02 Herbivory Rubric

... Relative to a constitutive defense, how does an inducible defense benefit the plant? Lowers cost of defense; only makes chemical if needed. What is one potential negative aspect of an inducible defense? It may not be able to make it before being consumed. 8. Observation: Showshoe hares eat young sh ...
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... Relative to a constitutive defense, how does an inducible defense benefit the plant? Lowers cost of defense; only makes chemical if needed. What is one potential negative aspect of an inducible defense? It may not be able to make it before being consumed. 8. Observation: Showshoe hares eat young sh ...
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Bifrenaria



Bifrenaria, abbreviated Bif. in horticultural trade, is a genus of plant in family Orchidaceae. It contains 20 species found in Panama, Trinidad and South America. There are no known uses for them, but their abundant, and at first glance artificial, flowers, make them favorites of orchid growers.The genus can be split in two clearly distinct groups: one of highly robust plants with large flowers, that encompass the first species to be classified under the genus Bifrenaria; other of more delicate plants with smaller flowers occasionally classified as Stenocoryne or Adipe. There are two additional species that are normally classified as Bifrenaria, but which molecular analysis indicate to belong to different orchid groups entirely. One is Bifrenaria grandis which is endemic to Bolívia and which is now placed in Lacaena, and Bifrenaria steyermarkii, an inhabitant of the northern Amazon Forest, which does not have an alternative classification.
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