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Topic: A pair of species


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In the News (Thu 16 Feb 12)

  
  Duck at exZOOberance!
Pair formation in most northern-hemisphere ducks takes place in winter: hence, unlike most birds with seasonal plumage, males wear their bright plumage in winter, and briefly assume a femalelike "eclipse" plumage during the summer.
Nests of most species are on the ground, containing from 4 to 12 eggs, surrounded by down feathers plucked from the female's breast and belly.
The mergansers are specialized for catching fish; the edges of their bills have sharp, toothlike serrations for holding slippery prey.
www.exzooberance.com /virtual%20zoo/they%20fly/duck/duck.htm   (637 words)

  
 Anti Essays : Free Essays on Evolution Essay   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-25)
Finally, one could suggest that species residing in a specific area might be placed into two ancestral groups: those species with origins outside of the area and those species evolving from ancestors already present in the area.
Species may also be isolated by geographic dispersion: they might colonize an island, and over the course of time evolve differently from their relatives on the mainland.
The idea of species is usually called the biological species concept, stressing the importance of interbreeding among individuals in a population as a general description.
www.antiessays.com /free-essays/1260.html   (8157 words)

  
 History of Evolution Part One
Rosiland Franklin took some special photographs which were used in 1953 by Francis Crick and James Watson (without giving her credit), to develop the astounding helix model of the DNA molecule.
A large number of French biologists and taxonomists (species classification experts) rebelled against the chains of the evolutionary creed and declared that they would continue their research, but would no longer try to prove evolution, which they considered an impossible theory.
He showed that it would be impossible for even a single ordered pair of genes to be produced by DNA mutations in the bacteria, E. Coli (which has very little DNA), with 5 billion years in which to produce it.
www.godsholyspirit.com /creation/history_of_evolution_part_three.htm   (5010 words)

  
 UFO.Whipnet.org | Aliens | Creation | History of Evolution Theory
Ancient species (aside from the extinct ones) were like those today, except larger, and strata are generally missing and at times switched—with "younger" strata below "older." Because there is no fossil/strata evidence supporting evolution, the museums display dinosaurs and other extinct animals as proof that evolution has occurred.
It would be impossible for one species to change into another, since the genes network together so closely.
While evolutionists secretly recognize that their theory is falling through the floor, to the gullible public it is praised more and more as the scientifically proven answer to the mystery of life and matter.
ufo.whipnet.org /creation/evolution.theory.history/index2.html   (7097 words)

  
 Native North American Orchid Reference Page
Mycorrhizae and mycorrhizal fungi of boreal species of Platanthera and Coeloglossum (Orchidaceae).
The species pair Platanthera orbiculata and P. macrophylla (Orchidaceae): taxonomy, morphology, distributions and habitats.
The prairie fringed orchids: a pollinator-isolated species pair Rhodora 88:267-290
www.newnorth.net /~mruh/ref.html   (9459 words)

  
 Species Profiles — OBIS-SEAMAP
The northern right whale dolphin is an oceanic species, inhabiting cool and warm temperate regions of the North Pacific only between about 30°N and 50°N. It forms an antitropical species pair with the southern right whale dolphin.
Species distributions (pink background polygon if present) were digitized by Kristin Kaschner as part of the Sea Around Us Project predominantly from the Jefferson et al (1993) Marine Mammals of the World.
Although market squid and lanternfish are the major prey items for right whale dolphins off southern California, a variety of surface and midwater species are taken by this species.
seamap.env.duke.edu /species/tsn/180454   (681 words)

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