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FIELD NATURAL HISTORY. BIO 120 Instructor: Karl Kleiner, PhD Lecture: Monday and Wednesday, 3:30 in Campbell 232 Lab: Tuesday 120.03 8:00 AM – 10:45 AM in LS 208 120.04 11:00 AM - 1:45 PM in LS 208. Educational Background. B.S. Biology - Antioch College
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FIELD NATURAL HISTORY BIO 120 Instructor: Karl Kleiner, PhD Lecture: Monday and Wednesday, 3:30 in Campbell 232 Lab: Tuesday 120.03 8:00 AM – 10:45 AM in LS 208 120.04 11:00 AM - 1:45 PM in LS 208
Educational Background • B.S. Biology - Antioch College • M.F.S. - Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies • Ph.D. Entomology – Penn. State University
Dipetalogaster maximus – from a subfamily known as “kissing bugs”.Blood-sucking insects from southern U.S. and Latin America.
A protist Irreversible damage to the heart or intestinal tract that appears 10 to 20 years after infection. Treatable in early stages, but not in later stages. Lethal. Chagas diseaseActually a Protist –Trypanosoma sp.
Giardia lambliagiardiasis – travellers diarrhea • The parasite (a Protist) attaches itself to the lining of the small intestines in humans, where it sabotages the body's absorption of fats and carbohydrates from digested foods. • Result from ingestion of water or food contaminated with human sewage. • Also attributed to animals – beaver. Hence ‘beaver fever.’
Microcebus lehilahytsara–Discovered August 2005.Named for U.S. lemur expert Steve Goodman ("lehilahytsara" is Malagasy for "good man"). The new primate species brings the total number of known lemur species to 49—all of which occur naturally only on Madagascar or the nearby Comoros islands. Lemurs are the closest living analogs to our ancient primate ancestors who lived about 55 million years ago One-third of lemure species are extinct. Remaining species are under threat from hunting and habitat destruction.
Science 20 May 2005:Vol. 308. no. 5725, pp. 1161 - 1164The Highland Mangabey Lophocebus kipunji: A New Species of African Monkey • Trevor Jones,1* Carolyn L. Ehardt,2 Thomas M. Butynski,3 Tim R. B. Davenport,4 Noah E. Mpunga,4 Sophy J. Machaga,4 Daniela W. De Luca4 A distinct species of mangabey was independently found at two sites 370 kilometers apart in southern Tanzania (Mount Rungwe and Livingstone in the Southern Highlands and Ndundulu in the Udzungwa Mountains). This new species is described here and given the name "highland mangabey" Lophocebus kipunji sp. nov. We place this monkey in Lophocebus, because it possesses noncontrasting black eyelids and is arboreal. L. kipunji is distinguished from other mangabeys by the color of its pelage; long, upright crest; off-white tail and ventrum; and loud call. This find has implications for primate evolution, African biogeography, and forest conservation.
http://archives.cnn.com/2000/NATURE/11/14/new.lemurs/index.htmlhttp://archives.cnn.com/2000/NATURE/11/14/new.lemurs/index.html
New Species are constantly being discovered http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/34112078#34112078 - video http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/34093542/ns/technology_and_science-science/ - web page This Enypniastes, a transparent sea cucumber, creeps forward on its many tentacles at about 2 cm per minute while sweeping detritus-rich sediment into its mouth at 2,750 meters in the northern Gulf of Mexico. Larry Madin / AP
Not that humans had anything to do with it. Bison skull pile - 1870
Conus magus –venomous cone snail. H:\public_html\fieldnaturalhistory\fnhimages\l1images\Snailpainkiller.pdf http://grimwade.biochem.unimelb.edu.au/cone/envenom.html http://grimwade.biochem.unimelb.edu.au/cone/fish2.mov