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MBL Catalyst, Volume 7, Number 1, Spring 2012
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Supplemental Material
Back to Spring 2012 Catalyst Homepage
Captions and Credits for Published Photos
Front cover: Bird illustrations from: Godman FD and Salvin O, eds. Biologia Centrali-Americana :Zoology, Botany and Archaeology. (London: Published for the editors by R.H. Porter, 1879-1915). Courtesy Biodiversity Heritage Library (Smithsonian Collection).
Inside cover: Bird illustrations from: Godman FD and Salvin O, eds. Biologia Centrali-Americana :Zoology, Botany and Archaeology. (London: Published for the editors by R.H. Porter, 1879-1915). Courtesy Biodiversity Heritage Library (Smithsonian Collection); G. Borisy (E. Armstrong)
P. 1: Bird illustrations from: Godman FD and Salvin O, eds. Biologia Centrali-Americana :Zoology, Botany and Archaeology. (London: Published for the editors by R.H. Porter, 1879-1915). Courtesy Biodiversity Heritage Library (Smithsonian Collection); Chameleon (McBeul, Flickr, via eol.org); Butterfly illustrations from: Smith JE and Abbot J. The Natural History of the Rarer Lepidopterous Insects of Georgia: Including their Systematic Characters, the Particulars of their Several Metamorphoses, and the Plants on Which They Feed. (London :Printed by T. Bensley, for J. Edwards [etc.]1797). Courtesy of Biodiversity Heritage Library, Missouri Botanical Garden Rare Book Collection; Arabidopsis thaliana (S. Simmons).
Pp. 23, clockwise fom top: Chameleon (McBeul, Flickr, via eol.org); Moon jelly (L. Viatour, Wikimedia Commons, via eol.org); Mushroom (M. Whitehead, Flickr, via eol.org); Florida gopher tortoise (C. ONeal, Wikimedia Commons, via eol.org); Eastern cottontail (M. Reinbold, Flickr, via eol.org); Crocus (anemoneprojectors, Flickr, via eol.org); Jumping spider (T. Shahan, Wikimedia Commons, via eol.org); Emperor penguins (G. Grant, NSF, Wikimedia Commons, via eol.org); Blue discus (P. Farrelly, Wikimedia Commons, via eol.org); General Sherman tree, in Sequoia National Park, USA (J. Bahn, Wikimedia Commons, via eol.org); Blue emperor (C. Fischer, Wikimedia Commons, via eol.org); Koala (Diliff, Wikimedia Commons, via eol.org).
Pp. 4-5, clockwise from top: African Elephant in Addo National Park, South Africa (Gorgol, Wikimedia Commons, via eol.org); Rhinoceros beetle (G. Gallice, Flickr, via eol.org); European green toad (M. Reinbold, Flickr, via eol.org); Scanning biodiversity literature at the Library of Alexandria in Egypt (S. Casper)
Pp. 6-7, clockwise from top left: Flower illustration from: Godman FD and Salvin O, eds. Biologia Centrali-Americana :Zoology, Botany and Archaeology. (London: Published for the editors by R.H. Porter, 1879-1915). Courtesy Biodiversity Heritage Library (Smithsonian Collection); Physiology course co-director Dyche Mullins (T. Kleindinst); An adult acorn worm with its proboscis on the bottom right and tail on the top left (A. Pani); Tim Savas, a research assistant working with Jim Tang, measures CO2 fluxes from a salt marsh (J. Tang); Marine microbe Umbellosphaera (N. Voers, ICoMM)
Pp. 8-9, clockwise from top left: Arabidopsis thaliana (S. Simmons); Zoe Cardon, MBL, Stefan Sievert, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, and Anne Giblin, MBL (T. Kleindinst); Sheri Simmons (T. Kleindinst)
Pp. 10-11, L to R: Flower illustration from: Godman FD and Salvin O, eds. Biologia Centrali-Americana: Zoology, Botany and Archaeology. (London: Published for the editors by R.H. Porter, 1879-1915). Courtesy Biodiversity Heritage Library (Smithsonian Collection); Bird illustration from: Sloane, H. A voyage to the islands Madera, Barbados, Nieves, S. Christophers and Jamaica :with the natural history of the herbs and trees, four-footed beasts, fishes, birds, insects, reptiles, &c. of the last of those islands … (London :Printed by B.M. for the author,1707-1725); Digitizing rare biodiversity books at Internet Archive Scanning Pod in Boston (courtesy C Norton).
Pp. 12-13, L to R: Nathan Wilson (self portrait);Violet crowned wood nymph (“Cathy & Sam,” Flickr, via eol.org); White shark (T. Goss, Wikimedia, via eol.org), Violet copper butterfly (F. Vassen, Flickr, via eol.org), Lion cub with mother in the Serengeti (D. Dennis, Wikimedia, via eol.org); Clownfish (“Jenny from Taipei,” Wikimedia, via eol.org); Flowering rabe (J. Hempel, Flickr, via eol.org)
P. 14, L to R: John Valois (R. Howard); MBL SPINES students (T. Kleindinst); Cuttlefish (J. Vallino); Marine microbe (E. Haeckel)
P. 15: A global map of ICoMM sample locations. The origin of the samples is indicated by triangles (benthic or seafloor realm) and circles (pelagic or ocean water realm) while ecosystem types are indicated by the color orange (coastal), light blue (open-ocean surface waters), dark blue (deep sea), red (anoxic), and purple (hydrothermal vents). Further visualization of sample distributions are available at http://vamps.mbl.edu/mapper/index.php; insets Each slice of the pie represents the abundance of a particular type of bacteria; researchers could go on to explore the data in each pie slice, such as individual DNA sequences. Below the heatmap is a graph showing the temperature of each sample site at the time of collection; other sorts of physical data such as salinity can also be displayed. (ICoMM and VAMPS)
P. 16: Joseph Levine (Haley Chamberlain Nelson)
P. 17: From Voyage de la Corvette l’Astrolabe: Exécuté par Ordre du Roi, Pendant les Années 1826-1827-1828-1829, sous le Commandement de J. Dumont d’Urville (Paris: J. Tastu and Ministère de la Marine, 1830-1834), Plate 19.
Back cover: Cross-section of an uninjured lamprey spinal cord showing a diverse array of large and small axons, which mediate locomotor and sensory behaviors. Both populations of axons are capable of robust regeneration (P. Oliphint).
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