969 resultados para Reptiles, Fossil


Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Material educativo realizado por los profesionales del Departament d'Educació del Zoològic de Barcelona destinado al último ciclo de educación infantil y educación primaria para el estudio de los amfibios y reptiles. El tema se trabaja a partir de una serie de actividades e imágenes que ilustran la temática.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Diseñado para atraer a los lectores principiantes en temas de la vida real, presenta a los reptiles abarcando su hábitat, la alimentación,colmillos y venenos,la descendencia y la forma de vida. El texto tiene dos niveles de dificultad y dos tamaños de letra. Incluye un glosario y direcciones de organizaciones para obtener más información.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Tiene como objeto explorar el mundo de los reptiles y ofrecer respuestas a muchos de los qué, por qué y cómo que los niños pequeños preguntan sobre el mundo que les rodea. Para ayudar a los niños a diferenciar entre tortuga marina y tortuga terrestre, aligátor y cocodrilo. por que la serpiente de cascabel tiene un sonajero. Cada dos páginas hay tres secciones organizadas por temas:un Ahora sé, es una revisión de los principales aspectos que refuerza lo aprendido. Eso es asombroso, ofrece características destacadas de la costa.Mira y encuentra sirve para alentar a los niños a identificar y asociar nombres con imágenes.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

La historia de la Tierra y de las diferentes formas de vida sobre ella se pueden conocer mediante el estudio de las rocas, los estratos, los fósiles y los restos animales y humanos conservados. Al final del libro hay una pequeña bibliografía y direcciones de páginas web.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Para saber qué buscar, dónde ir, y consejos de expertos sobre las rocas y la búsqueda de fósiles es lo que se ofrece en esta publicación con más de treinta actividades que ayudan a los niños a explorar, observar, y entender el mundo natural que les rodea, de forma educativa y divertida. Incluye una lista del equipo necesario y consejos útiles sobre cómo sacar el máximo provecho del estudio de las rocas y los fósiles. Algunas actividades tiene que realizarse en compañía de adultos y están identificadas con un símbolo. También incluye dos desplegables, que muestran la forma de identificar los principales tipos de rocas, minerales y fósiles que los niños pueden encontrar en los sitios más accesibles.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Este manual proporciona información sobre las costumbres de las diferentes especies de anfibios y reptiles de la Comunidad de Madrid. La primera parte describe las especies e incluye datos sobre su biología, distribución y situación de sus poblaciones y una guía rápida de identificación. En la segunda parte, se ofrece una descripción de las principales áreas de observación y un calendario del herpetólogo. El último cápitulo está dedicado al estado de conservación de las especies.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Adaptive radiations often follow the evolution of key traits, such as the origin of the amniotic egg and the subsequent radiation of terrestrial vertebrates. The mechanism by which a species determines the sex of its offspring has been linked to critical ecological and life-history traits(1-3) but not to major adaptive radiations, in part because sex-determining mechanisms do not fossilize. Here we establish a previously unknown coevolutionary relationship in 94 amniote species between sex-determining mechanism and whether a species bears live young or lays eggs. We use that relationship to predict the sex-determining mechanism in three independent lineages of extinct Mesozoic marine reptiles (mosasaurs, sauropterygians and ichthyosaurs), each of which is known from fossils to have evolved live birth(4-7). Our results indicate that each lineage evolved genotypic sex determination before acquiring live birth. This enabled their pelagic radiations, where the relatively stable temperatures of the open ocean constrain temperature-dependent sex determination in amniote species. Freed from the need to move and nest on land(4,5,8), extreme physical adaptations to a pelagic lifestyle evolved in each group, such as the fluked tails, dorsal fins and wing-shaped limbs of ichthyosaurs. With the inclusion of ichthyosaurs, mosasaurs and sauropterygians, genotypic sex determination is present in all known fully pelagic amniote groups (sea snakes, sirenians and cetaceans), suggesting that this mode of sex determination and the subsequent evolution of live birth are key traits required for marine adaptive radiations in amniote lineages.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The evaluation of life cycle greenhouse gas emissions from power generation with carbon capture and storage (CCS) is a critical factor in energy and policy analysis. The current paper examines life cycle emissions from three types of fossil-fuel-based power plants, namely supercritical pulverized coal (super-PC), natural gas combined cycle (NGCC) and integrated gasification combined cycle (IGCC), with and without CCS. Results show that, for a 90% CO2 capture efficiency, life cycle GHG emissions are reduced by 75-84% depending on what technology is used. With GHG emissions less than 170 g/kWh, IGCC technology is found to be favorable to NGCC with CCS. Sensitivity analysis reveals that, for coal power plants, varying the CO2 capture efficiency and the coal transport distance has a more pronounced effect on life cycle GHG emissions than changing the length of CO2 transport pipeline. Finally, it is concluded from the current study that while the global warming potential is reduced when MEA-based CO2 capture is employed, the increase in other air pollutants such as NOx and NH3 leads to higher eutrophication and acidification potentials.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The majority of vegetation reconstructions from the Neotropics are derived from fossil pollen records extracted from lake sediments. However, the interpretation of these records is restricted by limited knowledge of the contemporary relationships between the vegetation and pollen rain of Neotropical ecosystems, especially for more open vegetation such as savannas. This research aims to improve the interpretation of these records by investigating the vegetation and modern pollen rain of different savanna ecosystems in Bolivia using vegetation inventories, artificial pollen traps and surface lake sediments. Two types of savanna were studied, upland savannas (cerrado), occurring on well drained soils, and seasonally-inundated savannas occurring on seasonally water-logged soils. Quantitative vegetation data are used to identify taxa that are floristically important in the different savanna types and to allow modern pollen/vegetation ratios to be calculated. Artificial pollen traps from the upland savanna site are dominated by Moraceae (35%), Poaceae (30%), Alchornea (6%) and Cecropia (4%). The two seasonally-inundated savanna sites are dominated by Moraceae (37%), Poaceae (20%), Alchornea (8%) and Cecropia (7%), and Moraceae (25%), Cyperaceae (22%), Poaceae (19%) and Cecropia (9%), respectively. The modern pollen rain of seasonally-inundated savannas from surface lake sediments is dominated by Cyperaceae (35%), Poaceae (33%), Moraceae (9%) and Asteraceae (5%). Upland and seasonally-flooded savannas were found to be only subtly distinct from each other palynologically. All sites have a high proportion of Moraceae pollen due to effective wind dispersal of this pollen type from areas of evergreen forest close to the study sites. Modern pollen/vegetation ratios show that many key woody plant taxa are absent/under-represented in the modern pollen rain (e.g., Caryocar and Tabebuia). The lower-than-expected percentages of Poaceae pollen, and the scarcity of savanna indicators, in the modern pollen rain of these ecosystems mean that savannas could potentially be overlooked in fossil pollen records without consideration of the full pollen spectrum available.

Relevância:

20.00% 20.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Accurate differentiation between tropical forest and savannah ecosystems in the fossil pollen record is hampered by the combination of: i) poor taxonomic resolution in pollen identification, and ii) the high species diversity of many lowland tropical families, i.e. with many different growth forms living in numerous environmental settings. These barriers to interpreting the fossil record hinder our understanding of the past distributions of different Neotropical ecosystems and consequently cloud our knowledge of past climatic, biodiversity and carbon storage patterns. Modern pollen studies facilitate an improved understanding of how ecosystems are represented by the pollen their plants produce and therefore aid interpretation of fossil pollen records. To understand how to differentiate ecosystems palynologically, it is essential that a consistent sampling method is used across ecosystems. However, to date, modern pollen studies from tropical South America have employed a variety of methodologies (e.g. pollen traps, moss polsters, soil samples). In this paper, we present the first modern pollen study from the Neotropics to examine the modern pollen rain from moist evergreen tropical forest (METF), semi-deciduous dry tropical forest (SDTF) and wooded savannah (cerradão) using a consistent sampling methodology (pollen traps). Pollen rain was sampled annually in September for the years 1999–2001 from within permanent vegetation study plots in, or near, the Noel Kempff Mercado National Park (NKMNP), Bolivia. Comparison of the modern pollen rain within these plots with detailed floristic inventories allowed estimates of the relative pollen productivity and dispersal for individual taxa to be made (% pollen/% vegetation or ‘p/v’). The applicability of these data to interpreting fossil records from lake sediments was then explored by comparison with pollen assemblages obtained from five lake surface samples.