#taubert
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sitting-on-me-bum · 1 month ago
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A mule deer doe and her fawn are drinking at desert waterhole at sunset
by Bruce Taubert
NANPA’s 2024 Showcase - North American Nature Photography Association
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artfromthefuture · 2 months ago
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Bad Mergentheim, vom Schloss aus gesehen.
flickr
Bad Mergentheim, vom Schloss aus gesehen. by wwwuppertal Via Flickr: Bad Mergentheim, as seen from the Deutschorden's Castle during winter time.
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videoreligion · 1 year ago
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Zombie Reanimation (2009)
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ecarchive · 1 year ago
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nowheregeneration · 3 months ago
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Rise Against - Make It Stop, Live at Taubertal Festival 2024
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Lou Taubert Ranch Outfitters, Casper, Wyoming https://midwesternartlovertraveler.tumblr.com/
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always-is-nevereal · 3 months ago
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Estar a medias no es estar, trate por los dos y no pude más.
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black-cherry-idk-xoxo · 4 months ago
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No le he fallado a nadie más que a mí, por solo hacer a los demás feliz.
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aleeconfeccoes · 5 months ago
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❤️‍🩹
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erickexh · 8 months ago
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Pero si era tan bueno
¿Por qué no duró?
Y si era tan perfecto
¿Por qué se acabó?
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Viendo mi sonrisa en fotos
¿Cómo es que no noto cuándo dejé de sentir?, ah
Sé que no es culpa de nadie, pero mía tampoco
Y ya no quiero estar así
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videoreligion · 8 months ago
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Zombie Reanimation (2009)
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zahraa17 · 1 year ago
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Photo Credit to - Sven Taubert
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yesterdayandkarma · 2 years ago
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Giza, Egypt - In Line by Sven Taubert
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lonely-sure · 1 year ago
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Si se acabó el tiempo
Pido que haya otra vida para tenernos
Y si escuchas esto quiero que sepas que aún te quiero
¿Y si eras tú?
Dime
Cómo
Voy a vivir si ya no estas
Si eras tú
Tengo miedo
De no volver a sentir más
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leaping-laelaps-art · 1 year ago
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The archeocete Perucetus colossus dives through a coastal bloom of jellyfish in the Pisco Basin (southern Peru), some time during the Eocene (with bonus multiview).
I originally intended to add epibionts to this reconstruction (reflecting the specialized communities found on many living whales, especially baleen whales). Yet, interestingly, it appears that most animal epibionts and ectoparasites of modern cetaceans, such as whale barnacles (Hayashi et al. 2013) and remoras (Friedman et al. 2013), only appeared in the Neogene or late Paleogene, or have a poorly known (co-)evolutionary history, like whale lice (Pfeiffer 2009, Iwasa-Arai & Serejo 2018) and pennellids (large parasitic copepods) (Hermosilla et al. 2015). So, no epibionts* for big lad Perucetus!
References and notes about the reconstruction:
*animal epibionts. Unicellular eukaryotes like diatoms were most likely present on early cetaceans, given their prevalence on modern large marine animals (Ashworth et al. 2022). Of course, it is possible that other animals (i.e., early, less specialized representatives of modern groups, or different taxa altogether) were also already exploiting the surfaces offered by these early whales; however, this remains entirely speculative.
The reconstruction of Perucetus proposed in its original description (Bianucci et al. 2023) includes some rather odd (if interesting) choices about soft tissues, including limbs with webbed and distinguishable fingers, and a manatee-like tail. While these choices might be defendable in light of the rather basal status of Perucetus among cetaceans, I opted for a more derived look based on the assumption that fully marine cetaceans like basilosaurids would have probably rapidly acquired hydrodynamically favorable adaptations, pushing them towards a more familiar Neoceti-like appearance (even though Perucetus itself was likely a poor swimmer (Bianucci et al. 2023), it seems likely to me that this was a secondarily acquired trait, given the less extreme morphology of other basilosaurids).
Reconstruction in the multiview scaled to ~18 m in length after the estimations of Bianucci et al. (2023).
References:
Ashworth, M. P., Majewska, R., Frankovich, T. A., Sullivan, M., Bosak, S., Filek, K., Van de Vijver, B., Arendt, M., Schwenter, J., Nel, R., Robinson, N. J., Gary, M. P., Theriot, E. C., Stacy, N. I., Lam, D. W., Perrault, J. R., Manire, C. A., & Manning, S. R. (2022). Cultivating epizoic diatoms provides insights into the evolution and ecology of both epibionts and hosts. Scientific Reports, 12(1), Article 1. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-19064-0
Bianucci, G., Lambert, O., Urbina, M., Merella, M., Collareta, A., Bennion, R., Salas-Gismondi, R., Benites-Palomino, A., Post, K., de Muizon, C., Bosio, G., Di Celma, C., Malinverno, E., Pierantoni, P. P., Villa, I. M., & Amson, E. (2023). A heavyweight early whale pushes the boundaries of vertebrate morphology. Nature, 620(7975), Article 7975. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-023-06381-1
Friedman, M., Johanson, Z., Harrington, R. C., Near, T. J., & Graham, M. R. (2013). An early fossil remora (Echeneoidea) reveals the evolutionary assembly of the adhesion disc. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 280(1766), 20131200. https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2013.1200
Hayashi, R., Chan, B. K. K., Simon-Blecher, N., Watanabe, H., Guy-Haim, T., Yonezawa, T., Levy, Y., Shuto, T., & Achituv, Y. (2013). Phylogenetic position and evolutionary history of the turtle and whale barnacles (Cirripedia: Balanomorpha: Coronuloidea). Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 67(1), 9–14. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ympev.2012.12.018
Hermosilla, C., Silva, L. M. R., Prieto, R., Kleinertz, S., Taubert, A., & Silva, M. A. (2015). Endo- and ectoparasites of large whales (Cetartiodactyla: Balaenopteridae, Physeteridae): Overcoming difficulties in obtaining appropriate samples by non- and minimally-invasive methods. International Journal for Parasitology: Parasites and Wildlife, 4(3), 414–420. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijppaw.2015.11.002
Pfeiffer, C. J. (2009). Whale Lice. In W. F. Perrin, B. Würsig, & J. G. M. Thewissen (Eds.), Encyclopedia of Marine Mammals (Second Edition) (pp. 1220–1223). Academic Press. https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-12-373553-9.00279-0
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