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This is an email to remind you that in just over a year, I'll be hosting ISEPEP5, the Fifth International Symposium on the Environmental Physiology of Ectotherms and Plants here at Western University, in London, Ontario, Canada. More information is now available on the ISEPEP5 web page: http://www.uwo.ca/biology/ISEPEP5/.In addition, to help my planning, I would really appreciate it if you could ...
Tweed River Art Gallery (Murwillumbah, NSW, Australia) presents a new exhibition for insect lovers named Beauty and Nature: Art of the Scott sisters. There you can see butterflies and moths, caterpillars and plants depicted in paintings and sketches made by two famous 19th century nature artists, Harriet and Helena Scott. Susi Muddiman, director of the Tweed River Art Gallery, says that both ...
I really enjoyed Zimbabwe and Malawi. True, in Malawi, you will get a horseradish visa. Mozambique is terrible - there is no nature, the people are dangerous. South Africa-great! They say that in terms of nature, Zambia is very good. I totally agree with Proctos about Namibia and South Africa. In addition, our comrades were in Ghana - they brought very good material. I don't know any information ...
The species added, photo moved to "uncertain". So let it be identified by Dmitry for he was the first who suggested N. hylas.
Caterpillars actually can be rather harmful, not too much though. Last year I've got a colony of large tortoiseshell caterpillars (Nymphalis polychloros L.) in a pear tree at my country house. They did eat completely a 50—60cm tree branch, so what? It's nothing for a 5m spreading tree. I convinced my wife not to take them away. In that very year a huge twiggy bough of approximately 2m length ...