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Onto Annelidan Alcove... Oaktopus, Shrubb, Boodoo, Fwog
Annelidan Alcove (Plant, Water, Earth, Shadow, Crystal)
That worm guy is a member of a monster species known as a Fl'hexx... his name's Frederick, and he's abnormally large for his species... say hi.
HOME by Annelida
— #iwaoi #oiiwa doujin (sfw)
⚠️ PLEASE DO NOT REUPLOAD
⚠️ CW homophobic society
read: https://t.co/eeIqpf3PWg
— translated from jp → kr → en
(+ 한국어 번역 타래로 올렸습니다)
September newsletter is now flying out! Packed with history essays, new events, medals and grant news, fascinating papers on the natural history of annelids, how birds fly and much more.
Read here: https://t.co/hGcq74zKAy
Subscribe here: https://t.co/yJyUxT2Nwr
@bipbopbap Dinosaur, frog, snake!!! Good animals!! I was also recently reminded of how much I love annelids, especially earth worms
With a new school year around the corner, Matilda has brought a new phylum to the #MapOfLife
Our first #annelid is the medicinal #leech
@arrroberts Working on a story about a robot invertebrate sent from the annelid future to clear the decks for those that creep upon the Earth....it's....THE......WORMINATOR
Roberta McIntosh provided illustrations for "A monograph of British Marine Annelids" (1873-1923), a multi-part publication authored by her brother, William McIntosh, and produced over 50 years. See her #SciArt in the #BHLib Flickr ➡️ https://t.co/I9W0odFXgw
#HerNaturalHistory
@WPolyDb Wow, what a fantastic story. Amazing that William Carmichael McIntosh was continuing to publish for so long. His Monograph of the British Annelids was such an important publication. Are we right in thinking that Agnes produced illustrations for his work?
A flashback to 2019; my painting of the earliest unambiguous tube dwelling annelid, the oldest polychaete that can be placed in a living group.
https://t.co/YlQSX1ZVk5 (@Cambriannelids @Xiaoya_Ma)
We didn't get the Nature cover.
#PalaeoArt #PaleoArt #SciArt #SciComm #Paleontology
'Nobody likes me, everybody hates me, I think I'm gonna go and eat worms'🎶Remember this children's song? Well there are #earthworms in New Zealand called noke that were the food of chiefs: sweet & rich to taste. Amazing #wildfood, I💚this te reo Māori poem about them! #annelids