Editorialscarab, Amonre, The remarkably well preserved and conspicuously large seal has the form of a schematically represented beetle. The clypeus, head, pronotum and elytra are distinguished from each other by notched lines. A double groove runs around the ob...
EditorialCommon reed, Phragmites communis Trinius - common or reed, family: 24. Gramineae, 3. Arundineae - grasses, pipe grasses, signed: WM, plate 63, after p. 142 (vol. 1), M?ller, W., 1886, Otto Wilhelm Thom?: Prof. Dr. Thom?'s Flora von Deutschland, ?sterre...
EditorialPlatalea flavipes, Print, The yellow-billed spoonbill (Platalea flavipes) is common in southeast Australia; it is not unusual on the remainder of the continent, and is a vagrant to New Zealand, Lord Howe Island and Norfolk Island. It is around 90 cm (3...
EditorialPlatalea flavipes, Print, The yellow-billed spoonbill (Platalea flavipes) is common in southeast Australia; it is not unusual on the remainder of the continent, and is a vagrant to New Zealand, Lord Howe Island and Norfolk Island. It is around 90 cm (3...
EditorialPlatalea flavipes, Print, The yellow-billed spoonbill (Platalea flavipes) is common in southeast Australia; it is not unusual on the remainder of the continent, and is a vagrant to New Zealand, Lord Howe Island and Norfolk Island. It is around 90 cm (3...
EditorialPlatalea flavipes, Print, The yellow-billed spoonbill (Platalea flavipes) is common in southeast Australia; it is not unusual on the remainder of the continent, and is a vagrant to New Zealand, Lord Howe Island and Norfolk Island. It is around 90 cm (3...
EditorialPlatalea flavipes, Print, The yellow-billed spoonbill (Platalea flavipes) is common in southeast Australia; it is not unusual on the remainder of the continent, and is a vagrant to New Zealand, Lord Howe Island and Norfolk Island. It is around 90 cm (3...
EditorialCommon reed bunting, Emberiza schoeniclus, male 1, female 2, and egg 3, and rock bunting, Emberiza cia, male 4, female 5 and egg 6. Handcoloured lithograph from Carl Hoffmann's Book of the World, Stuttgart, 1848.