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Votre centre de documentation sera exceptionnellement fermé de 12h30 à 13h ce lundi 18 novembre.
Egalement, il sera fermé de 12h30 à 13h30 ce mercredi 20 novembre.
Lundi : 8h-18h30
Mardi : 8h-17h30
Mercredi 9h-16h30
Jeudi : 8h30-18h30
Vendredi : 8h30-12h30 et 13h-14h30
Votre centre de documentation sera exceptionnellement fermé de 12h30 à 13h ce lundi 18 novembre.
Egalement, il sera fermé de 12h30 à 13h30 ce mercredi 20 novembre.
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Détail de l'auteur
Auteur Jan Willem Tulp |
Documents disponibles écrits par cet auteur
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What Scientists Have Learned from 100 Years of Bird Banding : A rich archive of data has illuminated the secret lives of birds / Kate Wong in Scientific American, 03/21 (Mars 2021)
[article]
Titre : What Scientists Have Learned from 100 Years of Bird Banding : A rich archive of data has illuminated the secret lives of birds Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Kate Wong ; Jan Willem Tulp Année de publication : 2021 Article en page(s) : p. 48-53 Langues : Français (fre) Mots-clés : Oiseaux -- Distribution géographique -- Monde oiseaux : population : évolution Résumé : he year was 1902. Paul Bartsch, a mollusk researcher at the Smithsonian Institution, wondered whether the aquatic snails he was studying could be spread from one body of water to another by aquatic birds. To find out, he needed to track the movements of birds. Bartsch hatched a plan. He fastened lightweight aluminum rings inscribed with the year, a serial number and a Smithsonian return address around the legs of 23 nestling black-crowned night herons that he captured along the Anacostia River outside Washington, D.C. And then Bartsch waited for news of the banded birds—where they were sighted, what had become of them. En ligne : https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/what-scientists-have-learned-from-100 [...] Permalink : ./index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=92036
in Scientific American > 03/21 (Mars 2021) . - p. 48-53[article] What Scientists Have Learned from 100 Years of Bird Banding : A rich archive of data has illuminated the secret lives of birds [texte imprimé] / Kate Wong ; Jan Willem Tulp . - 2021 . - p. 48-53.
Langues : Français (fre)
in Scientific American > 03/21 (Mars 2021) . - p. 48-53
Mots-clés : Oiseaux -- Distribution géographique -- Monde oiseaux : population : évolution Résumé : he year was 1902. Paul Bartsch, a mollusk researcher at the Smithsonian Institution, wondered whether the aquatic snails he was studying could be spread from one body of water to another by aquatic birds. To find out, he needed to track the movements of birds. Bartsch hatched a plan. He fastened lightweight aluminum rings inscribed with the year, a serial number and a Smithsonian return address around the legs of 23 nestling black-crowned night herons that he captured along the Anacostia River outside Washington, D.C. And then Bartsch waited for news of the banded birds—where they were sighted, what had become of them. En ligne : https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/what-scientists-have-learned-from-100 [...] Permalink : ./index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=92036 Réservation
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