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Identifier Type Subject Title Web Resource
2048
  • Map
  • Nature, Animals, Birds
Horse Healthcare in Maine
  • https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/1c2f0b1e1aa741caa28e6eb24ed33b54
Description:
The USDA reported a shortage of veterinarians in at least 500 counties spanning 44 states. This shortage is mostly in rural areas and therefore has a larger effect on large animals and livestock. American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA) reported that only 10% of graduates had an interest in working with livestock.
2365
  • Map
  • Nature, Plants
Additions to the Arboretum of Eden
  • https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/05d1aba440544fd4ad20cf6e2bb88b8c
Description:
Developing our arboretum creates more records for future students to refer to, to analyze our campus inventory over time. Our current arboretum contains around 150 different species of woody specimens
2364
  • Map
  • Nature, Animals, Birds
Project Scotland
  • https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/04cc7cf98ec04fbabb0380d9339db30f
Description:
Natural Resource Management for Biodiversity. Understanding Scotland's protected habitats and their inhabitants.
2051
  • Map
  • Nature, Animals, Birds
A Profile on Dengue: The Infamous Neglected Tropical Disease
  • https://coagis.maps.arcgis.com/apps/MapSeries/index.html?appid=eaef18bdf5e24912a988700619d40bb1
Description:
Dengue, a mosquito-borne virus, has spread across the globe in recent years, now infecting an estimated 100-400 million people each year. Approximately forty percent of the world’s population lives in countries with a risk of dengue.
2042
  • Map
  • Nature, Animals, Birds
The Dorr Museum Collections and their Global Origins
  • https://coagis.maps.arcgis.com/apps/MapSeries/index.html?appid=e48489718ccd4715a66be5e264abe81a
Description:
An exploration of the George B. Dorr Museum of Natural History collections and their origins. The Dorr Museum of Natural History is unique among museums in that its collections have been prepared entirely by students.
2041
  • Map
  • Nature, Animals, Birds
Global Restrictions on Shark Finning
  • https://coagis.maps.arcgis.com/apps/MapSeries/index.html?appid=6b004d84bc9a4d7982f91733ef25de70
Description:
An estimated 73 million sharks were killed last year, primarily for their fins. Their populations are at critical levels, and they are still being fished out of the oceans at unsustainable rates. Some regional populations of shark species are down to 95 - 99%, which is considered functional extinction.
2039
  • Map
  • Nature, Animals, Birds
How to Bee in Maine
  • https://coagis.maps.arcgis.com/apps/MapSeries/index.html?appid=618c26c8d57f47ce993327ecb447c15f
Description:
Pollinators such as wild bees and the Western honeybee, Apis mellifera, are important to humans and nature. Seventy-five percent of food crops and 90% of wild flowering plants benefit from animal pollinators (IPBES 2016).
2038
  • Map
  • Nature, Animals, Birds
Gulls of the Gulf of Maine
  • https://coagis.maps.arcgis.com/apps/MapSeries/index.html?appid=0e0e6ad0761a41ccafda98da08f55b90
Description:
An overview of gull density in Maine
2057
  • Map
  • Nature, Plants
Studying Land Features using Drone Imagery
  • https://coagis.maps.arcgis.com/apps/MapSeries/index.html?appid=0cf2adf182f84d6bbd4ca1f258c5e214
Description:
Studying Chlorophyll Concentration and Land Classification using Drone Imagery
2387
  • Map
  • Nature, Animals, Birds
Pulling Natures Linchpin:
  • https://coagis.maps.arcgis.com/apps/Cascade/index.html?appid=ab565dbb28684267922e0ed8e18a5fe8
Description:
A Study of Potential Correlations between Declining bat Populations and Modern Mosquito-born Epidemics
2142
  • Map
  • Nature, Plants
Rockweed in Frenchman Bay
  • http://bit.ly/RockweedFrenchmanBay
Description:
Rockweed is a brown algae found on rocky shores. The most common types of rockweed are within the genus Ascophyllum spp. and Fucus spp. (the latter is shown to the left). They grow slowly and can live from 3 to 15 years before breakage. Rockweeds have fronds that bear air bladders. These 'airbags' help the algae to stand up straight under water. Rockweed lacks true roots, stems, and leaves, and because they lack a vascular system, absorb dissolved nutrients directly through the blades. Rockweed attaches to rocks with a disc-like “holdfast”, and regenerate fronds from remaining holdfasts after a natural disturbance that removes upright fronds. [show more]