Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Science - Slugs
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 4     61-80 of 123    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Slugs:     more books (100)
  1. Stabotage!: How to Deal with the Pit Bulls, Skunks, Snakes, Scorpions & Slugs in the Health Care Workplace by Judith Briles, 2008-11-01
  2. The Bug and the Slug in the Rug by Steve Allen, 1995-10
  3. 50 Ways to Kill a Slug: Serious and Silly Ways to Kill or Outwit the Garden's Number One Enemy by Nikoli, 2003-09-28
  4. Caribbean Sea Slugs by Angel Valdes, Jeff Hammon, et all 2006-09-15
  5. Slower Than a Slug (Rookie Readers) by Larry Dane Brimner, 2007-09
  6. Sea Slugs of Western Australia by Fred E. Wells; Clayton W. Bryce, 1996-06-01
  7. Slugs and Snails (Morgan, Sally. Looking at Minibeasts.) by Sally Morgan, 2000-07
  8. The Unreasonable Slug by Matt Cook, 2007-04-01
  9. Down in the Sea: The Sea Slug (Down in the Sea) by L. Patricia Kite, 1994-04-01
  10. The slug manual: The rise and fall of criticism by Jennifer James, 1986
  11. Snails and Slugs (Nature Close-Up) by Elaine Pascoe, 1998-07-13
  12. Slug Language by Anne Caldwell, 2008-10-01
  13. Snails, slugs, spiders and bugs: A child's guide to nature by Trudy L Rising, 1977
  14. The Slug Who Thought He Was a Snail (See & Read Book) by Penny Pollock, Lorinda Bryan Cauley, 1980-02

61. CIMD Stellite Solid Cobalt Based Alacrite Superalloy Foundry Aubert & Duval
France. Produces finished machined parts and rough machined slugs and tubes in cobaltbased stellite superalloy (Alacrite®) materials. Main characteristic is resistance to corrosion, abrasion, and high temperatures.
http://www.cimd.fr
CIMD foundry ( precision foundry produces your mechanical parts stainless solid cobalt-based stellite alacrite superalloy subjected to corrosion, oxidation , abrasion, seizing and high temperature CIMD is a 100% subsidiary of an holding ans Eramet alloys classified as stellite *
*stellite registered trademark of Deloro stellite Company, Inc.

62. Wired News: SlugBot: Enemy Of Slugs
Advertisement. SlugBot Enemy of slugs. By Louise Knapp Also by this reporter Page 1 of 2 next ». slugs are slow, said Dr. Ian Kelly, SlugBot s creator.
http://www.wired.com/news/gizmos/0,1452,47156,00.html
Welcome to Wired News. Skip directly to: Search Box Section Navigation Content Search:
Wired News Animations Wired Magazine HotBot (the Web)
SlugBot: Enemy of Slugs
By Louise Knapp Also by this reporter Page 1 of 2 next
02:00 AM Oct. 08, 2001 PT
VIDEO:
Watch the SlugBot in action

Wireless Hot Spot Directory Search for Wi-Fi hot spots near you:
Story Tools
See also
Today's Top 5 Stories
Breaking News
Tech Jobs Partner Today's the Day You must have JavaScript enabled in order to use the Wired News Multimedia Player. We apologize for any inconvenience. In the near future, the very mention of SlugBot could send waves of terror through the slug community, while farmers will sing its praises.

63. The Okinawa Slug Site
A site featuring Okinawan Opisthobranch Molluscs, nudibranchs and other related sea slugs such as bubbleshells, sea hares and side-gilled slugs.
http://rfbolland.com/okislugs/index.html
Chromodoris roboi
If your browser does not support the jump feature,
please see the non-jump link at the bottom of this page.
Welcome to the OKINAWA SLUG SITE!
This is a home page dedicated to the study of the Opisthobranch Molluscs of Okinawa’s subtropical Western Pacific waters. Hopefully the site will be one which will facilitate the study and understanding of this diverse group of molluscs. I've placed access to Okinawan images and island information, as well as a series of links to various opisthobranch resources by way of the Jump Buttons located on each page; should you have trouble with the buttons, please use the non-jump link at the bottom of this page which will duplicate the URLs found on the jump page. There are currently several first rate web sites which are providing opisthobranch researchers with a wealth of utility and information. Notable of these are Steve Long’s Opisthobranch Site , Gary McDonald’s Bibliographia Nudibranchia Check List of European Marine Mollusca ; all three of these feature a searchable database. On line opisthobranch newsletters are available from both Steve Long and Wayne Ellis . Erwin Koehler's Opisthobranchs of the World has an alphabetical listing of links to opisthobranch photographs found on the entire web. A relatively recent, but excellent presentation and dialogue site has been initiated by Bill Rudman with the establishment of the

64. Wired News Microsoft Recruits Sea Slugs
Advertisement. Microsoft Recruits Sea slugs. Researchers believe they can apply the methods used by slugs to prioritize information on computer systems.
http://www.wired.com/news/news/technology/story/14955.html

65. Taiwan Sintered Metals Co., Ltd. - Semiconductor, Molybdenum Slug, Lead Frame, M
Manufacturer of molybdenum slugs for the semi conductor industries.
http://www.tsm.com.tw/
E-mail: sales@tsm.com.tw

66. Snails & Slugs
SNAILS slugs. Though t. If you re reading this where it s warm and rainy, you shouldn t have problems finding snails and slugs.
http://www.backyardnature.net/snail&sl.htm
T hough snails and slugs look very different from one another, they're practically the same thing except that snails carry coiled shells on their backs, while slugs don't. If you're reading this where it's warm and rainy, you shouldn't have problems finding snails and slugs. They're found at the base of your house's foundation on the shady northern side, or maybe nibbling lettuce in the garden. If you're reading this during a drought, however, you may need to snoop around. Look for them early in the morning when dew wets everything. If it's really dry, you may just have to wait, for your backyard's snails and slugs may well be underground or beneath rocks or fallen trees, in suspended animation, waiting for rain. I found the one in the picture above resting on a slender bunch of grass flowers. In real life this snail's shell is less than half an inch long. In the picture the two long appendages atop the head are tentacles , used to feel the snail's environment. If you look hard you can see two stalked eyes projecting forward and downward from below the tentacles.

67. Slugs And Steel Website
slugs and Steel is a halflife 2 modification based on scenarios from different era s. This website and it s contents are copyrighted
http://www.slugsandsteel.com/
Report problems with this website to: Admin@dutch-gamers.nl
Hosted by:

68. Review Of Agricultural Entomology
Abstracts of the world literature on insects and other arthropods as pests of cultivated plants, forest trees and stored products; beneficial arthropods; and slugs and snails as agricultural pests.
http://www.cabi-publishing.org/journals/Abstract/RAE/
Product Search Home Bookshop Customer Services Publish With CABI ... Site Map Product Information Description Database Coverage Serials Cited Example Abstract ... View a Sample Copy Stay In Touch Email Alerts Email this page to
a friend
Bookmark this page ... Subscribe Registered Subscribers Search Abstracts Related Interest Related Products
Information for

Advertisers
Links Review of Agricultural Entomology
> Review of Agricultural Entomology Review of Agricultural Entomology Review of Agricultural Entomology is a fully searchable abstracts database. Derived from CAB Abstracts , the original life sciences database, Review of Agricultural Entomology brings you the latest information on crop protection against insect and other arthropod pests of plants and stored products.

69. Invertebrate Zoology - Molluscs - Snails, Clams, Sea-slugs And Relatives
These animals belong to the phylum Mollusca. Molluscs include chitons, clams, mussels, snails, nudibranchs (seaslugs), tusk shells, octopus and squid.
http://www.amonline.net.au/invertebrates/mal/
These animals belong to the phylum Mollusca. Molluscs include chitons, clams, mussels, snails, nudibranchs (sea-slugs), tusk shells, octopus and squid. The study of molluscs is called malacology. Characteristics of molluscs
  • Unsegmented soft body Most have internal or external shell Have a mantle (fold in the body wall that lines the shell) Muscular foot and/or tentacles
Research The research effort of the section is mainly concentrated on the marine and freshwater snails and sea-slugs. Much of the work is taxonomic, with an emphasis on world-wide, or at least Indo-West Pacific, revisions of groups, but studies on aspects of the biology, ecology and evolution of particular species are also taking place. Projects Staff Winston Ponder (Principal Research Scientist)
Bill Rudman
(Principal Research Scientist)
Ian Loch
(Malacology Collection Supervisor)
Janet Waterhouse
(Technical Officer)
Alison Miller
(Technical Officer)
Jaynia Tarnawski
(Technical Officer)
Holly Barlow
(Technical Officer)
Peter Middelfart
(Scientific Officer)

70. House Of Slime
Information about the morphology and ecology of slugs.
http://www.redscarf.com/slime/

Home
SlugInfo SlugMap SlugPix
Home
SlugInfo SlugMap SlugPix ... SlugMe

71. Leopard Slug Aerial Mating
Leopard Slug Aerial mating. This is the first shot that I got when I discovered a pair of Leopard slugs (Limax maximus) beginning to mate in my garden.
http://members.optushome.com.au/awnelson/davidavid/slug/
Leopard Slug Aerial mating
This is the first shot that I got when I discovered a pair of Leopard Slugs ( Limax maximus ) beginning to mate in my garden. They were suspended by about a metre of the slime shown in the photo, and anchored from the bark of a tree trunk. They were about half a metre off the ground. At this stage they had finished producing the slime and were about to start really mating. In this shot you can see that part of the sexual organ has been 'everted' by the slug that's lower down. It is a very beautiful thing - translucent white, almost blue, like those photos of ice caverns you see. The other slug has also begun to evert the organ. You can see that it comes out from around the side of the head. Well those beautiful organs have found each other and they've entwined a few times. You can see another feature of the organs - they are flanged. Quite a surprise - for some reason the two organs have managed to make this interesting looking structure. It's hard to make out quite what is happening, but it seems like the flanges on the sides of the worm-like organs have grown and are standing out erect. So this is how they end up - the slugs hanging by a metre of slime, with their sexual organs entwined in this strange embrace. I suppose that they were exchanging some intimate substance. They stayed like this for a while, and unfortunately I was called away for dinner. When I returned they were gone, having taken their bungee cord with them.

72. Handmade Wax - Dragon Wizard Cat Dog Frog Parrot Moose
A collection of handmade wax figurines. Featuring brightly colored dragons, cats, dogs, elephants, moose, parrots, slugs, gum savers and purple snot suckers.
http://www.comicartstudio.com/
Sorry, your browser doesn't support Java(tm). S ince 1972 Comic Art Studio has been hand shaping
whimsical wax animals for a sophisticated legion of fans enter

73. Sluggo, Non Toxic Slug And Snail Bait, Safe For Pets
Sluggo slug and snail bait will eliminate slugs and snails while posing no threat to pets or wildlife. Kill slugs and Snails Without Harming Pets, Wildlife.
http://www.pestproducts.com/sluggo.htm
Pest Control Pests Products
Items
... pest control
Sluggo Slug and Snail Bait
Kill Slugs and Snails Without Harming Pets, Wildlife
This bait kills slugs and snails and can safely be used around pets and wildlife! Contains iron phosphate, which occurs naturally in soil. Sluggo remains effective after rain.
Click here to order Sluggo
Active Ingredient:
Iron Phosphate.............. 1.0%
Can safely be used around domestic animals and wildlife! Description Sluggo Application Bait Application Sites This slug bait is a unique blend of an iron phosphate active ingredient, originating from soil, with slug and snail bait additives. It is also used as an ingredient in fertilizers. The bait which is not ingested by snails and slugs will degrade and become a part of the soil.
Sluggo is attractive to slugs and snails, luring them from their hiding places and plants. Ingestion, even in small amounts, will cause them to cease feeding. This physiological effect of the bait gives immediate protection to the plants, even though the slugs and snails may remain in the area. After eating the bait, the slugs and snails cease feeding, become less mobile and begin to die within three to six days. Dead slugs and snails may not be visible as they often crawl away to secluded places to die. Plant protection will be observed in the decrease in plant damage.

74. Shetland Wildlife - Non-Marine Molluscs
A catalog of common slugs and snails (pulmonate gastropods) of the region.
http://www.wildlife.shetland.co.uk/other/mollusc.html
Non-marine Molluscs in Shetland
The non-marine molluscs (Slugs and Snails) of Shetland are not a subject to immediately inspire interest, but this group of invertebrates are one of the most interesting and most often overlooked. To date 62 species have been positively identified in Shetland with a further 5 unsubstantiated records. This represents approximately 31% of the UK fauna and includes both the smallest - Punctum pygmaeum , a tiny disc 1.5 mm across - and the largest - Limax cinereoniger , up to 30 cm of ash-black slug. The latter is considered to be an indicator species of ancient woodland, but in Shetland it is likely to graze on lichens on exposed rocks. Molluscs are present in small numbers in most habitats in Shetland, although the diversity is influenced by underlying geology and it is only among dunes and on limestone that a wide range of species will be found. The earliest known record is for the large freshwater bivalve Margaritifera margaritifera , one of the rarest species, apparently confined to a single site near walls. There are specimens in the Royal Museum of Scotland from 1849. Victorian conchologists were far more interested in making unusual discoveries than in plotting distribution so many old records are tantalisingly vague. An example is Discus rotundatus , one of the commonest species in the UK and first recorded from 'Shetland' around 1860 and again at the turn of the century. However it was not until 1993 that it was re-located and there is no way of knowing if this is the same colony or a very recent introduction (the colony is actually located on a concrete pillar in Weisdale!). The Victorians also had a tendency to be rather imaginative with their identifications and records such as that for

75. Slugs As Pests Of Field Corn - Penn State Entomology Department
slugs AS PESTS OF FIELD CORN. Several species of slugs (gastropods) are common in fields and gardens throughout the United States.
http://www.ento.psu.edu/extension/factsheets/slugs.htm

76. GARDNERS CACHE'
Offers reloading supplies including cast rifle and pistol bullets and sabot slugs
http://www.gardnerscache.com
WELCOME TO GARDNERS CACHE' YOUR ONE STOP SHOP FOR ALL YOUR RELOADING NEEDS "SINCE 1994". HOME PAGE SHOPPING CART CAST PISTOL BULLETS CAST RIFLE BULLETS ... CUSTOMER COMMENTS "WELCOME RELOADERS"
(1)LIFE MEMBER NRA=NATIONAL RIFLE ASSOCIATION
(2)LIFE MEMBER NAHC=NORTH AMERICAN HUNTING CLUB.
(3)LIFE MEMBER PVA= PARALYZED VETERANS OF AMERICA.
(4)ANNUAL MEMBER KGCA=KANKAKEE GUN COLLECTORS ASSOCIATION.
PLEASE TAKE NOTE OF THIS***** WE HOPE IT'S TEMPORARY!!! THE LAST SIX MONTHS THE PRICE OF LEAD HAS BEEN CLIMBING TO HISTORIC LEVELS AND WE DON'T KNOW WHAT IS GOING TO HAPPEN,BUT AS OF 3/07/04 OUR PRICES HAVE INCREASED TO REFLECT THE FOUNDRYS RAISING OF THEIR PRICES TWICE IN THE LAST SIX MONTHS,PLUS A WARNING OF A NEW INCREASE NEXT TRIP TO REPLENTISH MATERIAL.
The Big List of ALL
Indiana Gun Shows

CLICK ON THE STATE OF INDIANA OR THE BLUE ILLINOIS GUN SHOW LINK TO VIEW ALL 2004 GUN SHOWS IN THOSE STATES. ILLINOIS GUN SHOWS 2004 LYMAN 12GAUGE SABOT SLUGS
LYMAN 12 GAUGE 525gr FLATPOINT HOLLOW BASE SABOT SLUGS. USE PLASTIC SHOTGUN WADS WITH A REGULAR FOLD CRIMP.EXTREMELY ACCURATE IN RIFLED BARRELS,CAN BE USED IN SMOOTHBORES. QUANTITIES OF 25,100,PIECES.COMES WITH LOAD DATA. TUMBLERS AND MISC. PRODUCTS.

77. Slugs In Home Gardens
FS07561 2000, To Order. slugs in Home Gardens. Jeffrey All rights reserved. slugs can be very damaging pests in moist, shady gardens. They
http://www.extension.umn.edu/distribution/horticulture/DG7561.html
FS-07561 2000 To Order
Slugs in Home Gardens
Jeffrey Hahn, Assistant Extension Entomologist
Jody Fetzer, Integrated Pest Management Coordinator
Slugs can be very damaging pests in moist, shady gardens. They feed on the leaves of many plants, especially seedlings. Later in the season they can feed on ripening fruits and vegetables. Slugs are especially numerous during rainy seasons and in well-irrigated gardens. If slugs are abundant one year, it does not mean they will be as common the following season; the relative number of slugs in a given season depends on how moist the growing conditions are.
Identification
Slugs are best described as snails without shells. They are a type of mollusk, related to clams and oysters. Slugs are soft bodied, generally brownish or grayish, with eye stalks. They vary in size from 1/4 inch to two inches or longer. Slugs leave a silvery slime trail that they secrete as they move. Slugs use file-like mouthparts to rasp and chew plant tissue. Because of their mouthparts, they create irregularly shaped holes. Feeding damage can be cosmetic, however extensive feeding can result in plant stress or even death.

78. The Trail Of The Snail
Information about land and freshwater snails and slugs by family, photo gallery, and snails in literature, poetry, and art.
http://members.tripod.com/arnobrosi/snail.html
The trail of the snail Evolution Biology Classification Snail species ... What's new Yes,i like snails and slugs,and not the kind that appear on restaurantmenus called escargots, but the ones that live in the garden leaving slimy trails.Ok,call me weird if you like but i really love the little creepers,i rather use snailmail than email and the Snailwatcher by Patricia Highsmith is one of my favourite stories. This site contains three sub-sites:the landsnails site,the freshwatersnails site and the slugs site . Each part is designed so that it can be viewed as a separate site.Because of that you might run into information you found earlier on another part of the site. Search this site powered by FreeFind
There are over 40 pages with snail species.Because many of you might not know to which family a certain species belongs,i've made a list with the english names(if availible) of snailspecies and on which page you can find them.Click here to go there. 17th century gravestone in the Dom church,Utrecht,The Netherlands.Photo:(c)Arno Brosi Go to....

79. If You Like Slugs
IF YOU LIKE slugs Than you are really cool. slugs are some of coolest animals. If you love slugs as I do, you can join the SLUG FAN CLUB®.
http://schools.4j.lane.edu/roosevelt/studentwork/cproj/slugtraps/likeslugs.htm

80. Later's Pest Info Bulletin - Slugs & Snails
slugs Snails. Solutions Prevention Water plants in the morning so area dries during the day so that slugs will look elsewhere for moist areas at night.
http://www.laters.com/insects/slugs.htm
Description: Slimy, soft-bodied molluscs Generations Per Year: Slugs and Snails have both male and female organs and as such are capable of laying tiny, shiny, gelatinous eggs in the soil on their own. Over-winter as: Mostly as adults, but also as eggs. Egg Stage: Masses are laid in damp, dark places or in the soil. Held together by a sticky secretion that turns yellow. Eggs hatch in about a month. Young Stage: Resemble adults but smaller. This stage can take several years to mature. Adult Stage: Live for about a year. Plants Attacked: Vegetables, Flowers (especially Coleus, Cineraria, Geraniums, Marigolds and Snapdragons. Damage: Chewed leaves and stems. Plants Disliked: Stinging Nettles, Wormwood (artemisia).
Solutions
Prevention:
Water plants in the morning so area dries during the day so that Slugs will look elsewhere for moist areas at night.
Slugs will not cross over bare copper tape.
Seaweed placed around vegetable patches and flower beds seems to keep slugs and snails away. Physical Control: Hand pick or trap them under empty flower pots.

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 4     61-80 of 123    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | Next 20

free hit counter