Flora and Fauna
- 741
- Hyperotreti - Hagfishes
- Taxonomic overview of this group, including characteristics and phylogenetic relationships. The hagfish include four genera: Myxine, Neomyxine, Paramyxine, and Eptatretus.
- 743
- Coastal Plains Reptiles
- Photographs and information on the snakes, lizards, turtles, and crocodilians of the Coastal Plain region of the southeastern United States.
- 746
- Reptile Knowledge
- An educational website including information on all types of reptiles, their behavior and classification, with articles on snakes, lizards, turtles and crocodiles.
- 747
- The New Reptile Database
- The database covers all living snakes, lizards, turtles, amphisbaenians, tuataras, and crocodiles.
- 749
- Faune Explo
- Photos by Alain and Isabelle Boyaval of the brown bear or grizzly (Ursus arctos) and the American black bear (Ursus americanus) and their tracks. [English and French]
- 750
- Sun Bear: Ursus malayanus
- Short illustrated description of this bear which inhabits southeast Asia.
- 751
- Ascidiacea
- Photograph and article from Wikipedia on the tunicates, including their life history, fertilisation and ecology.
- 752
- Ascidian Home Page for the United States
- Home page for Ascidian News, a twice yearly newsletter published by Charles and Gretchen Lambert, with recent worldwide publication citations, meetings abstracts and work in progress. The Ascidiaceae are a family in the Phylum Urochordata and are commonly known as tunicates or sea squirts.
- 753
- Botryllus schlosseri: Star Tunicate
- Photographs and information on this species, including its taxonomy, description, habitat, distribution, life history, population biology, physical tolerances, community ecology and information on its invasivness.
- 754
- Dutch Ascidian Website
- Hundreds of images of ascidian species photographed all over the world, and a few photographs of salps (Thaliacea).
- 756
- Oikopleura's Fishing House
- Article with photographs by Wim van Egmond on this Larvacean and its delicate “house”.
- 757
- Salp
- Photograph and article from Wikipedia on this barrel-shaped tunicate, including its distribution, nervous systems, relationships and classification.
- 758
- Sea Squirts: our Distant Cousins
- Article by Wim van Egmond on the life cycle and development of these Ascidians with several photographs.