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Masses of these on the incoming tide this day, from Himatangi Beach to Foxton Beach - thousands. A feeding frenzy by gulls, oystercatchers, terns and godwits much of the length of the beach. No more sign of them by Dec. 30. Some days later, the floats are washing back in again, the shore is dotted with them, 4th photo.
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Masses of these on the incoming tide this day, from Himatangi Beach to Foxton Beach - thousands. A feeding frenzy by gulls, oystercatchers, terns and godwits much of the length of the beach. No more sign of them by Dec. 30. Some days later, the floats are washing back in again, the shore is dotted with them, 4th photo.
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Masses of these on the incoming tide this day, from Himatangi Beach to Foxton Beach - thousands. A feeding frenzy by gulls, oystercatchers, terns and godwits much of the length of the beach. No more sign of them by Dec. 30. Some days later, the floats are washing back in again, the shore is dotted with them, 4th photo.
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Masses of these on the incoming tide this day, from Himatangi Beach to Foxton Beach - thousands. A feeding frenzy by gulls, oystercatchers, terns and godwits much of the length of the beach. No more sign of them by Dec. 30. Some days later, the floats are washing back in again, the shore is dotted with them, 4th photo.
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These plasticky looking bits have been common in the dunes in the past week. Today the light dawned - ref. the 2nd and 3rd photos - the remains of the influx of buoy barnacles which hit this beach Dec. 28 en masse. The story starts at observation #4869053
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These plasticky looking bits have been common in the dunes in the past week. Today the light dawned - ref. the 2nd and 3rd photos - the remains of the influx of buoy barnacles which hit this beach Dec. 28 en masse. The story starts at observation #4869053
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These plasticky looking bits have been common in the dunes in the past week. Today the light dawned - ref. the 2nd and 3rd photos - the remains of the influx of buoy barnacles which hit this beach Dec. 28 en masse. The story starts at observation #4869053
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Another smaller invasion this day, local to Himatangi Beach, not seen further than 1km south, ie. nothing like as big as the buoy barnacle event of Dec. 28
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Another smaller invasion this day, local to Himatangi Beach, not seen further than 1km south, ie. nothing like as big as the buoy barnacle event of Dec. 28
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Another smaller invasion this day, local to Himatangi Beach, not seen further than 1km south, ie. nothing like as big as the buoy barnacle event of Dec. 28
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Dosima fascicularis (Ellis & Solander, 1786)
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Dosima fascicularis (Ellis & Solander, 1786)
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Dosima fascicularis (Ellis & Solander, 1786)
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Dosima fascicularis (Ellis & Solander, 1786)
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Dosima fascicularis (Ellis & Solander, 1786)
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Pitriana P, Valente L, von Rintelen T, Jones DS, Prabowo RE, von Rintelen K (2020) An annotated checklist and integrative biodiversity discovery of barnacles (Crustacea, Cirripedia) from the Moluccas, East Indonesia. ZooKeys 945: 17-83.
Wikimedia Commons
Figure 4; Dosima fascicularis (Ellis & Solander, 1786) (MZB Cru Cir 048-19) a side view showing the capitulum and peduncle b maxillule c mandible. Scale bars: 5 mm (a); 0.5 mm (b–c).
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Dosima fascicularis (Ellis & Solander, 1786)
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PRESERVED_SPECIMEN; ; ; microslide; ; Gray Museum; IZ number 73657; lot count 1; Microslide 01, cirri; original catalog number GM 5358;
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SERC Photos|sourceurl=https://flickr.com/photos/117184384@N07/38330727934%7Carchive=https://web.archive.org/web/20200501062550/https://flickr.com/photos/117184384@N07/38330727934%7Creviewdate=2019-02-25 13:09:01|reviewlicense=cc-by-2.0|reviewer=FlickreviewR 2
Wikimedia Commons
Summary[
edit] Description: Dosima fascicularis, Gooseneck Barnacle, 7 mm. 80 miles offshore of Barnegat Light, NJ. Collected by VIMS Scallop Survey. Photo by Robert Aguilar, Smithsonian Environmental Research Center. Collected by VIMS Scallop Survey. Photo by Robert Aguilar, Smithsonian Environmental Research Center. Date: 6 December 2017, 09:29. Source:
Dosima fascicularis_(I1828)_0368. Author:
Smithsonian Environmental Research Center.