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== To do == |
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== To do == |
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* Substantially contribute to/expand some of the many stubs on imperiled or understudied North American orchid species (e.g. ''[[Calopogon oklahomensis]]'', the prairie grass-pink) |
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* Imperiled or understudied North American orchid species (e.g. ''[[Calopogon oklahomensis]]'', the prairie grass-pink) |
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* Expand the article on the ''Hemaris'' genus of hawkmoths, known as the clearwings or hummingbird hawkmoths in the U.S. and as bee hawkmoths in Europe, and also contributing to the articles for its 23 species, most of which are currently stubs |
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* ''Hemaris'' genus of hawkmoths, known as the clearwings or hummingbird hawkmoths in the U.S. and as bee hawkmoths in Europe |
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* Expand stubs in sweat bee genera Agapostemon, Halictus, and Lasioglossum |
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* Sweat bee genera Agapostemon, Halictus, and Lasioglossum |
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* Expand or create articles for endangered or extinct endemic Hawaiian flora and fauna |
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* Endangered or extinct endemic Hawaiian flora and fauna |
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* Natural History of Georgia (U.S. State) |
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* Improve Ecology of Florida |
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* ''Bombus'' stubs , and create missing species articles |
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<!-- The article's opening sentence currently says that Florida has two Level I and three Level II/III ecoregions, but there's no indication of what those levels mean or what the corresponding ecoregions are. It links to <nowiki>[[</nowiki>[[ecoregion]]<nowiki>]]</nowiki>, but that article doesn't clarify the levels used here. You have to click on the first source (Ecoregions of North America, epa.gov) and zoom in on the map PDFs to see that Florida's two Level I (broad) ecoregions are Eastern Temperate Forests and Tropical Wet Forests while the three Level II/III (more specific, nested within Level I) ecoregions are Southeastern Plains, Southern Coastal Plains, and Everglades. Specifically, the Everglades fall under the Level I classification of Tropical Wet Forests and the Level II/III classification of Everglades. All of Florida north of the Everglades falls into the Level I classification of Eastern Temperate forest, which is divided at Level II into Southeastern Plains along Florida's northern border and Southern Coastal Plains from there south to the Everglades. --> |
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* Improve and expand Natural History of Georgia (U.S. State); possibly rename as Ecology of Georgia (U.S. State) to have broader scope akin to the Florida ecology article |
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* Expand ''Bombus'' stubs and create articles for species needing them |
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== Articles created == |
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== Articles created == |
This is my user page. I'll make it better as I learn how.
- Gallery: my favorite Wikipedia and Commons images
To do
- Imperiled or understudied North American orchid species (e.g. Calopogon oklahomensis, the prairie grass-pink)
- Hemaris genus of hawkmoths, known as the clearwings or hummingbird hawkmoths in the U.S. and as bee hawkmoths in Europe
- Sweat bee genera Agapostemon, Halictus, and Lasioglossum
- Endangered or extinct endemic Hawaiian flora and fauna
- Natural History of Georgia (U.S. State)
- Bombus stubs, and create missing species articles
Articles created
Userbox containment facility