« Nature Links »
Random naural history links
- American Museum of Natural History
- BugBios : Shameless appreciation of insects. This site is brilliant!
- The Coleopterist
Apparently The Coleopterist is the leading journal for students of the beetle fauna of the British Isles.
It also has an extensive photlibrary covering over 450 beetles. - Discovery Channel: Animal Planet - Brilliant!
- The Eden Project - Interesting place
About the relationship between plants and people, their ongoing mission to promote the understanding and responsible management of the vital relationship between plants, people and resources leading to a sustainable future for all. - eNature.com - The pop-up is annoying, but the resources are absolutely phenomenal
- Essex Wildlife Trust
- Junglewalk - loads of great nature pictures here, many public domain.
Plenty of sounds and movies too, though it does rely a lot of RealMedia, which, personally, I detest.
Lots of (sponsor) links to posters to pay for it, but a great resource all the same - Micrographia
Micrographia is for those who use microscopes in their investigations of the world around them.
It is for students and teachers of (especially) fresh water biology in their search for creature identification and illustrative material, for both amateur and professional light microscopists seeking to extend the performance of their instruments and to record the images they produce ..... and for anyone at all who feels like a browse through a minutely detailed world of small animals, small plants, and small things. - [ www.microscopy-uk.org.uk ] Microscopy-uk.org - Excellent resource with online store for microscopes etc
- National Geographic - From furry bunnies to fiery volcano's, this natural history journal offers it all
- The Pied Piper
Actually these are pest control specialists but they have extensive details of the sort of visitors that plague us - including lice, rats. It also covers legal aspects, pesticides and more. - Antbase - The Social Insects Web
- Virtually Horses ~ Anatomy of a horse. This is a brilliant site!


