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Here we are at Kelso dunes
walking up the dunes seeing lots a lizards
lots of tracks in the sand. Eventually were going to try to maybe hike up to this thing.
A lot of tracks in the sand.
Eriogonum inflatum, the inflated bits.
Here's the larvae of the butterfly that lays the egg in the plant.
It's right here.
Apodemia, that's right.
It lays it's eggs in the
little crooks here. There's some down here.
Those get paraticized by the wasps that we're looking for. This one has a little wasp exit hole.
Here's another one up here. That one looks like it might be good.
So we just snip it off and check the rest of the branches.
Here's another one. We'll save that, take it back, and see what comes up.
whether it's a larvae or a wasp. [Professor]: What are you doing?
[Student]: I'm going through about 1000
eggs to see if any of them
merged with either wasps or the larvae.
And we're looking for
apodemia mormo.
I'm currently processing.
Taking the eggs off the plant and putting them into individual vials. Sometimes they're stuck together and that's a real pain.
Hey look what we found here
What is that? [Female Voice]: It's a sea urchin.
[Professor]: What do you remember from 1108 about that? [Student]: It's an econaderm phylum.
It has two feet for moving.
It's a close relative to a starfish.
Yeah, Angela just exposed
the stomach and his digestive system right now which inverts
yeah