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SPOOKY TIME HERDERS. Welcome back to the episode that will give you the willies! Deinopis, also known as net-casting spiders, gladiator spiders and ogre-faced spiders,[2] is a genus of net-casting spiders that was first described by W. S. MacLeay in 1839.[3] Its distribution is widely tropical and subtropical. They catch their prey using a specially spun "net". The name is derived from the Greek δεινός (deinos), meaning "fearful", and opis, meaning "appearance", referring to their ogre-like faces. The spelling "Dinopis" is also found, but is regarded as an "unjustified emendation".[1]
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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I'm excited to welcome our first doctor to the Holistic Interior Design Podcast, Dr. Natasha of Tulsi Wellness Center. Dr. Natasha practices Holistic Health, and as Holistic Interior Designers, it's important for us to make our overall health and wellness a priority, while also considering how our designs contribute to the holistic health of our clients. Dr. Natasha shares her journey to practicing Holistic Health, her personal connection to Holistic Interior Design, and how we can take better care of ourselves as designers and creatives. Dr. Natasha offers great, simple tips that will help us in all areas of our lives, not just business.About Dr. Natasha MacLeayDr. MacLeay is sincerely dedicated to transforming the lives of women. She helps optimize gut health, hormones and skin naturally. Dr. MacLeay uncovers the “why” of your health concern and provides the necessary treatment to make your health an asset to your life. She pioneers in establishing a targeted approach towards the bi-directional relationship between the bellies and brains, an often-overlooked area of treatment.Dr. MacLeay utilizes advanced technology and functional medicine testing such as gut microbiome, micronutrient, food sensitivity, neurotransmitter, and genetic testing to get answers for targeted treatment. As a Naturopathic Doctor her approach is a balance of traditional and modern medicine. Treatment often includes nutrition counseling, botanical medicine, homoeopathic medicine, hydrotherapy, and physical medicine.Specialties:- Cognitive & Mental Health (Brain fog, anxiety, depression, ADHD)- Gastrointestinal Health (IBS, IBD, SIBO, GERD, food sensitivity, dysbiosis and more)- Endocrinology (thyroid disorders, stress hormones, autoimmune disease)- Regenerative Medicine (PRP/Exosome therapy for hair and face)Featured in this episodeFeatured Tarot deck: Cosmo TarotConnect with Dr. Natasha & TulsiTulsi WebsiteTulsi InstagramDr. Natasha's InstagramAre you an interior designer or are you interested in Holistic Interior Design? Check out my membership program, the Design Coven! This program is a real-world industry mentorship for Holistic Interior Designers that has everything you won't find in traditional design school curriculum. You'll learn from practicing interior designers working on real life projects, and get access to cutting edge vendors, suppliers, furniture makers, textile designers, and design resources that I've curated over my 17 years of design experience. As a member, you'll have the opportunity to build valuable relationships of your own. Learn more.Connect with Rachel LarraineWebsiteInstagramInterior Design ServicesInterior Design ResourcesHouzz (Affiliate Link)
For this episode of Object Matters host Dr Craig Barker is joined by zoologist and 2023 Macleay Miklouho-Maclay Fellow Dr Angel Luis Viloria Petit, who has recently completed his research in Sydney, examining historic collections of butterflies. The Chau Chak Wing Museum houses the natural history collection of Alexander Macleay (1767-1848) largely amassed prior to his arrival in the colony of NSW in 1826. Many of the insects were acquired by Macleay from other naturalists, including Dru Drury (1725-1804) who published three volumes on butterflies. In his three months in Sydney, Venezuelan-based Dr Viloria has examined thousands of specimens in the collection and has successfully identified more than 260 primary type specimens, many from Drury's collections dating back to the 1770-1790s, identifiable from hand-painted illustrations from within those publications. Together they discuss Angel's career and research, the history of insect collecting, and early European collectors and the process of identifying primary type specimens in two hundred year old collections of butterflies using historical hand-painted illustrations. Read more on Dr Viloria's research while in Sydney. Guest: Dr Angel Viloria is a zoologist and entomologist at the Ecological Centre in Caracas, Venezuela and Senior Researcher at the Centre of Ecology of the Venezuelan Institute for Scientific Investigations (IVIC), specialising in South American lepidoptera. He received a first degree in Biology from the Universidad del Zulia, Maracaibo, Venezuela, and his Doctorate of Philosophy (zoology) from a joint program of the University of London (King's College) and the Natural History Museum, UK. He has pursued investigations on a variety of subjects related to zoology, theoretical biogeography, history and philosophy of the biological sciences. However, his main interest is on the systematics of butterflies of Tropical America, especially the Andean browns, members of the subfamily Satyrinae. In 2019-2020 he held the Simón Bolívar Visiting Chair at the University of Cambridge. He is is author and co-author of 110+ scientific papers, 210+ popular science articles and 8 books, including the standard reference, Catalogue of the hostplants of the Neotropical butterflies. Host: Dr Craig Barker, Head of Public Engagement, Chau Chak Wing Museum and Director, Paphos Theatre Archaeological Excavations. Follow @DrCraig_B on Twitter and Instagram. Objects details: The Dru Drury collection of butterflies and moths within the Macleay natural history collections.
This week we are looking into one of the most popular stick insects around the globe! The Australian spiny stick insect happens to make a great pet and teaching tool, and it's got quite a few tricks up its sleeve. Support the show :) -> https://www.patreon.com/user?u=46499107 IG:https://www.instagram.com/insects4fun/ FB: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100085443614825 Email: Insectsfordummies@gmail.com This week's featured artists: Mitchel Logan and Blue Wednesday. Transcript: It's Tuesday! Or Monday for some of you and that means it's time to talk about a cool insect with me as your host. We have another listener request episode this week from Chantelle out in Australia, and with that let's begin episode 42. Australia's spiny stick insect is scientifically known as Extatosoma tiaratum, which translates to Ecstatic-bodied tiara! Quite the dainty name for something that looks monstrous to many. This big stick insect is native to Queensland and New South Wales which are both on the east coast of Australia, but because they happen to be easy to raise, and docile, these insects have been shipped around the world and used in various museums and educational facilities. I'm not saying they can be found in the wild around the world, but escaped populations might exist in Australia's neighboring islands like New Guinea for example. These insects go by many names like Australian Walking Stick, Spinies, Macleay's Spectre after the naturalist William Macleay who described them, Spiny stick insects, and spiny leaf insects. Now you might be confused about why it goes by both leaf and stick insects and I'm gonna clear that up right now. Stick insects and leaf insects are terms for two different body shapes of insects in the order Phasmatodea, and as such are also divided by their family name. Leaf insects in the family Phylliidae are typically very flat and look like leaves while stick insects in the family Phasmatidae are usually more twig-like. Today's spiny stick insect is indeed a stick insect within the family Phasmatidae, BUT! The females have a pretty ambiguous body shape that makes them look as if they could be a leaf insect too. And yeah I'm specifically talking about the girls here because this insect is sexually dimorphic which means males and females are pretty different. The females for this species are longer and a bit more thicc. They also have leaf-shaped arms with very small wings. The males on the other hand are thin with very long wings, and their legs do not widen out to the same leafy extent as their counterparts. I think the females are actually the most commonly photographed as well, but I'll put pictures of both sexes up on the socials. So as I mentioned earlier these insects are very popular as both pets and exhibit insects for museums, and as such there is a wealth of knowledge about how to raise them and what they eat. Wild populations are known to feed on Eucalyptus, but they can also eat brambles like raspberry bushes, oak, and rose bushes as well. In fact, most domestic populations are raised on rose or berry bushes, because Eucalyptus isn't exactly easy to get outside of Australia. The life cycle begins as an egg 2mm in length which is like the tip of a lightly used crayon, how do I know that? Because that's what Google sensei told me. Anyway, here's where things get crazy. The eggs look like calico brown seeds, and not just to humans. Female spiny stick insects actually flick their eggs on the ground so that ants from the genus Leptomyrmex will take them home and keep them safe until they hatch! It gets even wilder because the seeds actually have a small plug called a capitulum that's edible for the ants with no consequence to the stick insect. This is mimicry to the extreme to the point where the eggs even smell like ant food. I have no idea what that would be exactly but what I do know is that the ants keep these eggs in their homes until they hatch, which is a long time by the way. Like over 6 months of time and sometimes two years. The time it takes is dependent on the conditions of its environment. For example, dry and unsuitable weather might cause the egg to remain in this state for longer as opposed to a warm and relatively humid environment. Upon hatching these first instars actually resemble red-headed spider ants which also happen to be the ants which housed them. After the stick insects hatch they begin their ascent into trees of host plants. In most wild cases that would be Eucalyptus. These small nymphs go through 5 molts if they are males and 6 molts if they are female with each one looking very much like a stick or dried leaves. Something really cool is that if a stick insect loses a leg while it is still a nymph, that leg will actually grow back in the next molt, just not as long as the original. That being said, if it's already an adult and loses a limb then it's gone for good. In regards to their molting, these insects actually need to hang upside down on something for the best chance of having a clean molt. Their bodies are pretty big with females reaching a length of 20cm and as a result they rely on gravity to help them slip out. In the wild, these insects are preyed upon by birds, but they do a pretty good job at mimicking their surroundings. They even go as far as to sway their bodies like branches or leaves in a tree. One study actually looked at whether or not wind triggers stick insect body sways, and the answer was yes it does! Aside from blending into their surroundings, these stick insects do have some other methods of warding off predators. Both males and females if threatened will strike a pose that mimics scorpions by curling their abdomen up and elevating it by standing only on their front four legs. Males can also flare out their wings and both are able to release a defense odor that to us has a kind of toffee smell, but to other animals is gross, unless you don't like toffee. They also cross their hind legs in a defensive position to protect their backs. These insects are all bark and no bite though which is another reason they make great pets and educational tools for learning about insects. If you are interested in raising some of these yourself it's really not that complicated. You simply need a large enclosure with adequate air flow, and a heating source if you live in places where it gets colder than 16C or 60 degrees F in your home during the year. When it comes to food most people will take cuttings from raspberry, blackberry, rose or other known host plants and place them in a vase or jar with water. You need to be careful though, just because they can eat any of these plants does not mean the insects you receive will. Just like people, they have their individual preferences, so using what the parents were raised on is a good place to start since that is what they are genetically predisposed to wanting. These insects have a lifespan of 1 year in the wild but up to 2 in captivity. They are also a gift that keeps on giving because the females can lay up to 1000 eggs in their lifetime and they do not need a male for fertilization. The Australian spiny stick insects are parthenogenic which means that the females can produce viable eggs that are clones of herself! This is something I went into detail on in episode 26 with the web spinners so I'm not gonna say much more other than If you take good care of your sticks then you'll never not have any.
Wellness in San Diego: Food, Movement, Spirituality + Wellbeing
We've all heard the phrase "listen to your gut" and the notion of a "gut feeling." This is because our gut, often referred to as our "second brain," communicates directly with our central nervous system, influencing our emotions, moods, and cognitive function. In this week's episode, Dr. Natasha Macleay, naturopathic doctor at Tulsi Wellness Center in Del Mar, shares her wealth of knowledge and the latest research on the intricate connection of the gut-brain axis and its profound impact on our mental health. We also cover how: the trillions of gut microbiota play a pivotal role in regulating neurotransmitters and influencing our mental state the benefits of curcumin to treat depressive symptoms practical tips to help regulate stress + mood Whether you're interested in the science behind the gut-mind connection or seeking to improve your mental health, tune in to expand your understanding of your gut and mind. Episode resources: Tulsi Wellness Center: wearetulsi.com | @wearetulsi Dr. Natasha Macleay: @dr.natashamacleay New Moon Mindful Mixer | Friday, May 19 The Wellness in San Diego podcast is produced by Locally Well San Diego, your destination for all things wellness here in San Diego. Visit locallywell.com or @locallywell for the latest!
The AKC Canine Health Foundation was founded in 1995 and is now an independent organization that gives grants to researchers studying health problems in dogs. Their website also features a variety of educational resources for dog lovers and veterinarians alike! Learn about where the money comes from, how they select which studies to fund, and some of the fascinating studies underway that will help give us some extra ammunition in the fight against dog cancer. Links Mentioned in Today's Show: AKC Canine Health Foundation Canine Health Foundation Tribute Page AKC Canine Health Foundation Facebook page One Health Initiative Ethos Veterinary Health Clinical Studies American Veterinary Medical Association Animal Health Studies Database Google Scholar Related Links: Choosing the Right Clinical Trial for Your Dog podcast episode About Today's Guest, Dr. Jennifer MacLeay: Dr. MacLeay is the Chief Scientific Officer of the AKC Canine Health Foundation. Dr. MacLeay received her DVM from The Ohio State University, completed an internship in Charlottesville, VA, and residency and PhD at The University of Minnesota. She is boarded by the American College of Veterinary Internal Medicine and completed an MBA at the University of Kansas. At the University of Minnesota and Colorado State University Dr. MacLeay taught in the veterinary teaching hospitals, conducted research, and taught in the veterinary medicine curriculum. Most recently Dr. MacLeay was Medical Director at Hill's Pet Nutrition where she developed and executed research that fused patient needs, physiology, and technology. She supported basic research, product development, and exercised strategic study design to deliver state of the art claims, elevating patient care. Dr. MacLeay's deep understanding of internal medicine and love of One Health is now focused on accelerating the growth of the AKC Canine Health Foundation. She is a skilled communicator, having authored or co-authored over 50 peer reviewed scientific papers and book chapters in addition to over 80 abstracts for conferences and meetings presented nationally and internationally. LinkedIn Other Links: To join the private Facebook group for readers of Dr. Dressler's book “The Dog Cancer Survival Guide,” go to https://www.facebook.com/groups/dogcancersupport/ Dog Cancer Answers is a Maui Media production in association with Dog Podcast Network This episode is sponsored by the best-selling animal health book The Dog Cancer Survival Guide: Full Spectrum Treatments to Optimize Your Dog's Life Quality and Longevity by Dr. Demian Dressler and Dr. Susan Ettinger. Available everywhere fine books are sold. Have a guest you think would be great for our show? Contact our producers at DogCancerAnswers.com Have an inspiring True Tail about your own dog's cancer journey you think would help other dog lovers? Share your true tail with our producers. If you would like to ask a dog cancer related question for one of our expert veterinarians to answer on a future Q&A episode, call our Listener Line at 808-868-3200 www.dogcanceransers.com. Dog Cancer News is a free weekly newsletter that contains useful information designed to help your dog with cancer. To sign up, please visit: www.dogcancernews.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Dr. Kathy Macleay visit with Shawn & Brian to share the extraordinary story of her & her family's lifelong commitment to those with special needs Personal Investments:: A Practical Guide to How to Use Psychotherapy as an Investment in Your Life by Dr. Kathy Macleay: https://www.amazon.com/Personal-Investments-Practical-Psychotherapy-Investment/dp/B08F6Y3NP4 — Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/just_two_dads/ Podcast: https://anchor.fm/justtwodads LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/justtwodads Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/wearejusttwodads YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-GN4T9fkHEVR5R_16w_7bw #KathyMacLeay #InvestingInYourSelfWorth #justTwoDads
The Nambucca, Macleay and Hastings River systems hold good numbers of trevally all year round - with multiple species on offer and some pretty hectic action at times. David Irvine loves to target these feisty sportfish on very light gear and a range of small lures. _________________________ Enjoying the ALF Podcast? Please show your support by joining Team Doc Lures! Members get bonus audio masterclasses, ebooks and other resources to help improve their fishing. Check it out: https://team.doclures.com/ _________________________ Full show notes for todays episode are available at https://doclures.com/nsw-mid-north-trevally-david-irvine/
Despite their household name being all but forgotten, the Macleay family were a force to be reckoned with in Colonial Sydney society. They owned vast swaths of NSW as it was carved up in the 19th century, they represented much more of the colony in parliament, they built a most impressive sandstone mansion at Elizabeth Bay House and after 3 generations of collection famously bequeathed one of the world's vastest natural history collections to the University of Sydney. Join us this episode as we discuss one of the most important but oft overlooked colonial Sydney families; the Macleays.
From June 2008: Electric flying saucers, Personal networks sewn into clothes, Fake urine used by miners by Patrick Rubie, Nineteenth Century naturalist Fanny Macleay by Lachlan Whatmore, Discussion of news, staying young by staying with the young, and the portable hug with Ian Woolf and Patrick Rubie, Can Dolphins Talk? by Ian Woolf, Presented and produced by Ian Woolf Support Diffusion by making a contribution Support Diffusion by buying through affiliate links
Devon will be interviewing Dan MacLeay of Muletown funding, a top private money lender in Denver and Nashville. When is private money a good idea? what does the process look like compared to conventional financing?mulefunding.com See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Republican National Committeewoman in DC Ashley MacLeay recaps the March for Trump Rally in Washington DC over the weekend.
Republican National Committeewoman representing DC Ashley MacLeay explains that a March for Trump rally is being held in Washington DC this weekend but Facebook and other social media websites keep taking down their event pages.
Dr. Nicole Saphier Board Certified Physician in NYC area Author of the bestselling book: Make America Healthy Again, how bad behavior and big government caused a trillion-dollar crisis. The largest on the convoluted covid data, the truth behind covid treatments, the unreliable numbers hidden in testing results and the science behind school opening policies with Dr. Nicole Saphier. Liz Harrington Spokesperson for the RNC Liz Harrington tells Larry O'Connor that Democrats and teachers' unions are using our children for their own selfish political purposes. She also gives an update on the RNC convention in Charlotte and Jacksonville in light of the covid-19 protocols. Ashley MacLeay At-Large Representative on the DC State Board of Education DC Board of Education member Ashley MacLeay is being accused of using "racist" and "harmful" language in a recent, marathon BOE meeting where the issue of police and school resource officers was debated. You'll hear the remarks in question and MacLeay will tell her side of history on today's podcast. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Often when we talk about 60cm Australian bass we're referring to the large, fat impoundment fish. But Aussie bass specialist and renowned fishing journalist David Seaman takes some sizable wild bass from the Macleay and Manning River systems. In this episode he explains how. Full notes at https://doclures.com/macleay-river-bass-dave-seaman/
“I loved horses and I wanted to ride and my parents convinced me that if I became a veterinarian I would have time to ride, which was so not true” Our guest today is Dr. Jennifer MacLeay. Dr. MacLeay is the Medical Director for Hill’s Pet Nutrition. She has a fascinating career filled with a lot of research and a lot of credentials and get this, she isn’t done yet! At the time of the recording she was weeks away from earning her MBA. We really enjoyed our chat with Dr. MacLeay and learned so much. We cannot wait to share this journey with you! Remember we want to hear from you! Please be sure to subscribe to our feed on Apple Podcasts and leave us a ratings and review. You can also contact us at MVLPodcast@avma.org You can also follow us on Social Media @AVMAVets #MyVetLife #MVLPodcast
Rad rad rad…. welcome to a very special episode of Hot & Delicious: Rocks The Planet! podcast where this week, I’m podcasting live from Macleay College in Sydney with a lecture on Content Strategy - Platforms, Content Execution and Distribution. I provide you with all the top tips & tools to write a strategy for your business or brand, no matter how big or small. And yes, it’s absolutely free! Here’s the PDF deck so that you can follow along with the lecture: http://bit.ly/ContentStrategyLecture2019byhotndelicious Podcast flow: Dan Wilkinson Overview/Portfolio - Who I am and what I do. Client Digital Content Strategy:1st Steps. Where Do We Begin? Market Research, Digital Ecosystems & Platform Mix. Our Approach To Social Media: Driving Business/Brand Objectives, Designing for the User Experience. Best Practice Content Execution. Distribution Through Advertising. Let’s get into the show! Hit Hot & Delicious: Rocks The Planet up on social media here: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/danwilkinson1/ Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hotndelicious/ Instagram https://www.instagram.com/craftbeerlovin/ Twitter https://twitter.com/hotndelicious Facebook https://www.facebook.com/HotnDelicious Hot & Delicious YouTube - Ballistyx Snowboard Show, interviews & more. https://www.youtube.com/user/HotnDeliciousRecords 'Hot & Delicious: Rocks The Planet’ entertainment, travel, photography & lifestyle blog: http://hotndelicious.com/ For social media strategy, content/photography & influencer business enquiries contact: info@hotndelicious.com
Obesity In Horses Is More Common Than We Think Time Stamps and Contact Details for this Episode are available on www.HorseChats.com/ClaudiaMacleay Music - BenSound.com Interviewed by Glenys Cox
In this week's episode I chat with the National News Director for NOVA and Smooth FM Michelle Stephenson Michelle can currently be heard on Nova 96.9 reading the news. She has been active in the Australian and International media scene for more than 10 years, which has seen her work for Sky News, Prime TV and even anchoring a news show in Canada. With a Degree in Politics and a Masters in journalism, Michelle is now happy helping out the next generation of journo’s as the radio lecturer at Macleay college. Never shy of putting her opinion forward, she appears regularly on morning TV, podcasting and any other forum with, or without a microphone. She is married to husband Ethan and they are the proud parents of 4 year old Bae. You can contact Michelle on https://www.linkedin.com/in/michelle-stephenson https://www.instagram.com/michellaseka/
News by Patrick Rubie - electric flying saucers - personal networks sewn into clothes - fake urine used by miners Nineteenth Century naturalist Fanny Macleay by Lachlan Whatmore,Discussion of the news, staying young by staying with the young, and the portable hug with Ian Woolf and Patrick Rubie,Can Dolphins Talk? by Ian Woolf,Produced and Presented by Ian Woolf.