<div dir="ltr"><div><div><div>Hi Friends,<br><br></div>You've all been super helpful in the past as I've worked on my book about species with long shelf lives. I now have examples of mammals, fish, birds, frogs, salamanders, beetles, giant flies, gallwasps, crabs, seadragons, nematodes, fossils, a mineral, and all sorts of other species that waited 75, or 100, or 150 years or more in collections to be described. I'm including 30 species, and I'm currently at 27. So this is a last call! I need three more. Don't send me examples you've sent me before if you're aware of the project, because I'll have already checked them out in the past. But send me anything new! The criteria are: recently described (in the last 10 years) after a long time in a collections (at least 50 years or longer). I've excluded some examples because they simply don't seem all that interesting, and others because, well, if I already have a bat story I don't can't include another one. But I feel like to be complete I need a plant. I don't have an example. I had a few, but they don't seem very compelling. Like this: a plant that looks like a bunch of other plants isn't any of those plants. I need a more superlative story than that. So, consider this the last call. Plants! But anything else too. Maybe some microscopic examples, or lichens, or something weird I haven't thought of? I don't know. I'll welcome anything I haven't seen before! I just need 3 examples!<br><br></div>All bst,<br><br></div>--ck<br clear="all"><div><div><div><div><br>-- <br><div class="gmail_signature" data-smartmail="gmail_signature"><div dir="ltr"><div><div dir="ltr">“If you try and take a cat apart to see how it works, the first thing you have on your hands is a non-working cat.”
<br><br>-- Douglas Adams<span></span></div></div></div></div>
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