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Researchers say odd-looking plants discovered by a volunteer and supervisory interpretive park ranger at a U.S. National Park ...
The Wooly Devil, or Ovicula biradiata, was first spotted by botany volunteer Deb Manley and a park ranger in Big Bend ...
The plant, formally known as Ovicula biradiata, is especially notable for being the simultaneous discovery of a new species ...
A new plant species, Ovicula biradiata, also known as "Wooly Devil," was discovered in Big Bend National Park, marking a new ...
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Midland Reporter-Telegram on MSNNew plant species discovered in Big Bend National Park after 50 yearsA new plant species, Ovicula biradiata, has been discovered in Big Bend National Park, marking the first such discovery in a ...
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New ‘wooly devil’ plant species discovered in national parkThe plant’s name, Ovicula biradiata, pays tribute to its fuzzy exterior. Ovicula means “tiny sheep” — apropos for the white ...
(CNN) - Staff members at Big Bend National Park discovered a brand-new plant. They spotted several odd-looking plants on desert rocks in a remote part of the park. Genetic analysis revealed that not ...
A new fuzzy plant species called the "Wooly Devil" has been discovered amongst the arid landscapes of Big Bend National Park ...
The small plant, officially named “Ovicula biradiata" and more affectionately called “wooly devil,” was first spotted in ...
It’s in the same family as daisies. Researchers named it Ovicula biradiata. Ovicula is Latin for tiny sheep, for the fuzz that resembles wool covering it. And biradiata refers to the two ray ...
Big Bend National Park staff members in Texas were the first to log the "wooly devil," a new plant species with the official name Ovicula biradiata.
The newly-discovered plant is officially named Ovicula biradiata. “Ovicula = tiny sheep, in reference to the thick white “wool” that covers the leaves, and biradiata = referencing the two ...
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