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  2. Images tagged "jamin"

Images tagged "jamin"

Students use yarn to create a mangrove food web or a series of interconnected food chains.
This student was so excited to hold a crab for the first time.
A student answers questions on her activity worksheet while on a field trip to a mangrove forest.
William Knibb student stands next to the mangrove propagules to show the scale.
William Knibb students show off the food web animals that they represent.
William Knibb high schoolers learn about the different trophic levels in the mangrove food web. These two students (macroalgae and phytoplankton) are primary producers meaning they create their own food.
William Knibb student taking a closer look at turban snails. They have two antennae that help them to feel around their surroundings.
Students show off mangrove leaves they collected.
A student shows off his sketch of a mangrove leaf.
Students taste a mangrove leaf -they\'re salty!
A student holds up a fiddler crab, one of many species that makes its home in Jamaican mangrove forests.
Camilo Trench finds a tiny crab crawling around and though unexpected, he teaches students how small animals often live on other organisms like sponges and seaweed.
UWI Discovery Bay partner, Camilo Trench, teaching students from William Knibb High School about black mangroves.
University of the West Indies partner, Camilo Trench, explains how sea stars, sea urchins, sand dollars, and sea cucumbers are part of the Phylum Echinodermata.
Teachers at Willliam Knibb High School holding a sea urchin. Fulvia Nugent (right) is one of our JAMIN teachers.
Holland High School teachers, Cherrida Walters-Jackson and Gregory Peart examine a sea cucumber during professional development training.
A brittle star, a type of starfish, that we showed to teachers and students when talking about the organisms that live in the mangroves.
Holland High School grade 10 biology students concentrate on listening to a presentation about mangrove food webs.
JAMIN participants at Holland High School check out the small structures of a lettuce sea slug in the microviewer.
Biology students at Holland High School touch an anemone and find out that the tentacle are quite sticky.

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Khaled bin Sultan Living Oceans Foundation

The Khaled bin Sultan Living Oceans Foundation is dedicated to the conservation and restoration of living oceans and pledges to champion their preservation through research, education and a commitment to Science Without Borders.®


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