- Industry: Government
- Number of terms: 30456
- Number of blossaries: 0
- Company Profile:
                        
  
                                                        NOAA Coral Reef Conservation Program, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce                             
                                                     
                        An examination and dissection of a body of a dead organism in order to determine the cause of death or changes produced by disease.    
    
    						Industry:Natural environment    
									Fine-grained carbonate-rich mud; a calcareous clay which contains approximately 30 to 65 percent calcium carbonate.    
    
    						Industry:Natural environment    
									One of eight non-branched ciliated canals which originates from the gastric pouches of scyphozoan medusae. The flow of digested food materials is toward the ring canal.    
    
    						Industry:Natural environment    
									Rotifers are small invertebrates in the Phylum Rotifera.They range in size from 100 to 2500 microns, with approximately 2000 described species. Rotifers are found in aquatic and semi-aquatic habitats, but are predominantly freshwater inhabitants. Most species are free-living herbivores, bacteriovores or predators, and possess a ciliated, wheel-like organ for feeding and locomotion. Rotifers move by swimming or crawling. Some sessile species are permanently attached to freshwater plants.    
    
    						Industry:Natural environment    
									The copulatory organ or clasper of sharks, rays, skates and chimaeras.    
    
    						Industry:Natural environment    
									The structure and spatial characterization of all habitat types in a specified area.    
    
    						Industry:Natural environment    
									A bar graph in which the area over each class interval is proportional to the relative frequency of data within this interval.    
    
    						Industry:Natural environment    
									A device for measuring the height (rise and fall) of the tide; especially an instrument for automatically making a continuous graphic record of tide height versus time.    
    
    						Industry:Natural environment    
									 
  				
