Office Work, Part Deux: Professional Mayhen

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g is a very good writer when she wants to be.

I know it. But I love the way she writes on here, it's so conversational.
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Plus I love her 'cause she can take some teasing.
 
I didn't write this. It is an example of some of the informtation I am wading through.

Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd), a chytridiomycete fungus pathogenic to amphibians and implicated as the proximate cause of
amphibian declines around the world (Berger et al. 1998, Pounds et al. 2006), has been found in Rana pretiosa in Oregon and
Washington and may have contributed to declines observed there (Hayes et al. 2009). Other diseases also affect Oregon spotted frogs
(see USFWS 2009), but the degree to which these represent signficant threats is poorly known.​
 
Tongue is squishy.

I used to be the kid who would walk through the meat section of the grocery store and poke all the meats. I used to poke fish in the eyes.....maybe I had a bad experience and that is why dead animals FREAK me out.
 
Check this out, my uncle told me about it after I told the story of our bat wake-up call.

"What is white-nose syndrome?

In February 2006 some 40 miles west of Albany, N.Y., a caver photographed hibernating bats with an unusual white substance on their muzzles. He noticed several dead bats. The following winter, bats behaving erratically, bats with white noses, and a few hundred dead bats in several caves came to the attention of New York Department of Environmental Conservation biologists, who documented white-nose syndrome in January 2007. More than a million hibernating bats have died since. Biologists with state and federal agencies and organizations across the country are still trying to find the answer to this deadly mystery.

We have found sick, dying and dead bats in unprecedented numbers in and around caves and mines from New Hampshire to Tennessee. In some hibernacula, 90 to 100 percent of the bats are dying.

While they are in the hibernacula, affected bats often have white fungus on their muzzles and other parts of their bodies. They may have low body fat. These bats often move to cold parts of the hibernacula, fly during the day and during cold winter weather when the insects they feed upon are not available, and exhibit other uncharacteristic behavior.

Despite the continuing search to find the source of this condition by numerous laboratories and state and federal biologists, the cause of the bat deaths remains unknown. A newly discovered cold-loving fungus, Geomyces destructans, invades the skin of bats. Scientists are exploring how the fungus acts and searching for a way to stop it."
 
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You only thought it was funny cause you don't spell so gud.

hukd on fonix werkd fore mee!

Spell check is my bestest friend ever!
 
Quote:
hukd on fonix werkd fore mee!

Spell check is my bestest friend ever!

I hate spell check. But, I was going to grow up and be an English teacher....
 
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