February 8, 2013
| From Scientific American Blog
Watch the video @ Scientific American Blog
Mosses, which probably already have an inferiority complex, must feel especially inferior in Sequoia National Park. When you stand in the shadows of giants, how will you ever get noticed?
If you are lucky, someone like Lena Coleman will come to your rescue.
You may have recently read David Quammen’s wonderful profile of The President, the second-largest tree on Earth and a resident of Sequoia National Park. Coleman, who has been studying the mosses there for her Ph.D., made a short film about some of the park’s other residents that may be equally worthy of your notice …
Watch the video @ Scientific American Blog
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