Tim's Wildlife Video Pages
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These videos are filmed on a Sony Hi8, digitized and edited on my "Weapon of Mass Instruction"
using ULead MediaStudio Pro and made available for your viewing pleasure. For best viewing, use WidowsMedia Player.
This Media Player is probably on your computer already if you're running Windows 98; Check your computer now..
Click on "Start"-"Programs"-"Accessories"-"Entertainment"-"Media Player";
is it there? No? then click on this ikon to get your free player

After downloading and installing the program, click on the images below to view the associated
video. I've optimized the videos for 56k Modems and they are programed to stream after buffering.
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Red Tail Hawks
at Seal Beach National Wildlife Refuge
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Tern Island
at
Seal Beach National Wildlife Refuge
This Video Clip webspace provided by
Don May California EarthCorps
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See the Endangered
Beldings Savannah Sparrow
at Seal Beach National Wildlife Refuge
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See the latest of my Endangered Species Videos, California Least Terns get physical at
Venice Beach.
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Jellyfish filmed at the Aquarium of the Pacific. This particular species is Ctenophore
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Masking Crabs frolic on my Fouling Species Study Station at Los Cerritos. Check back, I'm making a "How to
Build Your Own" video.Then you can help this study by collecting data at your marina! |
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Annelida Polychaeta,One of the worms that lives and feeds among Bryozoa living on my Fouling Species Study Station.
Is this cool, or what? |
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A short segment of the award winning environmental film
"Lost Jewel of the Coast", by Janice Dahl .
Featuring Professor Claudia Freitas of Long Beach City College Lecturing on Salt Marsh Ecology
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Brown Pelicans being released at the Seal Beach National Wildlife Refuge after being rescued at the Salton Sea
and Rehabilitated by the Pacific Wildlife Project. |
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El Coyote at Los Cerritos Wetlands
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The Violent side of Mother Nature: a young anemone tears the baby caprella from their mothers arms and eats them
with gusto.
This film was shot using my computer microscope. |
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Dinner time at Los Cerritos Wetlands
Watch an Egret catch his dinner on a winters evening, while Avocets feed in the
slough alongside Dowitchers, Godwits and Willets.
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