Wikipedia:Main Page history/2015 January 5

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Fruit bodies of the bolete fungus Suillus pungens

Suillus pungens, commonly known as the pungent slippery Jack, is a species of fungus with a slimy convex cap up to 14 cm (5.5 in) wide. The young cap is typically whitish, later becoming grayish-olive to reddish-brown or a mottled combination of these colors. The mushroom has a dotted stem up to 7 cm (2.8 in) long and 2 cm (0.8 in) thick. On the underside of the cap is the spore-bearing tissue with angular, yellowish pores; milky droplets on the pore surface of young individuals, especially in humid environments, are a characteristic feature of this species. The mushroom is considered edible, but not highly regarded. The fungus—limited in distribution to California—fruits almost exclusively with Monterey and bishop pine, two trees with small and scattered natural ranges concentrated in the West Coast of the United States. Several studies have investigated the role of S. pungens in the coastal Californian forest ecosystem it occupies. Although the species produces more mushrooms (mostly through efficient transfer of nutrients from its host) than similar competing fungi in the same location, it is not a dominant root colonizer, and occupies only a small percentage of root tips. (Full article...)

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January 5

Mikheil Saakashvili

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From today's featured list

A photograph of a man whose arms are folded across his chest who is wearing a blue-and-white floral-print T-shirt while looking at the viewer and smiling

Human characters on Sesame Street, a children's television program, appear together with the program's Muppet characters despite the advice that the producers received prior to the 1969 premiere from child psychologists who were concerned that children would be confused by human-Muppet interactions. The producers defied the recommendations of their advisers because researchers found that, although children's attention was high during the Muppet segments, their interest wavered when there were only humans on screen. The original cast, chosen by producer Jon Stone, consisted of four human actors—Matt Robinson, who played Gordon; Loretta Long, who played Gordon's wife, Susan; Will Lee, who played Mr. Hooper; and Bob McGrath (pictured), who played Bob. Unlike most children's television programs at the time, the producers of Sesame Street decided against using a single host and cast a group of ethnically diverse actors. Most of the initial cast and crew found jobs on Sesame Street through personal relationships with Stone and the other producers. (Full list...)

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Yellow-bellied marmot

The yellow-bellied marmot (Marmota flaviventris) is a ground squirrel in the marmot genus. Found in the western United States and southwestern Canada, including the Rocky Mountains and the Sierra Nevada, these marmots live in colonies of about ten to twenty individuals, typically located in open areas at least 6,500 feet (2,000 m) above sea level.

Photograph: David Iliff

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