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Drosera capensis, commonly known as the Cape sundew, is a perennial rosette-forming carnivorous plant in the family Droseraceae. It is endemic to the Western Cape and Eastern Cape provinces of South Africa. As in all sundews, the leaves are covered in stalked, mucilage-secreting glands (or 'tentacles') that attract, trap, and digest arthropod prey. When prey is captured, the tentacles bend inward and the leaves curl around it, preventing escape and enhancing digestion by increasing the surface area of the leaf in contact with the prey. This time-lapse video shows a D. capensis leaf curling up around a Mediterranean fruit fly over a period of approximately six hours.Video credit: Scott Schiller

Short articles started: Hardy-Weinberg principle, Richard Lewontin, Pseudogene, 808 State, Replication, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Tierra, Black widow spider, Crab spider (last two with some help!). --- Stub articles started: Krautrock, Morcheeba, Hooverphonic, Robert Rosen, Culture of the United Kingdom, Sasha, Autocatalysis, CSIRO, William Ross Ashby, The Quiet Earth, Nu jazz, Hybrid (band), Timescape. --- Longer articles started and/or made major contributions to: Self-organization, Computer simulation, Evolutionary biology, Tackhead. Articles with substantial contributions, modifications, or copyediting: Evolution, History of evolutionary thought, Social effect of evolutionary theory, Evolutionary theory and the political left, Genetic drift, Population genetics, Microevolution, Biology, Major histocompatibility complex, Signal transduction, Electronic music, Rave music, Rave party, Industrial music. Progressive music, List of biology topics, Simulation, Model, House music, Techno music, Trance music, Drum and bass, Life, Origin of life, Zoology, History of zoology, Genomics, Bioinformatics, Genetics, Cell (biology)


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{{cite journal | author=Stephen Breyer | title=Copyright: A Rejoinder | journal=UCLA Law Review | year=October 1972 | volume=20 | pages=75–83}} (Template:cite journal)

Option #2 (only US state, county, city articles) multi-licensing

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I agree to multi-license all my original contributions (this does not include edits I made in which I added GFDL material for which I did not own the copyright) to any U.S. state, county, or city article as described below  :

Dual licensed with the Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike License version 2.0
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