user:Tylototriton
{{Babel|de|en-3|fr-3|sw-2}}
File:Tylotriton shanjiing.jpg, the crocodile newts, have many narrowly endemic species (and the article is still on my to-do list).]]
Hi! I've been on Wikipedia for a little while now. My activity here varies greatly, depending on how much time I can spare – I spend it as a biologist otherwise. So far, I've mainly edited articles on fungi, grasses and salamanders, but I am generally interested in ecology and evolutionary biology. I see a certain beauty in well-structured, accessible information.
A sample of contributions
Featured articles 16px Alpine newt · Flora of Madagascar · Russulaceae · Smooth newt · Triturus
Good articles 14px Danube crested newt · Northern crested newt · Palmate newt · Réunion National Park
Other (articles created or significantly expanded): Batrachochytrium salamandrivorans · Cantharellus guyanensis · Greek smooth newt · List of C4 plants · Reticulate evolution · Russula campinensis · Species complex · Uapaca bojeri
Good article reviews 14px Gigantorhynchus · Taxonomy of Liliaceae
Did you know...
- ... that Réunion National Park could become the first French national park to lose its status?
- ... that the DNA of Sartidia perrieri's only known herbarium specimen was successfully sequenced 100 years after its collection?
- ... that the Madagascar succulent woodlands are home to the world's smallest primate?
- ... that the Anatolian crested newt is a cryptic species, only shown to be distinct by genetic analysis?