Welcome to my user page!



Welcome to Wikipedia.

Thanks for creating a Wikipedia account, RahulWaghamare. Now you're a part of the world's largest encyclopedia. Happy editing!

Tell us more about yourself   This page is your user page. You are free to change it however and whenever you want. Just remember, it is your face towards the rest of the community and the world. You can always get back here by clicking on your user name at the very top of every page.

Start editing   Every one of Wikipedia's articles has been created by its readers. Click here to learn more about how quickly and easily you can help make Wikipedia better. As we say: Be bold!

Personalize Wiki How   With your account, you can enhance your reading and editing experience by marking articles to watch as they evolve and adjusting your settings.

About me

Click here to add an image of yourself (optional).
Important information for minors

I am Rahul Waghamare, from Parbhani.I am student of COEP, S.Y.COMP ('111003047').
I am taking part in WP:India Education Program. My subjects are Atan2(C) and Localtime for editing wikipedia.
I like playing vollyball,reading books,listening silent music and sleeping also./sandbox

This user comes from India.
Indian WikipedianThis user is an Indian Wikipedian.
progThis user is a programmer.
मराठी
These users can speak Error: unrecognized language tag: म.
This user participates in the
Wiki How
India Education Program
.

.

mrया व्यक्तीची मातृभाषा मराठी आहे.






Bispira volutacornis
Bispira volutacornis, sometimes known as the twin fan worm or spiral fan worm, is a type of tube worm found in the shallow sublittoral zone of the eastern Atlantic Ocean. It grows in crevices and in stony areas and prefers areas rich in sediment but with low levels of illumination. It has a parchment-like tube with a mucoid outer layer that is often coated with mud or silt. The tube is usually concealed in a crevice and the worm can retract into the tube when disturbed. It feeds on plankton which it captures with its plumes. It also uses the plumes to gather sediment with which to expand the tube. This B. volutavornis worm was photographed in Arrábida Natural Park, Portugal.Photograph credit: Diego Delso