TODAY! 1 til 6pm LONDON
@nhcooper123
Scientist @ Natural History Museum London. Senior Editor Methods Ecology & Evolution. Biodiversity, macroecology/evolution, R, PCMs, comedy, theatre, books, fun animal facts. she/her https://m.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL6w4ihPqk5_LOTuw-VhlaqEn1CctPqWGB
TODAY! 1 til 6pm LONDON
Very proud of this perspective that came out of some really interesting and difficult conversations with friends and colleagues!
TLDR: how do scientists define sex? why does it matter??
#EcoEvo #Ecology #Evolution π§ͺ
Optical illusion of a woman bent over some papers. Her sunglasses are pushed up and she is wearing a hair band so the top of her head looks exactly like a Muppet face
Sorry I know the world is in a terrible fix but I've been laughing at this for ten minutes now
More on the Lazarus species from west papua theconversation.com/meet-tous-an...
A brown penguin chick of some kind. It looks very much like a man in a suit. It is bedraggled and miserable
Made it to Friday but at what cost
π§ͺππ¬π‘οΈMany heat-stressed tropical insects are reaching their limits www.science.org/content/arti...
In a reply to Guevara-Fiore, L.A. Rueda, F. Vargas & I wrote a commentary (doi.org/10.1093/beheco/arag008) claiming, based on our own experience πΈ, that studies on nat. hist. & behaviour can be conducted in forested areas within university campuses or woodlands by relatives' homes, and on β¬οΈπ°(4/5)
Evolution 2026 meeting logo. Clilp art of a globe and laptop showing a virtual presentation. Text: Society for the Study of Evolution Global Meeting Participation.
Registration for virtual #Evol2026 on May 20-22 is free for SSE members in 152 countries and territories around the world! Check if youβre eligible and request your discount code on our website: www.evolutionsociety.org/index.php?mo...
@evolmtg.bsky.social
Last few days to apply!
Is this the biggest ever single species count on eBird? Gobsmacking photos of an estimated 2.75M Snow Geese in North Dakota (HT @evornithology.bsky.social)
ebird.org/checklist/S2...
Do you live in the UK or Canada? Could you spare an hour to help me with an important science project focused on excessive packaging? (all you need is a ruler and a basic kitchen scale) π€πβ»οΈ
We described a new species of grasslizard from #Assam, #India.
π¦
NE India is the westernmost distributional limit of this genus, which extends all the way to Japan!
I can finally share my main postdoc project! It took a while but we finally got it out
So if you want to read about an updated phylogeny for waterfowl and all the convergent evolution they get up to boy do I have a paper/thread for you
academic.oup.com/sysbio/advan... πͺΆπ§ͺ
Imagine a human being sitting on their ass with their arms on their hips such that their fingers are facing each other near their crotch. Now cover it with cream fur, change the arms and feet into pink and then nails about 3 inches long and sharp. Make two holes for the nose, and put a literal msmiley on its face. The text above it reads: drawing of a three tote sloth by English naturalist and more mythologist George Edwards 1709 to 1773. Below is the curator's comments from the British Museum: This drawing is probably related to the etching (dated October 2nd 1758) made by George Edwards in his βGleanings of Natural Historyβ, volume II, plate 310, where he wrote: βThe specimen from which I drew [this likeness] was a stuffed skin, set up in the attitude represented by the figure. [...] This animal was brought from Honduras in America, and I believe isΒ found all over those parts of South America, that are not many degrees distant from the equinoctial line. It was the property of the late Lord Peter [i.e. Petre].β It is also probable that the naturalist Peter Collinson refers to this drawing in a letter to Sir Hans Sloane dated 20 June 1734, which Sloane received in his capacity as President of the Royal Society, and in which Collinson wrote: βI Presumβd It might not be unacceptable to You & the Rest of the Gent[leme]n [i.e. of the Royal Society] to see a Sloth. It is well preservβd. It came last from Jamaica but I conclude it is no Native of that Island because not mentioned in yr Natural History. Mr Edwards has taken a Draught of it.β [This letter is referenced in Arthur MacGregor, βThe natural history correspondence of Sir Hans Sloaneβ, Archives of Natural History 22 (1995), p87, however MacGregor gives no indication in which manuscript of Sloaneβs correspondence in the British Library the letter is contained.] Source: https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/object/P_SL-5261-28
See alt.
New episode today is COLOURFUL! With apologies from @nhcooper123.bsky.social that since recording this one of the papers she talked about has been retracted! Sponge wars continues m.youtube.com/watch?v=O_DN... π§½ π πΈ πͺΈ
I also remember this talk and it was indeed excellent!
Doctor Strangelove now reads like a subdued masterpiece of the subtle mimetic.
I will be taking part in this event on 7th March with @amnestyfeminist.bsky.social - tickets here
www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/internatio...
Coming in November from @brisunipress.bsky.social, In the Aftermath of Empire explores the impact of British imperialism on gender and sexuality law in four jurisdictions.
Please tell your libraries to pre-order!
bristoluniversitypress.co.uk/in-the-after...
Thanks Mike! Itβs all thanks to the very talented ECRs who wrote the sections :)
New paper out! The first from @osteosophia.bsky.social 's PhD - a new (hopefully more objective) way for categorising locomotor repertoires. With @eloygl.bsky.social @livevobiomech.bsky.social and Laura Fitton: royalsocietypublishing.org/rspb/article...
#notallseaotters
lol yeah. Though all the galleries are getting a refresh over the next 10 years so enjoy it while you can!
Haha sorry about that!
I believe papers about extinct charismatic vertebrates should be held to the same publishing standards and norms as other taxonomic groups. It's objectively bizarre that papers describing a single species gets published in Science/Nature as if that's considered of broad paleobiological significance
I have since learned it should be hackathon as all one word. Tune in for more pearls of wisdom like this π€£
If you're in Oxford, come along!
If you're not, tune in!
In defence of this, we donβt usually use common names in species rich stuff like bats so Iβve never called it this (they were part of my PhD thesis). But, the genus it belongs to is commonly called tailless bats, but this species has a tail. Hence the name. Itβs not trying to be annoying. Poor π¦π
I just did the dumbest thing of my entire career to prove a much more serious point.
I tricked ChatGPT and Google, and made them tell other users Iβm a competitive hot-dog-eating world champion
People are using this trick on a massive scale to make AI tell you lies. Iβll explain how I did it