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Posts by Eliot Miller

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NSF LTER program “archived”.

LTER=“Long Term Ecological Research”.

This program has been incredibly successful, incredibly frugal for what they accomplish, and…of course…targeted by evil know-nothings.

My heart is breaking.

2 weeks ago 385 189 18 61
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Purdue AeroEco Lab Opportunities

🚨 Hiring a postdoc (2 years)!
We’re looking for someone with skills in data science, remote sensing, or computer science:
🛰️ Build next-gen nighttime light products
🦅 Link light spectra to migration & collision risk

Apply or reach out!

aeroecolab.com/opportunities

4 weeks ago 25 38 0 2
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ML652399570 - Common Grackle - Macaulay Library Macaulay Library ML652399570; © Joseph Bratta; Cook, Illinois, United States

Frosty Tip Grackle: macaulaylibrary.org/asset/652399...

4 weeks ago 2 0 0 0

Both the Jetz and Burleigh supertrees have these as not sisters. Probably used same sequences, though haven't dug into it. I don't see any newer relevant sequences archived on GenBank. Who amongst you is working on these?

4 weeks ago 0 0 0 0
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Phylogeny Explorer - Birds of the World The Phylogeny Explorer offers a captivating experience for exploring avian evolution, discovering closely related species, and grasping the timescales at which they evolved.

What do you all think: are the two Urocolius spp, Red-faced and Blue-naped Mousebirds, actually sister species? All molecular phylogenetic results to date seem to suggest otherwise. Help make Urocolius whole again, tell me if we're missing phylogenetic information birdsoftheworld.org/bow/phylogen...

4 weeks ago 4 2 1 0
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How to Bring a Bird’s Song Back From the Edge of Extinction

The need to preserve animal culture in conservation efforts. 🪶

Gift link.

1 month ago 210 61 4 2
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Heading into conference abstract / presentation season, I 100% recommend Kathryn Langin's (@kangin.bsky.social) "Tell me a story! A plea for more compelling conference presentations". It's short, sweet, and not just for ornithologists. I can get behind every word!
🔒 academic.oup.com/condor/artic...

1 month ago 39 22 0 4
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A 50-year sequence of Peru’s Ucayali River shows how a river constantly shifts its bed, reshapes landscapes and redraws maps. Rivers move, ecosystems respond and planning must learn to work with that movement rather than pretend landscapes stay fixed. Source: buff.ly/jNmzCQG

1 month ago 118 46 0 2
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Tiny recording backpacks reveal bats’ surprising hunting strategy By listening in on their nightly hunts, scientists discovered that small, fringe-lipped bats are unexpectedly able to efficiently take down prey nearly their own size.

"Tiny recording backpacks reveal bats’ surprising hunting strategy" - nice description and videos by Leonie Baier theconversation.com/tiny-recording-backpacks... #bioacoustics

1 month ago 7 17 2 1
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So creepy looking. Does seem like it's actually a planned city in the making. Curious how this all plays out. Anyone know anything more? gestion.pe/tu-dinero/in...

1 month ago 0 0 0 0
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WTF is this? Giant empty planned city...

1 month ago 0 0 1 0
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That was when I noticed this set of ghost roads along the side of the farms. So I zoomed in further.

1 month ago 0 0 1 0
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So. I was staring at Google Maps when I noticed something weird. Extensive, very structured agriculture in the northern Peruvian desert. So I zoomed in.

1 month ago 0 1 1 0
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Ancient DNA and spatial modeling reveal a pre-Inca trans-Andean parrot trade - Nature Communications Here, the authors combine ancient DNA, stable isotopes, and computational modeling to study colorful feathers from a pre-Incan tomb in Peru. They identify four species of parrots, which were likely ca...

🦜🏔️ How did vibrant Amazonian parrot feathers end up in a desert tomb on the Pacific coast of Peru 1,000 years ago? Our new paper on @natcomms.nature.com reveals they didn't just trade feathers, pre-Inca societies transported live macaws and parrots across the Andes!👇 www.nature.com/articles/s41...

1 month ago 99 45 5 2
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Such a cool area, that’s an awesome place to cut your teeth. Find the cassette!

1 month ago 1 0 0 0

Good news! We've added enough Pacific Hornero recordings that it should be in Merlin sound ID soonish. Keep recording though!

Saw two hornero statues, and it's on murals all around Loja (next to HOSP no less!). The disconnect b/w its ubiquity and notable absence in the model was driving me crazy.

1 month ago 7 1 2 0
Cornell University, Department of Natural Resources and the Environment Job #AJO31747, WDR-00057430 Postdoctoral Associate, Department of Natural Resources and the Environment, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, US

Are you interested in complex social-ecological systems, pedagogy, sustainability education, and working with bright students and engaged faculty? I'm hiring a postdoc for a cool new initiative! More Info & Apply here: academicjobsonline.org/ajo/jobs/31747

1 month ago 4 5 0 0

Hi Boris! All the recordings submitted to eBird end up in Macaulay Library, where they are freely available for research, education, and conservation. From there they end up building resources like BirdNET and Merlin.

1 month ago 1 0 0 0

Ok. We the world are up to 125. Tomorrow I start activating collaborators here in Ecuador.

1 month ago 4 1 0 1
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rambaut/figtree Automatically exported from code.google.com/p/figtree - rambaut/figtree

The first version of FigTree was released nearly 20 years ago and it is still widely used (including by me). But there are currently 85 issues on the GitHub repo (github.com/rambaut/figt...) and some of them I don’t really like the look of.

1 month ago 147 42 3 2
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#notajocotoco

1 month ago 6 0 0 0
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The local parks carry an extra large version as well

1 month ago 5 0 1 0
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In 2006 I spent a week w Harold Greeney trying to find the first nest of the Jocotoco Antpitta. We spent 12 hrs a day swimming through soaking wet bamboo. After all that, I managed to see one's shadow for about 1/16 of a second. Flash forward to today...

1 month ago 29 4 1 0
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Birds Aren’t Just Declining. They’re Declining Faster, a New Study Finds.

And here is some of the amazing news coverage of our paper. www.nytimes.com/2026/02/26/c... by @catrineinhorn.bsky.social

1 month ago 43 22 2 0
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Pacific Hornero - eBird Thrush-sized, plump bird of open habitats, especially near water. Particularly fond of disturbed areas, often around human settlements, clearings, and roadsides. Builds an impressive dome-shaped mud nest. Rich rufous above and pale tan below, with a whiter throat and eyebrow. Look for staring pale eye. Most often seen strutting confidently on the ground, and also perches high in a tree or atop a building to sing: listen for a long, loud, descending series of explosive “pee” notes. Mostly restricted to lowlands and foothills in western Ecuador and northwestern Peru, just barely occurring in far southwestern Colombia.

This is a common bird in w Ecuador, and one that I really wish was covered by Merlin, but it's not well recorded given how common it is. We need ~150 recordings to make it eligible for the model--nice little mini-mission for the community. Currently at 118. Let's go! ebird.org/species/palh...

1 month ago 1 2 0 0
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ML651775654 - Pacific Hornero - Macaulay Library Macaulay Library ML651775654; © Eliot Miller; Loja, Ecuador

On a mini-mission to get enough recordings of Pacific Hornero into the @cornellbirds.bsky.social's Macaulay Library that we can add it to the Merlin sound ID model. Getting after it with phones, a parabola and, most importantly, encouraging others to do the same! macaulaylibrary.org/asset/651775...

1 month ago 7 2 3 1
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the most important question of presidents day is what did they think about birds and luckily for you chumps i've got answers
birdhistory.substack.com/p/our-birdy-...

2 months ago 19 5 1 0
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Getting ready for a really cool community-led monitoring project in shade-grown coffee and cacao farms in Ecuador and Mexico. Quick stop in #ICTC2026 first! #BirdsPlusIndex @abcbirds.bsky.social @wildlifeacoustics.com

2 months ago 12 2 1 0

Have you ever seen Blue Jays flighting with Crows and be like, I need to record this on eBird? Your comment could help with tracking species interactions! In this piece, we show how LLMs can be used to collect interaction data on large scales from comments on participatory science platforms. 1/3

2 months ago 8 5 1 0
Comic. [2x2 chart. Top left quadrant: seem like dinosaurs x are dinosaurs. Silhouettes of dinosaurs stegosaurus, triceratops, tyrannosaurus, velociraptor, and long-neck dinosaur. Top right quadrant: seem like dinosaurs x are not dinosaurs. Silhouettes of mosasaur, quetzalcoatlus, dimetrodon, plesiosaur, and pteranodon. Bottom left quadrant: don’t seem like dinosaurs x are dinosaurs. Silhouettes of penguin, egret, ostrich, pigeon, falcon. Bottom right: don’t seem like dinosaurs x are not dinosaurs. Silhouettes of squirrel, stapler, plant, person, and bicycle.]

Comic. [2x2 chart. Top left quadrant: seem like dinosaurs x are dinosaurs. Silhouettes of dinosaurs stegosaurus, triceratops, tyrannosaurus, velociraptor, and long-neck dinosaur. Top right quadrant: seem like dinosaurs x are not dinosaurs. Silhouettes of mosasaur, quetzalcoatlus, dimetrodon, plesiosaur, and pteranodon. Bottom left quadrant: don’t seem like dinosaurs x are dinosaurs. Silhouettes of penguin, egret, ostrich, pigeon, falcon. Bottom right: don’t seem like dinosaurs x are not dinosaurs. Silhouettes of squirrel, stapler, plant, person, and bicycle.]

Dinosaurs And Non-Dinosaurs

xkcd.com/3204/

2 months ago 8731 1978 104 96
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