About a sixth of the public endorse very extreme views on making legal/settled migrants leave & then follow up on the specifics. (This overlaps with the 8% who say they support violence in protests & liked the riots, so it should be challenged, not indulged)
Posts by Ron Pasieczna
🧪🦣🏺 Who wants to hear a story about biotech billions, unscientific claims, and shoddy smear tactics attacking women in science*?
Thread 🧵
*which, for legal clarity, are totally denied as being connected
Really pleased to have contributed to this epic survey of >59,000 pairs of gannets! The St Kilda colony was less impacted by HPAI than other colonies, perhaps because steep cliffs reduced disease transmission. Flatter areas of the colony suffered greater losses.
#ornithology #seabirds #NTSseabirds
🌊 How do tiny zooplankton shape climate & marine ecosystems? The latest #IJMS symposium issue calls for global, sustained efforts to study zooplankton’s critical role in a changing ocean.
📖 Read more ➡️ www.ices.dk/news-and-eve...
NEW on the #BOUdiversityBlog from Jamie Dunning
Why I don’t want to talk about my neurodivergence
bou.org.uk/blog-dunn...
#ornithology 🪶
A photo of a Manx Shearwater, a black and white seabird with a thin, long hooked bill, with the text 'Skomer Island Burrow Cam - Watch Manx shearwaters live'
Our Burrow Cam livestream is back! Tune in to follow the journey of this Manx Shearwater chick as it grows and fledges the nest!
Watch Shearwaters live from Skomer: www.youtube.com/watch?v=-ihL7gTNKZE
📸 Chris Lawrence
#ManxShearwater #Seabirds #Skomer #WildlifeWebcams
Word received via @jodiemhenderson.bsky.social who's holidaying on Skokholm this week of a fantastic Storm Petrel recovery: one of the 20 caught here in the early hours of Friday morning (02.15am) was recaught at Skokholm at 03.00am this morning - c280 miles via the tip of Cornwall in 25 hours!
Taxonomic distribution of all banded seabirds that were recorded in the North American Bird Banding Program dataset (1930–2023) as having died from colliding with anthropogenic structures. Recovery rate is defined as the number of collision-associated recoveries per 100,000 birds banded. Bird silhouettes generated by PhyloPic (Keesey 2024).
There's a new guest post on the WOS blog! Riley Lawson describes the backstory of his recent paper in The Wilson Journal of #Ornithology, which documents the underappreciated threat that collisions with anthropogenic structures pose to #seabirds. wilsonsociety.org/2025/07/28/g...
A dark brown bird sits on a branch with its wings outstretched.
Latest Cormorant indices released for England
The Cormorant population in England increased since monitoring began in the late 1980s. However, the latest results suggest a recent levelling off jncc.gov.uk/our-work/cor...
Protection on paper isn’t enough. Real conservation needs real enforcement. Two new studies serve as the latest wake-up call for closing the gap between promise and practice.
#OceanConservation #MPARealityCheck #ProtectWhatMatters
Today is #EarthOvershootDay — the day when humanity’s demands on nature surpass Earth’s ability to replenish itself in a year. This year’s date (a week earlier than 2024) means that people are using nature 1.8 times faster than Earth can replenish itself.
Learn more about the day ⬇️
Conservation's Blind Side: Seabird Moult Overlooked in Marine Policy
New global study finds gadfly petrels moult during breeding and migration in warm, unproductive seas, reshaping our understanding of seabird vulnerability at sea www.rarebirdalert.co.uk/v2/Content/C...
The regulator, Environment Agency, has cancelled 1000s of water quality tests. “The work affected by the cuts to testing this year included investigations into the water industry in various parts of the country and monitoring of protected areas including the River Wye”. www.bbc.co.uk/news/article...
One of the most common science myths is that we need 10k steps a day...a number originating from a Japanese ad.
In general, the more steps the better, right? However, several studies now identify inflection points around 7k as significantly reducing many health risks, from heart to dementia.
Preparation of coffee in Ethiopia, a native cultural crop that supports 15 million national livelihoods. Image © Jenny Williams / RBG Kew.
☕ Species of the Month: Wild Arabica coffee
The plant behind 60% of the world’s coffee is listed as Endangered on the IUCN Red List. Yes, wild Coffea arabica is in trouble. #PlantScience
Bats save the economy billions by acting as natural insecticides , yet they don't count in GDP calculations like pesticides do.
In this blog, Matilda Dunn, policy analyst, shares reflections on how to make nature visible in decision making: buff.ly/qbqIN8J
I'm so glad to hear this. Let's hope something effective actually comes out of it www.gov.uk/government/n...
A great opportunity to compare and contrast these common (L) and Arctic (R) terns as they preened next to each other in Shetland last week
#birds
#terns
#seabirds
A young Sri Lankan scientist, Himesh Jayasinghe, has rediscovered more than 100 of 177 possibly extinct species in Sri Lanka as well as three of five extinct species and both species previously considered extinct in the wild.
Now online in Journal of #Ornithology
The potential of White Stork (Ciconia ciconia) nest lining to evaluate the functional diversity of Coleopteran fauna
Open access
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Herd of wildebeest in a river, surrounded by a larger herd of safari vehicles.
I guess now they're crossing that river, whether they wanted to or not.
A black-browed albatross rookery at Saunders Island in the Falklands #birds #seabirds #albatross #falklandislands #nature #southatlantic #nature #saundersisland #flight #wildlife #hatching #blackbrowedalbatross #hatchling #DailyNature
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This blog abou the migration of waders to/through/from Britain and Ireland has been read by over 16,000 people since publication on 20 July 2017 🎂8️⃣
wadertales.wordpress.com/2017/07/20/w...
Blog about Sanderling:
wadertales.wordpress.com/2019/10/04/t...
#ornithology
A death trap in the nest: anthropogenic nest materials cause high mortality in a terrestrial bird | www.sciencedirect.co... | Ecological Indicators | #ornithology 🪶
If you were born between 1970-1990 you may not have full MMR protection, even if you had parents who took you for all your jabs. The NHS will give you a free booster. With cases surging, this is a great way to protect yourself & your community. I’m getting mine tomorrow www.nhs.uk/vaccinations...
New paper on avian flu in seabirds from an Edinburgh Uni PhD student published! Edinburgh University has been working on the Isle of May with UKCEH and other partners to investigate the effects of this virus among seabirds. Read about it here: doi.org/10.1038/s415...
A Great Black-backed Gull flies through the sky (image by Edmund Fellowes/BTO). Wording underneath reads: New Study. Partial niche partitioning in three sympatric gull species through foraging areas and habitat selection. BTO logo is top right of the image.
1/ GPS-tracking of three gull species from the Isle of May, Scotland revealed overlap in foraging habitats during the breeding season, but differences in where the three species foraged, and their preference for landfills, urban and coastal habitats.
📖 bit.ly/GullStudy #Ornithology 🌍
A map of the Isle of May within the Firth of Forth and arrows linking the isle with different habitats (landfill, harbours, urban, agriculture and coastal) reflecting each species strength of habitat selection. Each gull and the coresponding arrows are a different colour with Great Black-backed Gulls being green, Herring gulls being purple and Lesser Black-backed Gulls being orange.
Great Black-backed Gulls preferred coastal areas & harbours, similar to Herring Gulls, which were also more likely to visit urban areas. Lesser Black-backed Gulls largely visited farmland, which is common around the colony. Across species, several individuals strongly selected landfills #ornithology
A good point & one I bring up in my drone talks. Not being able to SCUBA doesn’t preclude one from being a marine scientist. Some of the first drone pilots in my lab were individuals who couldn’t dive due to medical conditions. We need to highlight the different ways of being a marine scientist.
When rivers get low & warm like this:
- the pollution in them gets more concentrated
- fish & other water creatures have less oxygen to breathe
- pathogens from sewage have perfect conditions to grow
- algae grow too much too fast - blocking out light & air for wildlife
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