What a MASSIVE scientific undertaking 🤩
Stephens et al. inferred orthogroups for over 100 scleractinia reference genomes/transcriptomes - 228 datasets total!
I can only begin to imagine what incredible insights can be gained from this 🪸🧬🧪
#popgen #evolution #coralreefs #phylogentics #EvoBio
Posts by Erin Chille, M.S. 🧬🪸🧪
Congratulations to Dr. Stephens and team! I'm honored to have my photos featured alongside this incredible work 😁
If you are a female early career scientist in STEM fields and want to find community and mentorship, these two conferences at UCLA (4/17-18) are for you!! there are slots and travel grants still available, I will be talking at both and look forward to meeting you! 🧪🌎🧬🌊🦠🌿
After I wrote a eulogy for science twitter, American Scientist asked me what’s next for online public science engagement. Here’s my piece on the science community on Bluesky
Quotes @jay.bsky.team @danirabaiotti.bsky.social 🧪🌎🦑
www.americanscientist.org/blog/macrosc...
Haha yeah it kinda looks like one!
Sargassum natans: Sargassum is a floating, fast-growing algae that constantly extracts CO2 from the atmosphere
🚨 Post-doctoral position alert! 🚨
The Bhattacharya Lab at Rutgers University is seeking a postdoc in the field of algal multi-omics and metabolic engineering 🌊 🦠 🧬
Ideal start by June. Applications will be reviewed as received. Please share widely :)
jobs.rutgers.edu/postings/269...
#evobio
An especially timely message for #coral conservation -particularly given the growing efforts with assisted reproduction and cryopreservation! Looking forward to giving this a read!
Table coral
Three-way hybridization of table corals in the Acropora hyacinthus group from the southern Great Barrier Reef results in parallel adaptive introgression. Check out our new preprint: doi.org/10.64898/202...
#CoralSky #MarEvol #coral #popgen #consgen #genomics
Emerling, @freddelsuc.bsky.social et al. investigated candidate genes related to dentition, gustation, and mastication in nine convergent myrmecophagous mammalian lineages, finding that convergent evolution of myrmecophagy was a protracted process.
🔗 doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msag009
#evobio #molbio
Genomic evolution across traits and across species: 🐟 #EvoDevo #Genomics #Evolution
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.6...
For almost two decades, scientists have debated whether sponges or comb jellies are the first animal lineage. A feature in Nature describes how some researchers are calling for a more harmonious approach. #evosky 🧪
Preprint alert: We adopt a cheap & rapid WGS protocol for vertebrate sized genomes, and use it to sequence nearly 1K whitefish genomes to low/med coverage for lake-wide pop genomics of adults + larvae for species assignment, habitat use, decline & selection: www.biorxiv.org/content/10.6...
#PopGen
🪸🧬 Our take on what can multi-omics tell us about the coral bleaching problem:
TL;DR
1️⃣ Corals are more complex than they appear
2️⃣ One-size-fits-all solutions won’t work – place-based, population-specific approaches matter
Check it out👇
doi.org/10.1002/bies...
Nearly 9,000 baby corals are on the move from the Florida Aquarium to restoration institutes as part of a major effort to rebuild threatened reef ecosystems.
Learn more below.
#wmnf #floridanews #environment #coralrestoration #oceanconservation
Trump: "we found an answer to autism."
Reality: Nope!
We can't let the fearmongering, stigmatizing, guilt-placing lies win. 💪
‘No relationship’: Scientists push back on Trump’s reported claim linking paracetamol to autism www.euronews.com/health/2025/...
#ScienceMatters!
Yayyy!! Congrats!!!
Today’s #DailyCoralRead: Clay et al. show that modern Caribbean corals descend from fast-growing, stress-sensitive ancestors. With warming seas, communities may shift toward Eocene-like corals –slower-growing, longer-lived, and more stress-tolerant. 🌊🌡️
doi.org/10.1017/pab....
Due to the current funding climate, I’m crowdfunding the last of my PhD project, and 𝐈 𝐜𝐨𝐮𝐥𝐝 𝐫𝐞𝐚𝐥𝐥𝐲 𝐮𝐬𝐞 𝐲𝐨𝐮𝐫 𝐡𝐞𝐥𝐩! 𝐌𝐲 𝐜𝐚𝐦𝐩𝐚𝐢𝐠𝐧 𝐞𝐧𝐝𝐬 𝐨𝐧 𝐎𝐜𝐭𝐨𝐛𝐞𝐫 𝟐𝟎𝐭𝐡, when I need to reach my $16k funding goal. I immensely appreciate your support!
𝐏𝐥𝐞𝐚𝐬𝐞 𝐬𝐡𝐚𝐫𝐞 𝐭𝐨 𝐝𝐨𝐧𝐚𝐭𝐞 𝐚𝐧𝐝 𝐥𝐞𝐚𝐫𝐧 𝐦𝐨𝐫𝐞: experiment.com/projects/rec...
View Hege Skryseth’s graphic link Hege SkrysethHege Skryseth • FollowingFollowing Executive Vice President at Equinor | Shaping the future of energy supplies and achieving carbon net zeroExecutive Vice President at Equinor | Shaping the future of energy supplies and achieving carbon net zero 2h • 2 hours ago • Visible to anyone on or off LinkedIn Recently I met with the Board of Equinor to present how technology is innovating the way we work and how it could solve hurdles we are facing. I started by showing this picture. Wells at the Troll field in the North Sea compares to the size of Bergen and Stavanger (here showing only Bergen). When Troll was discovered in 1979 there were no technology available to bring the gas to shore. There where issues to solve, like water depths to conquer, the Norwegian Trench to cross. And the thin layer of oil on top of the reservoir needed a solution. The result? Equinor and partners built the largest manmade object ever to be moved, developed horizontal drilling to penetrate the thin oil layers, and built an extensive network of pipelines and gas processing capability to provide reliable gas to Europe. The key to success has been development of technology, with record-long wells and advanced downhole equipment, together with a strong focus on standardisation and visualization of data. As Europe’s largest energy supplier, Equinor is aiming to maintain the production at the Norwegian Continental Shelf (NCS) at today’s levels also in 2035, targeting 1.2 million barrels of oil equivalents per day. Yet here is our new reality: To maintain production on the NCS and meet global
Inadvertently, this is an incredible illustration of how
(a) the infrastructure required for fossil fuel extraction is bonkers and
(b) how we don't consider our oil and gas to be 'destroying nature' like wind turbines simply bc it's undersea
Your periodic reminder that mRNA vaccines are a scientific and public health game-changer. Those that have been approved have passed stringent efficacy and safety checks. They protect you and your child against potentially fatal diseases. You may, however, get a sore arm.
🌊 Today's #DailyCoralRead shows coral outplanting can boost reef accretion & structural complexity - depending on the species! 🪸
This is great news for #biodiversity 🐠🦀 since complex reefs support fish & invertebrates.
#coralreefs #coralconservation
Our collaborative study shows that hatchery domestication in Delta smelt elevates thermal tolerance but reduces plasticity, with transcriptome and methylome shifts influencing adaptation. Read the preprint here: www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
Delighted to share the peer-reviewed version of our study led by @tomlewin.bsky.social now out in Genome Biology @bmc.springernature.com! We analyzed 64 chromosome-level genomes across 15 animal phyla and found that extensive genome rearrangements are the norm in bilaterians.
doi.org/10.1186/s130...
For a project, we needed a tool that will batch download phylogeographic DNA samples (like mtDNA and nucDNA) for lots of species, which have just been sitting on NCBI since the PCR and Sanger-sequencing era (ca. 2003-2015) and can still be hella useful, so I wrote one. It aligns the sequences, too 👍
Please repost and amplify !
We are hiring a faculty position in Evolutionary Genetics in the Biology Department at U of South Carolina!
Check us out and come be our colleague!
sc.edu/study/colleg...
Deadline for applications is Oct 1
#AcademicJobs #EvoBio
This press release shares our vision for developing rapid, field-ready diagnostics—similar to COVID-19 lateral-flow tests—to monitor coral health. These tools could help protect reefs by enabling earlier, easier detection of stress and disease. 🪸🧪
Thrilled to have our work featured by the Rutgers Office of Public Outreach and Communication! 🧪🪸 http://tiny.cc/ri3r001 #marinegenomics #coralreefs #conservation
1. "'Trusting the experts is not a feature of either a science or democracy," Kennedy said."
It's literally a vital feature of both science and of representative democracy.
I've written a fair bit about trust in expertise as a vital mechanism in the collective epistemology of science.