It is with great sadness that I'm sharing the news that Dr. Don Moerman passed away this weekend. He was such a legend in the #Celegans and Canadian science community.
Posts by Patrick Phillips
Great to see some of our constructs highlighted in this super helpful review.
In 2024, NIH published 756 funding announcements (NOFOs)
In 2025, it published 120.
In 2026, as of 3/15, it published 14.
Scientific program staff can no longer steward their fields b/c every NOFO must be approved by political appointees in the NIH director’s office, the DHHS, & the OMB.
The research center of gravity is shifting faster than many expected.
New data suggests China's public R&D spending could overtake the US by 2028. While our investment grew 12% since 2013, theirs surged 90%.
13% success rates for FY2025 grant awards.
NIH finally releases some FY2025 success rate data drugmonkey.wordpress.com/2026/03/18/n...
A line graph showing the fraction of R01 applications funded as a function of percentile for NIA. The estimated success rate for FY2024 was 15.8% compared with 5.8% for FY2025.
12/25
Following @joshuasweitz.bsky.social post and discussions with him and the Vox story, I have estimated R01 success rates for each NIH institute and center with enough awards for this to be meaningful.
A long 🧵...
1/25
we are losing so much talent, progress, and hope for no good reason www.vox.com/future-perfe...
Zero papers. Just references and keywords in titles broken down in a complex way.
There is a nice discussion about this book in this interview with Felsenstein as part of the "Reflections on Modeling and Theory in Population Biology" series, presented by the Society for Modeling and Theory in Population Biology. Discussion starts at 48 minutes:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZSSx...
Perhaps the most unusual book in my library. Could also be used as a useful tool to bonk young whippersnappers on the head when they don’t realize how great they have it (the thing is massive).
Check our new preprint from the KR-colab with @ramencult.bsky.social and Andy Kern:
MKado: a toolkit for McDonald-Kreitman tests of natural selection
doi.org/10.64898/202...
Encoding recent movement history with Wormtrails makes spatial differences in C. elegans behavior much easier to see. In this assay, worms not only avoid the hydrogen peroxide gradient on the left, but also move faster near it. 4/
Out in print in Geroscience by @rosealsaadi.bsky.social: Pro‑longevity compounds extend Caenorhabditis elegans male lifespan and reproductive healthspan. Most interventions that help hermaphrodites also improve male lifespan, not necessarily reproductive heathspan. link.springer.com/epdf/10.1007...
taps microphone...
Friends! I am so happy to share our new preprint!
Hydrogen peroxide has been the most common reactive chemical threat to life forms since the Great Oxygenation Event 2.5 billion years ago.
How do animals like C. elegans sense it fast and escape?
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.6...
Thread 1/
showing how microscope resolution has improved more than 10,000× over the past 200 years. The horizontal axis shows year (1800s to 2025). The left vertical axis shows feature size, from 1 micrometer (small bacteria) down to 0.01 nanometers (atomic nuclear structure). The right vertical axis shows resolving power in inverse angstroms. A blue curve at the bottom represents light microscopy, limited by visible-light diffraction to about 200 nanometers. A tan curve rising sharply in the mid-20th century represents electron microscopy, reaching nanometer-scale resolution. A red region near 0.1 nanometers shows aberration-corrected electron microscopy surpassing the electron diffraction limit. A blue region at the top shows ptychography achieving the highest resolving power through overlapping diffraction patterns and computation. Dots label key scientists and institutions at milestones. Overall trend shows steady, then dramatic gains in resolution over time.
The resolution of microscopes has increased over 10,000 fold over the last 200 years.
It's allowed scientists to examine not only cells, but bacteria, then viruses, their protein structure, and, eventually, the individual atoms that comprise them.
Your soul looks thin yet expansive.
Not totally sure why my son wanted a thermal camera for Christmas, but we’re now prepared to drop our first techno demo track.
Very excited to share this work led by Austin Link, a graduate student in our lab. We have discovered a novel, fig-associated microbe that promotes reproductive success via variable life history mechanisms in two nematode species.
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.6...
Very interested. We run a primary literature discussion section for the 300 level evolution class I’m teaching this winter.
Watch this if you haven't. Pro science viral marketing at its best — and 100% authentic to Tim Boyle's sense of humor and plain spoken approach to the rational. Proud of homegrown @columbiasportswear.bsky.social for the approach. www.youtube.com/watch?v=JxJO...
The Gibson lab at UVA is hiring a postdoc to study dispersal as a parasite avoidance mechanism. Apply by mid-January: uva.wd1.myworkdayjobs.com/UVAJobs/job/Charlottesvi... #postdoc
Inconceivable!
This is normally called embellishment, but embellishment has nothing to do with it. The sparkling light has existed in all its brightness from the very beginning in the world of phenomena. 3/3
This is why, no matter whether nature or human things are concerned, the artist conceals innumerable priceless gems in a place that common mortals dare not approach. 2/3
Natsume Söseki (1987): The artist can be defined as one who works within the four corners of the world to suppress what is called common sense and no longer inhabits more than three of them. 1/3
I’ve definitely seen lines at our famous campus Prince Puckler’s Ice Cream, but never a happy mob. That’s apparently what a perfect fall Saturday in Eugene following a Friday night football win brings.
Killian standing in front of a podium at his thesis defense!
Going to break my social media hiatus for a belated congratulations to @kdc509.bsky.social on an outstanding thesis defense last week! I cannot say enough good things about Killian - an amazing scientist and human being.