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Posts by Anne Aulsebrook

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New paper on breeding site fidelity in pectoral sandpipers out in @asab.org! The pectoral sandpiper is a highly nomadic polygynous shorebird, but a very small proportion of individuals is nevertheless faithful to their breeding site between years 1/6 www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...

1 year ago 34 10 1 0
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Facultative sex allows some animals to reproduce with or without a partner. So why can’t humans do it? A variety of species across the animal kingdom can reproduce both sexually and asexually, including some types of starfish, water fleas, hammerhead sharks and Komodo dragons.

I wrote an article for @aunz.theconversation.com about facultative sex, after I found out that many people outside of biology have never heard of the concept. I think it's such a neat ability that everyone should know about!

Read it here:
theconversation.com/facultative-...

1 year ago 2 1 0 0
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Details : Research Fellow in Mammalian Movement Ecology and Energetics : The University of Melbourne Careers at The University of Melbourne

Please circulate: Postdoc position on responses of Australian mammal pests to climate change. Part of my ARC Laureate Fellowship research. Lots of hands-on fieldwork. Learn about biophysical models. Remote locations. Collaboration with #EcologicalHorizons and #AWC jobs.unimelb.edu.au/en/job/91880...

1 year ago 36 46 0 1
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New paper out in @rsocpublishing.bsky.social! Research from our group shows that males of the polygynous ruff visit many potential breeding sites within a breeding season, travelling up to 9000 km and visiting up to 23 different sites! royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/... 1/7

1 year ago 105 47 2 3
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🧵1/4. New book finally coming out on 26 December 2024. This has been a monumental effort and I take the opportunity to thank my co-editor @ulrikacandolin.bsky.social, all of the amazing contributors, chapter reviewers and the team at Oxford Academic.

global.oup.com/academic/pro...

1 year ago 100 26 5 8
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‘It felt very icky’: This scientist’s name was used to write fake peer reviews Elsevier retracts dozens of journal articles that were published based on “fictitious” reviews

Earlier this year, I received news that fake peer reviews were allegedly being submitted impersonating me and approximately six others

I shared my story with Science to, hopefully, reduce the chance of this kind of breach happening again

www.science.org/content/arti...

1 year ago 438 197 26 49

Wow, thanks for sharing - it also never occurred to me that someone might do this. Very sorry to hear that this happened to you!

I just wonder how people can believe they’ll never get caught out with this stuff. But I guess it took a while.

1 year ago 7 1 0 0
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The time you've all been waiting for has finally arrived - announcing the winners of our Ecology in Action photography competition! 👏 #ecology #WildOz

1 year ago 60 12 1 2
A quokka (extraordinarily cute marsupial that looks like a cross between a wallaby, a wombat and a mouse) holding a leaf and gazing directly at the camera.

A quokka (extraordinarily cute marsupial that looks like a cross between a wallaby, a wombat and a mouse) holding a leaf and gazing directly at the camera.

Excited to meet folks at the @austevolsoc.bsky.social conference tomorrow! I’ve already been having a great time hanging out with some of the locals. #wildoz #rottnest

1 year ago 7 2 0 0
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Would love to be added too! Thanks for your work!

1 year ago 1 0 1 0

Thank you! @willsowersby.bsky.social is also working on sleep and cognition in fish 🐟

1 year ago 2 0 1 0
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White and Amber Light at Night Disrupt Sleep Physiology in Birds Artificial light at night can disrupt sleep in humans [1, 2, 3, 4] and other animals [5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10]. A key mechanism for light to affect sleep is…

Would love to be added, too! I study sleep in birds, including impacts of disturbance on sleep (e.g. www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...). I'm also interested in how different environments shape sleep in different populations and species 💤

1 year ago 1 0 1 0
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Want to make beautiful scientific figures? Easy!

The NIH released a library of 2000+ free scientific illustrations called *BioArt*.

Check it out! bioart.niaid.nih.gov

#AcademicSky #PsychSciSky 🧠🟦 🧪

1 year ago 562 260 28 18
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#InverteFest December 2023 What is #InverteFest? is a periodic online event where we invite you to celebrate the overlooked invertebrate fauna around you and share the joys of discovery online. The hashtag was conceived when @f...

If you're spotting critters in your area this #InverteFest, join our community science project on iNaturalist!

It's a good way to record which animals live in your area each season, which might be useful for science and conservation projects in the long run.

2 years ago 35 27 3 10

Hi I'd like to be added please! Here's my staff profile: www.bi.mpg.de/staff/115965

2 years ago 0 0 1 0

Cute!

2 years ago 0 0 0 0
A figure from the paper showing a schematic workflow for quantifying behaviour from accelerometry using machine learning. Important considerations include choosing a method for splitting data for training and testing, choosing evaluation metrics, and avoiding applying models to untested scenarios.

A figure from the paper showing a schematic workflow for quantifying behaviour from accelerometry using machine learning. Important considerations include choosing a method for splitting data for training and testing, choosing evaluation metrics, and avoiding applying models to untested scenarios.

New paper! We compared different methods for detecting mating displays in ruffs, using accelerometry and machine learning. The best methods worked pretty well! This paper is intended as a guide to help other researchers develop their own models and avoid common issues. doi.org/10.1016/j.an...

2 years ago 4 0 0 0

Oh that sounds amazing! Thank you!

2 years ago 1 0 1 0
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A male pectoral sandpiper in breeding plumage. He has a puffy throat.

A male pectoral sandpiper in breeding plumage. He has a puffy throat.

Just arrived here. Hello! This should be fun.

Here's a pectoral sandpiper. This guy has an inflatable throat sac that he uses to make deep, hooting calls at lady sandpipers. He will also sometimes bob around near a female and make gurgling noises. He thinks it's sexy.

2 years ago 42 5 3 0