Our new paper on shieldtail conservation is out in @animalconserv.bsky.social
Read it here: doi.org/10.1111/acv....
Posts by Anuj Shinde
Many large biodiversity datasets (occurrences, traits, and so on) used in comparative studies are limited by the quality of raw data present in taxonomic literature. Read this commentary advocating for a 'digitally native species' which could greatly speed up research in taxonomy and biodiversity.
Digital illustrations of a museum collection
๐ฆ The Swiss Node of GBIF (GBIF.ch) and #SwissNatColl has transformed access to Switzerlandโs natural history collections by launching a national data aggregator that improves the discoverability, standardization and reusability of specimen data.
Book cover for Reproducible Code guide. The cover has a red background with a large yellow-bodied black-headed stag beetle.
Excited to launch the new improved Reproducible Code guide from @britishecologicalsociety.org @methodsinecoevol.bsky.social FREE online here! www.britishecologicalsociety.org//wp-content/... Amazing work by some very talented ECRs. We hope itโs useful!
Three Narwhals (grey sea mammals with a long pointed tusk) diving down into a green wave.
Narwhals (Monodon monoceros) are called the unicorn of the sea โ for obvious reasons.
This illustration by Louis A. Sargent comes from "The wild beasts of the world", v. 2 (1909), contributed to BHL by @uoftlibraries.bsky.social: www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/19657038 #SciArt #ILoveBHL ๐งช ๐ ๐
Rudolf Meier paraphrases a post from @rdmpage.bsky.social : as ~ 2/3 of the records in GBIF are birds, @gbif.org is primarily a Global Bird Information Facility. To correct this bias, we need to focus on the โuglyโ biodiversity. ๐ชฐ ๐ชฑ ๐ชณ ๐ฆ @mfnberlin.bsky.social #LivingData2025 x.com/rdmpage/stat...
A close up of a toad in water. Its head is above the surface. You can see the fly's larvae in its nostrils; they look like little white gelatinous balls.
Did you know? The toad fly lays its eggs in an unusual place: a toadโs nostrils. When its eggs hatch, the larvae feed on the toadโs face and body. Unfortunately, this leads to the toadโs demise.
Jona263d, CC BY-SA 4.0, Wikimedia Commons
New on global conservation science:
Empowerment is central to people-centered conservation but rarely defined or grounded in theory. A review finds rhetoric often outweighs practice & research often focuses on communities in the Global South.
Petriello et al. in Cons. Biol. doi.org/10.1111/cobi...
#LatestPublicationAlert!
Nishant Narayanasamy & team from Dr @stpalli.bsky.social's lab investigated how early multicellular clusters may have overcome this diffusion barrier to facilitate nutrient transport and exponential growth.
Congratulations to the team!๐
www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
Screenshot of the title and author list from the Correspondence article "Six actions for ecologists in times of planetary crisis" from the Nature Ecology & Evolution homepage
Six actions for ecologists in times of planetary crisis: www.nature.com/articles/s41...
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Explicitly recognize and address the #biodiversity crisis
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Explore positive futures
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Defend academic freedom
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Go political
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Inspire society
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Address the colonial legacy of ecology
Free to read: rdcu.be/eqjlk
Two straight sets! What an incredible game โจ
Beautiful turquoise water near Exmouth, WA last month. We were sharing the beach with this bizarre-looking Lerista skink (second photo: L. planiventralis) that had left trails all over the sand.
Data are everywhereโฆ
โHere, we examine an unusual source of information: classic Chinese poetry. From 724 ancient poems containing references to the Yangtze finless porpoise (N. asiaeorientalis), we infer that the range of this subspecies has contracted by at least 65% over the past 1400 years.โ
Dive into our latest issue!๐
www.cell.com/issue/S0960-...
On the cover:Yangtze porpoises in troubled waters๐ฌ by Yaoyao Zhang and colleagues www.cell.com/current-biol...
New species alert!
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We (myself, Glenn Shea, Stephen Richards and Paul Oliver) just published a description of a fantastic new species of Prasinohaema from New Guinea. A short thread:
(A) Island connectivity with sea level change. Present-day emergent land is coloured for cluster membership inferred with DAPC (see B), and islands unsampled in this study are shown in white. Sampling localities are shown by green dots. Elevation (above sea level) is shown by contour lines (200โm spacing). Smaller islands (Ste. Anne and Curieuse) are circled for clarity. The grey shaded area represents exposed land, with the shade of grey in the key indicating metres below current sea level. Bathymetry data from the GEBCO 2024 repository. Inset map shows position of the Seychelles (indicated with a green loop) relative to Africa. Latitude and longitude given in decimal degrees. (B) DAPC of Kโ=โ4, with eight PCs and two eigenvalues. (C) Hypogeophis rostratus, photographed by STM.
Structure plot with 10 runs permuted in CLUMPAK and plotted in distruct for Kโ=โ2 and Kโ=โ3. Vertical bars represent individuals (nโ=โ77). Labels above the plots correspond to the major genetic clusters. Colour codes as in (1B).
New paper led by Miranda Sherlock on "Submerged Corridors of Ancient Gene Flow in an Island Amphibian". In this paper we found that populations of the Seychelles #caecilian Hypogeophis rostratus would have been connected by palaeo-islands across Seychelles
onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10....
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Very happy and humbled to have received this award. A huge thanks to all my wonderful colleagues @scienceanu.bsky.social and abroad who made this possible!
Check out our big new meta-analysis looking at plasticity and changes in physiological rate variance under climate change. Huge effort with a great team of fantastic thinkers! @itchyshin.bsky.social @fontikar.bsky.social Frank Seebacher and Alex Bush
Blue azurite and green malachite from the Singing Stone!
Painting looking up at two trees with pink blosdom against a blue sky with white clouds
'Cherry Blossom' painting by contemporary U.S impressionist style painter Erin Hanson #WomensArt #Spring
Photo credit: Peter soltys. Image created by Nicholas Wu.
How vulnerable are #amphibians to extreme heat? ๐ธ๐ก๏ธ
Our paper in @nature.com shows that many amphibians are already overheating, and many more species will be impacted by climate warming globally.
See the thread below for a digest ๐งต
Link to the paper: doi.org/10.1038/s415...
#Nature
If any frog were ever butterscotch flavoured, it would be this one. It literally looks just like a butterscotch from the bottom of your granโs purse; slightly squashed and replete with a little black stain of undetermined origin that wonโt stop you eating it. Yum.
I donโt feel like I have anything to contribute to the conversation right now except possibly distraction by means of pretty frogs. So, here is Platypelis tuberifera. A personal favourite. ๐ธ๐๐งช
New paper out in @animalecology.bsky.social! In this study, led by Avik Banerjee, we examined the link between stress and nutrition in wild lizards. Stress levels influence nutrient retention, not dietary composition, in these colourful agamids!
besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10....
Northern fungoid frogs (Hydrophylax bahuvistara) getting it on in the Western Ghats
Mackinnon's Wolf Snake (Lycodon bicolor)
Chir Pine (Pinus roxburghii) Forests
Flipping rocks in the chir pine forests of Western Himalaya led us to a Mackinnon's Wolf Snake.
It's still cold here- perhaps we were its first visitors since winter began.
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