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Close-up of the head of a female Sphiximorpha oharai in dorsolateral view showing compound eyes and antennae

Close-up of the head of a female Sphiximorpha oharai in dorsolateral view showing compound eyes and antennae

How much diversity is hidden in well-known insect groups? New work on hoverflies revises the genus Asemosyrphus and describes a new Sphiximorpha species - highlighting how much remains to be uncovered even in studied taxa. #LIBresearch

© Mengual et al., CC BY 4.0

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Dorsal view of a Ubristes mirabilissimus hoverfly with transparent wings and a dark, hairy body

Dorsal view of a Ubristes mirabilissimus hoverfly with transparent wings and a dark, hairy body

How much insect diversity is still hidden? A new study describes insects that mimic stingless bees - revealing previously overlooked diversity and how resemblance helps them avoid predators. #LIBresearch

© Reemer et al., CC BY 4.0

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The Hungarian Meadow Viper, one of Europe’s rarest snakes. Thanks to the EU Life+ project and Bálint Halpern, 25 years of work has seen thousands of vipers bred and released into restored habitats!

Learn more about this conservation masterclass: rakosivipera.hu
#LIBresearch @leibnizlib.bsky.social

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Close-up of a Patella rustica limpet shell with ridged texture on a rocky surface covered with barnacles

Close-up of a Patella rustica limpet shell with ridged texture on a rocky surface covered with barnacles

A new ERGA–Biodiversity Genomics Europe reference genome for the limpet Patella rustica provides a key resource to study how coastal species respond to global warming. #LIBresearch

© Faria R et al., CC BY 4.0

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Many “single species” actually turn out to be complexes of multiple, distinct species once studied in detail.
A great example of how taxonomy continues to reveal hidden biodiversity. #LIBresearch

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Englisch:

Map showing the Azores archipelago between North America, Europe, and Africa with a detailed satellite view of São Miguel Island highlighting the eastern area as the 136.5 km² extent of occurrence for the Azores Bullfinch (Pyrrhula murina) alongside a photo of the bird perched on a branch

Englisch: Map showing the Azores archipelago between North America, Europe, and Africa with a detailed satellite view of São Miguel Island highlighting the eastern area as the 136.5 km² extent of occurrence for the Azores Bullfinch (Pyrrhula murina) alongside a photo of the bird perched on a branch

A new reference genome for the Azores bullfinch (Pyrrhula murina) provides a powerful tool to study and conserve one of Europe’s rarest birds. High-quality genomic data help track genetic diversity and support targeted conservation efforts. #LIBresearch

© Lopes et al., CC BY 4.
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Close-up of insects trapped inside a cracked piece of amber

Close-up of insects trapped inside a cracked piece of amber

A newly discovered “monkey hopper” from mid-Cretaceous amber adds to our picture of ancient insect diversity. Fossils like these help trace the deep evolutionary history of grasshopper-like insects. #LIBresearch

Symbol picture: © Adobe Stock, Minakryn Ruslan

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Turning individual experience into shared community standards is key for large-scale genomics.
Great to see this collaborative effort highlighted! #LIBresearch

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Science and museums have histories shaped by broader societal forces.
Important #LIBresearch highlighting how political dynamics influenced the development of Museum Koenig — and why reflecting on this matters today.

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Congratulations! Jointly supervised by me @leibnizlib.bsky.social and Prof. Dr. Thomas Ziegler, Nils Ostrowski successfully defended his BSc thesis #LIBResearch! Analyzing the impact of thousands of parameter combinations, he was able to improve model parametrization in SDMs significantly.

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Circular snail plot showing assembly statistics with 1,000 size-ordered bins representing 0.1% each of a 493 million base pair assembly, dark grey bars indicating sequence length distribution, concentric rings for scaffold count, scaffold length, longest scaffold, N50 and N90 lengths, a pie chart for BUSCO completeness, and a composition legend for GC, AT, and N content percentages.

Circular snail plot showing assembly statistics with 1,000 size-ordered bins representing 0.1% each of a 493 million base pair assembly, dark grey bars indicating sequence length distribution, concentric rings for scaffold count, scaffold length, longest scaffold, N50 and N90 lengths, a pie chart for BUSCO completeness, and a composition legend for GC, AT, and N content percentages.

High-quality genomes help us study evolutionary uniqueness, population history and conservation needs: A new ERGA–BGE reference genome for the Pyrenean “milky worm” sheds light on the evolution & conservation of little-known soil biodiversity. #LIBresearch

© Novo et al., CC BY 4.

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Closely related species living side by side — but using completely different ways to determine sex.
A fascinating example of how evolutionary mechanisms can help maintain species boundaries even when hybridisation occurs. #LIBresearch

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Snail with a patterned shell crawling on a rough, textured surface

Snail with a patterned shell crawling on a rough, textured surface

How do snails scrape algae off rocks — without destroying their own teeth? A new review explores the radula, the specialized feeding organ of mollusks, whose teeth are finely adapted to different diets and habitats. #LIBresearch

© Adobe Stock, Macronatura. es

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Diagram showing main drivers of insect biodiversity change with interconnected arrows between five labeled photos: invasive alien species with a sphecid wasp on a plant, land use change with agricultural machinery, natural resource extraction with a sandy landscape, climate change with clouds in the sky, and pollution with industrial smokestacks.

Diagram showing main drivers of insect biodiversity change with interconnected arrows between five labeled photos: invasive alien species with a sphecid wasp on a plant, land use change with agricultural machinery, natural resource extraction with a sandy landscape, climate change with clouds in the sky, and pollution with industrial smokestacks.

Why are insects declining — and what can we do about it? A new review synthesises current evidence: habitat loss, land-use change, climate change and pollutants are key drivers reshaping insect communities worldwide. #LIBresearch

© Scherber et al., CC BY 4.0 @cscherber.bsky.social

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A new contribution revisits the work of J.F.G. Umlauff and the historical infrastructures that shaped how natural history collections and information circulated. #LIBresearch

→ doi.org/10.3897/rio....

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Third day of the CBD expert meeting on the draft global guidance for sustainable wildlife management! Discussing revisions and streamlining the guideline, supported by #LIBResearch @leibnizlib.bsky.social

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Great to see this work describing new species and revisiting known diversity — a reminder how much there is still to discover about insect–ant interactions. #LIBresearch

Fun Fact: Some beetles living with ants avoid detection by copying their hosts’ chemical signals.

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A strong start to the CBD expert meeting on the draft global guidance for sustainable wildlife management! Day 1 featured rich, constructive discussions and valuable inputs from diverse perspectives, supported by #LIBResearch @leibnizlib.bsky.social Looking forward to continuing the review tomorrow.

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Spannend zu sehen, wie LIB-Forschung auch außerhalb der Fachcommunity aufgegriffen wird — danke an RiffReporter für das Feature!
Ein gutes Beispiel dafür, wie Infrastruktur unbeabsichtigt Tierbewegungen beeinflussen kann. #LIBResearch

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Fossil insects in amber can be preserved with lifelike detail.
Great to see these new elcanid species highlighted — offering rare insight into the deep evolutionary history of grasshoppers and their relatives. #LIBresearch

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From Tiny Spines to Sticky Toes: What Cyrtodactylus Geckos Can Tell Us about the Evolution of Stickiness in Lizards Like anoles, geckos are famous for their adhesive toepads, enabling astonishing climbing abilities. Since adhesive toepads evolved independently in geckos and anoles, these two rather distantly rel…

@leibnizlib.bsky.social #LIBresearch From Tiny Spines to Sticky Toes: What Cyrtodactylus Geckos Can Tell Us about the Evolution of Stickiness in Lizards

Read more:

www.anoleannals.org/2026/02/03/f...

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Cobra snake with hood expanded hanging from metal bars of a train window overlooking green fields and railway tracks

Cobra snake with hood expanded hanging from metal bars of a train window overlooking green fields and railway tracks

Trains may be more than transport for people & goods — they might also be inadvertently moving vulnerable king cobras into habitats where they struggle to survive. #LIBresearch

© Parmar et al., CC BY 4.0 @droedder.bsky.social
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Amber can preserve insects almost as if they died yesterday — making it a powerful window into deep-time biodiversity and evolution. #LIBresearch #paleontology

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Field with green wheat next to a strip of wildflowers including yellow, blue, and white blossoms

Field with green wheat next to a strip of wildflowers including yellow, blue, and white blossoms

More plant species not only enrich ecosystems — they can make agriculture more productive with less reliance on synthetic pesticides. #LIBresearch

© Adobe Stock, Sonja
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Railways don’t just carry goods and people — they can also unintentionally move wildlife.
What other species might be using our transport networks to spread? 🚆🐍

#LIBresearch

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Snakes on Trains: Railways May Sway Goa's King Cobra Distribution Distribution of King Cobras (Ophiophagus kaalinga) across Goa, India, shows occurrence in climatically suitable forests and, notably, also along low-suitability railway corridors, suggesting that sna...

📄 New paper @leibnizlib.bsky.social: Snakes on Trains!
Using 22 years of rescue data + SDMs, we show that railway infrastructure may facilitate accidental dispersal of Ophiophagus kaalinga into unsuitable habitats.
doi.org/10.1111/btp....

#Biogeography #ConservationBiology #Herpetology #LIBresearch

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Horned mason bee pollinates flowers

Horned mason bee pollinates flowers

What helps pollinators cope with human pressures? Supporting flower diversity in agricultural landscapes can benefit both pollinators and food production. #LIBresearch

© Adobe Stock, JuergenL
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@leibnizlib.bsky.social #LIBresearch: Iranian marsh crocodiles show unique head & neck scale patterns compared to the rest of Crocodylus palustris range. Could this mean Iran hosts a separate conservation unit?
Find out more:
wildlife-biodiversity.com/index.php/jw...

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