We are recruiting MSc and PhD students to join our interdisciplinary and diverse group. Key themes include: spatial ecosystem ecology, food web ecology, zoogeochemistry, biogeography, restoration ecology, and conservation planning. Please RT. https://t.co/jW91FLuBxi
Since the beginning of lockdown, @BaylaArt and I have been collecting bird carcasses from window strikes at @Yale SOM, which was unthinkingly designed to be one of the world's most effective bird killing architectural mistakes.
@wdhalliday This was a long road, but thanks to amazing co-authors we came out three years of samples. @wdhalliday summarized our paper well! Very excited to see this out in #openaccess!
Are you excited about soil food webs? Check out our (@oppiella & myself) paper and R code. We share some handy new soil food web model features and a cautionary tale about lumping together organisms with different parameters (especially C:N ratio). https://t.co/63lwXfJjw5
Please re-tweet! @amy_hurford @KathrynHargan and I are recruiting a Postdoctoral Fellow in Species Distribution Modelling. Details are here: https://t.co/jW91FLuBxi
We begin evaluating applications on August 28, 2020.
@rafazenni @urban_sci@EcoInvasions @ColauttiLab @carlyziter @jscottmacivor @RicardoAdelino_ It is native that is true, though it is imported and planted into regions where other species used to dominate the forests. Like eucalyptus, it is being genetically enhanced to speed up production.
@rafazenni @urban_sci@EcoInvasions @ColauttiLab @carlyziter @jscottmacivor @RicardoAdelino_ Canada produces wood pulp (pulp and paper) from white spruce trees, which can be cut only every 25-50 years because they grow slowly in our cold climate. This is much longer than the 6-7 year rotations for eucalyptus in Brazil (data from Bahia).
@amy_hurford @KathrynHargan and I are recruiting a Postdoctoral fellow to work on statistical and mathematical models of spruce budworm in Eastern Canada. Details of the position are here: https://t.co/jW91FLuBxi
Come join our great team @humans_MUNBIOL@MUN_Science
Pls RT!
My partner @BaylaArt is an amazing scientific illustrator, but she doesn't use Tw much (even though I told her that this is where all the science is!).
Think yall could RT to help her out?
And maybe keep her in mind for all the quarantine papers your working on?
I'm thrilled to share our newest #hurricanes and #anoles study in PNAS (@pnasnews): "Hurricane effects on Neotropical lizards span geographic and phylogenetic scales."
https://t.co/kZ3hvFcBAx