New POSTDOC POSITION within ASICS!
Where: Rennes, France, with David Renault
What: distribution modelling of polar species!
To do: apply now - or retweet widely!
https://t.co/EJsFrufB1U
We are offering a 5-day PhD course in Ecological entomology and climate change 4-8 October 2021. Great international group of teachers in beautiful Mols Bjerge, Denmark. Please RT and/or sign up https://t.co/1Grrno2n9M
Postdoc in integrative environmental physiology and alpine grasshoppers. Field work! Modeling! Grasshoppers! This is an amazing opportunity with the best in the business! I'd apply, but they want someone capable of 'reasoning'. If I only had a brain! :-)
Calling all @NeATundra enthusiasts interested in earning a PhD. See below for an opportunity to join @TokeHoye's lab and study how plants and arthropods respond to climate change
Please RT. I have an exciting, fully-funded PhD position in my lab for a highly motivated candidate. The position is part of the @TheASICSProject with excellent international collaborators.
Note the application deadline is 1 Feb 2021.
https://t.co/aIPq9E4Qc2
We have developed an automatic insect monitoring device. We have tested it for #moths, but it can monitor other #arthropod taxa too. Since sampling is standardized, the data can be compared across space and time, e.g. for global comparisons.
https://t.co/D9XLljkk66
Our new results suggest that the winter moth recolonized Northern Fennoscandia via the British Isles; possibly with pre-roman traders, and that current outbreaks are not due to recent reintroductions https://t.co/1RIyGP5xGH @NeATundra@icbarrio and others not on twitter
4 butterfly species are regularly observed in Greenland, but only 2 are found in the South and only in mountains. The fascinating biogeography of Arctic butterflies is revealed in this new study superbly led by Jana Maresova https://t.co/2ESKAstnS3
Happy to be part of this int. collaboration: ARCTIC-BIODIVER – filling gaps in Arctic freshwater biodiversity knowledge.
We have just ended a successful annual project meeting (began yesterday) – bound to be online – but still with fun and many smiles.
https://t.co/MCzb22MSnr
Very cool research on summer #grazing in young planted #larch forests in Iceland @d_bjarni featured in the Icelandic news! @RUVfrettir Maybe sheep grazing is not so incompatible with #forestry after all :)
https://t.co/VurtQKNv6y @lbhi_is
💪🏾I've finished going through 5 years of peat soil samples from two sites of our #BRACE climate change experiment (Northern Ontario). I counted/morphotyped impressive ~𝟖𝟖𝐤 microarthropods in total, most being #oribatid#mites
Now time to ID the oribatids.
#peatland#fen
Iconic animals such as polar bears and muskoxen are often use to highlight arctic research. I advocate for this tinny but important fellow: tadpole shrimp – also known by the Latin name Lepidurus arcticus. Here swimming in an Arctic pond (along with Daphnia). @FBL_UCPH@ZERO74N
Great paid opportunity for @JSEP_GL@EAE_JASE@DartArctic@NeATundra students to get involved with Arctic biodiversity conservation and policy with @CAFFSecretariat https://t.co/HliFLtUHMG
Check out this interview with our senior researcher @TokeHoye where he explains the idea that lead to #pollinatorwatch 🐝 (The video is in Danish but you can add English subtitles under "settings") https://t.co/XYrIXQbbIG
|EARLY VIEW | OPEN ACCESS|
Parasitoids indicate major climate‐induced shifts in arctic communities
@foodwebs@ZERO74N@INTERACT66@NeATundra
📝https://t.co/DmsnYk8QwL