New hypothesis suggests costal breathing in amniotes evolved gradually as buccal pumping waned—driven by shifts in terrestrial feeding. A fresh take on how early amniotes learned to breathe.
Elizabeth Brainerd: https://t.co/oz0Nq2XGRD
Our new paper is out today.
Perfect mimics (Aspidontus taeniatus) approached prey targets at very close distance "sneaky tactics", whereas non-mimics (Plagiotremus tapeinosoma) rapidly attacked from a long distance "hit-and-run tactics."
https://t.co/PVGHNz7xNQ
In what may be one of Earth’s craziest forms of mimicry, researchers in 2023 reported a species of rove beetle that grows a termite puppet on its back to fool real termites into feeding it.
Learn more during #InsectWeek: https://t.co/DGNVVL0Pjz
"Adaptive radiations" are almost always complicated, often involving introgression from external lineages. Case in point: Malawi cichlids.
https://t.co/rGygIcVzss
Racism twitter has taken to arguing that observed racial differences must be "in part" explained by genetic differences, though they demure on how much. Not only is this claim aggressively misleading, it is completely unsupported by data. A 🧵:
Amazing figure made with the help of #Rstats#phytools in "Adaptations to marine environments and the evolution of slow-paced life histories in endotherms" by Sol et al. in @NatureComms: https://t.co/Leg7GIn9Mg.
New paper from the lab: Our teeth arose as sensory organs on the outside of the body of ancient jawless fish.!! Congrats to Yara Haridy and the team!
Open Access Paper: https://t.co/Q4gOzCKm1p
News and Views: https://t.co/YrfXxegygN
Background and video: https://t.co/UFGocj83VY
@JoeViturbo@SandyofCthulhu To my knowledge, the reason it’s not used much by ecologists today is that too many species, like oak trees in the thread, don’t fit either strategy. Fast- slow life histories work better as a framework.
Neat! The article by @AbbyGraceDrake, @JLosos, et al. (and in which I played a very small role) made the cover of @PNASNews! "Copy-cat evolution: Divergence and convergence within and between cat and dog breeds." https://t.co/NSjLuKAMju
Today, 166 years ago Alexander von Humboldt died (he was 89 years). He changed the way we think about nature (describing it as a web of life) & predicted climate change. Can't believe it's been 10 years since I published 'Invention of Nature'. It's change my life. In so many ways
#ActNow: Tell Virginia decision-makers to ensure a strong and healthy future for the Rappahannock River by implementing smart, science-based water management solutions. ⬇️ https://t.co/ZJNUilkhFa
The species-area relationship explained: why does the species area relationship exhibits three phases across spatial scales? Our paper solving this decades old mistery is out in @NatureComms. A thread👇1/#
The sensory neurons of touch are a quirky cast of characters. The neuroscientist David Ginty, the “emperor of touch,” has gotten to know our tactile neurons better than anyone else ever has. https://t.co/FRQupbPXnU
🔊 America’s Most Endangered Rivers® of 2025 report is here!
From Alaska to New Jersey, whether threatened by drought, mining, logging, or flooding, these 10 rivers all have one thing in common: they are all at a tipping point, facing an urgent decision in the coming months.
Take action below and speak up for greater investment in rivers! https://t.co/n6n6Yn3fJt