So glad to have this published in @JBiogeography ! We use genomics to elucidate patterns of diversification and dispersal in the Indo-Australian Archipelago and reject notorious biogeographic hypotheses in the region! Amazing job to all of the coauthors. https://t.co/sd8SEhL3Jw
So proud of the student I've been mentoring, Soe, on her first publication! Check it out @HerpNotes to see some neat country level records on wolf snakes in Myanmar! https://t.co/Y0MQl5RAu3
Wondering how fossils 🦴 can tell the stories of the past? Check out our new paper on Holocene #bats in the Caribbean, and what they taught us about extinction! 🦇 Congratulations to lead @Mormoops at the @AMNH, and all collaborators @camiloandresAC https://t.co/fv0wQsCcTe
I finally published our new paper embracing the heterogeneity of whole genomes for understanding evolutionary processes! And it's on #snakes! Always a plus! Huge thank you to my collaborators!
https://t.co/c0iYxXKsVN
A new snake discovered from Himachal Pradesh has been placed into a newly identified genus, Anguiculus (meaning small snake). This finding highlights the distinctiveness of the Western Himalaya.
@snakeszeeshan@JustBernstein
✒️@lifesciexplore
https://t.co/maNXSbzDS9
I did something I thought was impossible. I cleared out my email of 11 years, 30,000 emails. Including an email from 3 years from myself with a link "how to clear your inbox and clean your email."
Finishing the last of a few invited seminars in the Philippines amidst field adventures! It's such a pleasure to work with and meet some of the most enthusiastic and brightest individuals!
And finally, a snake! This cute little guy may look fierce, with those viper eyes and! triangular head shape, but this is Psammodynastes pulverulentus, the mock viper! A harmless snake that even has two enlarged, front fang-like teeth that are *not* connected to any venom system!
I'm amazed that even in torrential downpours and flash floods, these guys still manage to hang onto branches or even just sit atop leaves. Pseudogekko and Cyrtodactylus in the Philippines
Another successful symposium in the Philippines! Doing these kinds of events between field research expeditions is imperative for local communities and academics to be aware of and understand why we do what we do!
We hosted a seminar day specifically on research and enhancing student and local community awareness of #snake#biodiversity and education in the Philippines. A major success and the start of work to come! A huge thank you to FSUU, my collaborators, and those that attended! 🧬