New paper: Tracing the Drivers of Range-Wide Bowhead Whale Genomic Structure and Diversity 🐋 In Molecular Ecology by M. Wesbury, @Smilodontology, et al. https://t.co/iLWlgbPTGQ
Ancient and modern dingo DNA reveals eight genetically distinct groups of dingoes – and the limited influence of domestic dog genes. https://t.co/nbkj8EUH1H
New study of 300+ dingoes using aDNA shows they retain ~90% dingo ancestry. Dog genes are limited, linked to human areas and control. Insights could help improve conservation strategies 🐕🧬@ConLetters https://t.co/5UWdMHx8LB
Sehr empfehlenswertes PIK-Video: Rockström zu #PlanetaryBoundaries Science
In Folge 1 der Video-Serie “Zentrale Forschungsthemen des PIK" erklärt Direktor @jrockstrom das Rahmenwerk zur Stabilität der Erde und zum sicheren Handlungsraum der Menschheit.
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https://t.co/fWPERFpmJM
Past whaling nearly wiped out bowhead whales. By mapping logs, researchers find that sea ice slowed whalers & created natural refuge. This helps explain why some populations rebound faster today🐋🐋 @PNASNews@Smilodontology@DamienFordham@Carsten_Rahbek https://t.co/UVrjRe5E7X
To fight climate change we need renewable energy, which is much better for the #environment.
But wind turbines, solar panels, and dams for water power can harm animals, causing #biodiversity loss.
How we can keep wildlife safe as #renewableenergy grows?
https://t.co/ml3TsZN2sX
The genomic impact of population connectivity and decline in Africa’s elephants 🐘🐘 New paper out @NatureComms by Pečnerová et al. w. CMEC co-author @AnnaBruniche#conservation#popgen
https://t.co/SYk99lPbkP
We publish two papers on the inadequacy to introduce the European Bison in the Iberian Peninsula. Lack of evidence of previous presence, wrong habitat/climate conditions, legal aspects...and much more
https://t.co/vsnNSWjeq0
https://t.co/Wcx5Mn6dbH
New paper 📢 Conservation evidence is biased but can support decision-making for prevalent and severe threats in tetrapods. By González-Suárez et al. incl. @jgeldmann in @JAppliedEcology. https://t.co/6UswI7uxhZ
Can rewilding save the planet? I gave my answer on BBC Radio's The Inquiry — and so did some of my colleagues. Tune in and see if you agree.
https://t.co/gRtJlp8sKe
Paul R. Ehrlich, author of The Population Bomb, has died, a great scientist, biologist, and naturalist who helped shape the world’s thinking
Many will remember him first for The Population Bomb, hugely influential, fiercely debated, and impossible to ignore.
But that was only one part of a much larger scientific life. Paul was a leading figure in population biology and conservation, and he helped shape the field of coevolution.
Yet Paul was also, in the deepest sense, a naturalist. Originally trained as an entomologist, he began as a butterfly researcher, and that grounding in close observation of living systems remained with him throughout his career. Even when he addressed the largest planetary questions, his thinking was rooted in biology and in the natural world itself.
What I will remember most is not only the scale of his influence, but also his intellectual courage. He was willing to say what he believed the science demanded, even when it was uncomfortable, controversial, or unwelcome.
Many debated his conclusions, and that too is part of his legacy. But no one can deny the force of his contribution. He helped ensure that biodiversity loss, ecological limits, and humanity’s pressure on the living world could not simply be pushed aside.
Scientists of Paul’s kind are rare. He did not merely add to knowledge; he altered the terms of debate.
The news of his passing was not unexpected. At 93, Paul had lived a rich and full life. Still, I write this with sadness. I had the privilege of knowing him as a fellow scientist working in much the same intellectual terrain, and I experienced his work not as a distant reputation, but as part of the living fabric of our field.
Hearing of his death brought back fond memories of a birding trip together in the Oaxaca region of southern Mexico many years ago, and our shared joy when we saw the endemic and beautiful Red Warbler, an iconic and much sought-after species of those mountains.
The legacy of Paul Ehrlich endures not only in science, but in the way the world thinks and talks about human population growth, biodiversity, and humanity’s place within nature.
New paper on Central African frog #biogeography shows that Pleistocene forest refugia best explain where frog diversity is highest 🐸 Expanding conservation to these refuges could improve amphibian protection. By Jongsma et al. incl. @HannahOish
https://t.co/NwSzUTJVyk
Tipping points of no return ⚖️ On this episode of Green Planet Monitor, Professor Katherine Richardson explains the risk of a #hothouse Earth following a recent publication in @OneEarth_CP. Read or listen here 👇 https://t.co/EnktwZ1Y8s
📢 Viewpoint out in #ConservationLetters by @jgeldmann: Stop talking about "30x30" and ask the question that matters for #biodiversity: Are protected areas located where they matter most with real outcomes for nature & people? https://t.co/k4ZVPqfmRU
Det er fuldstændig naivt at tro, at vi kan klare os med teknologi. At forlade sig på teknologier, der ikke eksisterer, er galimatias", siger @KRichardsonC ifm. nyt studie om global opvarming og tipping points 🌎 #dkvid#dkgreen@informeren https://t.co/CfTy8tAcNJ
Reptile genomes show multiple independent losses of "hunger hormone" #ghrelin & its activating enzyme in snakes, chameleons, & toadhead agamas pointing to major shifts in energy use & adaptations for long fasting🐍 New paper #OpenBiology@RSocPublishing https://t.co/zQ0sA1BJCR