Friday Insanity 2.16

Thanks, Brian. Also pretty sure this was on TMZ. MARKET SATURATION.

Posted by Tim on December 18th, 2009 • Add a comment

Friday Insanity 2.15

Almost salamander season in CA.

Posted by Tim on December 11th, 2009 • Add a comment

“How genetics works”

Apologies for light posting recently. Hopefully back at it once the thesis (fingers crossed) is approved. (via Why Evolution is True)

Posted by Tim on December 9th, 2009 • Add a comment

Friday Insanity 2.14

Jealous…

Posted by Tim on December 4th, 2009 • Add a comment

Friday Insanity 2.13

Harvest time

Posted by Tim on November 27th, 2009 • 1 comment

Friday Insanity 2.12

As a friend pointed out, it’s weird to freak out about an animal in a zoo — that you came to see! — doing what it does naturally. Maybe this can be read as a metaphor for our own consumption habits. But still, gnarly.

Posted by Tim on November 20th, 2009 • Add a comment

Friday Insanity 2.11

Posted by Tim on November 13th, 2009 • Add a comment

Extinction

The Guardian goes in search of the lost species of the decade and finds a bunch of “probably extincts” and “extincts in the wild.” Extinction is hard.

Posted by Tim on November 10th, 2009 • Add a comment
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News Roundup

  • Great pictures and story on the banteng, “the most beautiful of all the wild relatives of cattle.” Compared to the Kouprey, banteng are doing pretty well in SE Asia. But then, the Kouprey are probably extinct. That’s probably what happens when you set aside new land for carbon sequestration, and ignore the threats from hunting. Meanwhile, in Indonesia, one woman is hunting the hunters (and by “hunting”, the headline writer meant tracking and trying to carry out legal enforcement against poaching, not killing in cold blood).
  • This paper probably marks the end of the pendulum swing against individual actions in the Global War on Climate Change. If everybody worked on cutting household emissions, the U.S. could reduce carbon emissions by about 20% in the next decade. Call this Obama’s vaunted “Check your tire pressure” initiative.
  • This is crazy: some migratory birds push out a second brood after migration. “He noted that orchard orioles might raise a first brood in the Midwestern and south-central U.S. and a second on Mexico’s western coast, yet both sets of offspring find the same wintering area in Central America. The question is how both groups find the right place, since they must travel in different directions.”
  • Some discussion has arisen about conservation targets due to a recent publication in Conservation Letters. One problem with setting a target may be seen in Britain, where rare species appear to be increasing in abundance (i.e. doing better), while common species are in decline. Sometimes the whole thing feels sort of like the little boy with his finger in the dam. The newly-released IUCN Red List suggests that about 36% of the species analyzed are threatened with extinction (CJB weighs in).
  • Interesting profile of the new National Parks head, Jonathan Jarvis. Jarvis is the first trained biologist to head the NPS.
Posted by Tim on November 9th, 2009 • Add a comment
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Friday Insanity 2.10

Zounds.

Posted by Tim on November 5th, 2009 • Add a comment