7/Ultimately, large, age-structured populations may be robust to rare mass-mortality events. But, if those events start to happen more frequently, recovery may become impossible. What's more, climate change is also selecting for earlier breeding, putting martins between a rock and a hard place.
06.03.2026 15:58
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6/Nonetheless, our demographic analyses suggest that because of the reduction in reproductive success and the number of adults killed by the storm, martin populations will take at least 6-7 years to recover. That's if another storm doesn't come along first. If that happens, recovery could decades...
06.03.2026 15:58
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Timeline - Purple Martin Conservation Association
Purple Martin birds rely on human-provided housing. Learn more about Purple Martin Biology, Behavior, Lifecycle, Timeline, and more.
5/We were surprised that, in 2023, martin migratory timing started to return to 'normal' and, in 2024, they arrived earlier than the long-term mean. This was probably because the storm didn't kill any sub-adult martins & they advance their migrations as they age. www.purplemartin.org/timeline/
06.03.2026 15:58
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4/Following the storm, martins delayed breeding by 12 days and their reproductive success was the lowest in 27 years of citizen science monitoring. In 2022, they also returned to TX and LA 2 wks late. Using these data, we estimated that the storm killed 5-24% of adult martins across the two states.
06.03.2026 15:58
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3/By examining the specimens, we determined that the martins likely died of cold exposure and not starvation. We also compared their genomes with those of martins sampled from TX both before and after the storm. Remarkably we saw signatures across the genome of differences among these three groups.
06.03.2026 15:58
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2/Our project started with citizen scientists from @pmca.bsky.social reporting 100s of dead Purple Martins across TX and LA in the wake of the storms. The @lsu.bsky.social Museum of Natural Science was able to collect those storm victims and bring them to the museum where we could measure them.
06.03.2026 15:58
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1/ Remember when Ted Cruz went to CancΓΊn as the Texas power grid failed? It wasn't just the people of TX left behind, it was also the wildlife. Out now @natecoevo.nature.com, our paper led by @mstager.bsky.social & @treeswallows.bsky.social documents how bad the storms were for birds.
rdcu.be/e7aUy
06.03.2026 15:58
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Sunset sky with hundreds of birds flying around.
purple martin bird
purple martin feeding baby purple martin
One flying purple martin
A new UMass study in @natecoevo.nature.com has found how many purple martins died in The Great Texas Freeze of 2021βand how long recovery may take.
https://bit.ly/40JO1eK
06.03.2026 15:10
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Our paper is out in @Science! The Atlantic silverside spans Earth's steepest latitudinal gradient in coastal sea-surface temperature. Despite high gene flow, populations show clinal genetic variation in multiple locally adapted traits. doi.org/10.1126/scie...
05.03.2026 19:05
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Schematic illustration of variation in selection predominantly determined by (a) spatial effects, (b) temporal effects or (c) spatio-temporal effects
Annual variation in natural selection on two reproductive traits (egg laying date and clutch size) between 1980-2024 in blue and great tits in 8 sub-populations of Wytham Woods, Oxfordshire
Scatter plots - with associated correlation coefficients - for annual estimates of natural selection on reproductive traits in blue and great tits. Relationships are moderately to strongly correlated across years, suggesting that there are common drivers of variation in selection in both species
What most determines variation in the strength of natural selection? Spatial variation, temporal vn or space*time together? New research by @jorgensoraker.bsky.social et al. exploring this Q using 45y of Wytham tit data. Strong time & space*time signal + cross-species corr'n
doi.org/10.64898/202...
05.03.2026 16:07
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New Paper alert π
RΓΌppel et al. 2026 - "movetrack: An R package to model flight paths from radio-telemetry networks"
-> this makes it possible to transform station-based radiotelemetry data into actual flight path, validated with a plane flight.
besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/...
05.03.2026 16:13
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Big effort, exciting results - our paper on the constraints of thermal limits in tropical insects is now out in @nature.com! π¦ππͺ°πͺ²π¦
@ecoresearchzoo3.bsky.social
@biologie-uniwue.bsky.social
@uni-wuerzburg.de
04.03.2026 19:43
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#NewPaperAlert! So incredibly proud of Katy Silber, former PhD student & post-doc for publishing ALL of the work she did in the lab. This last paper @pnas.org answers the question, how and why does rain matter to bird reproduction, *generally*? Here is the graphic summary... details below.
1/n
03.03.2026 15:32
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A selfie in front of the conference welcome sign. The logo shows a sea turtle at the waterβs surface with a volcano in the background. Across the volcano is the word βKaiΔuluβ, which is a Hawaiian word for community/neighborhood/village. The theme reflects the close-knit nature of the people who work with sea turtles - celebrating how we support one another to coordinate conservation, science, and management around the world.
The pronunciation of KaiΔulu in English is roughly "kai-ah-oo-loo": Kai sounds like "kite" without the "t", Δ is a long "ah" sound, ulu is like "oo-loo". So, the full pronunciation is "kai-AH-oo-loo" with emphasis on the "AH" syllable.
Iβll be posting this week from the International Sea Turtle Society symposium in Hawaiβi
Day 1 was full of fantastic workshops: in the morning I attended one about applying for research permits to study turtles, and my afternoon was all about sea turtle epibionts ππ’
#ISTS44 #ISTS2026 #seaturtle
02.03.2026 15:56
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Lead author Wes Walsh, his tattoo of Agelenopsis pennsylvanica (the Pennsylvanian grass spider) and one of the inspirations for this study, a live Platycryptus undatusβ―(tan jumping spider). Credit: Wes Walsh
πΈοΈ Scared of spiders? The real horror could be a world without them. New UMass Amherst research shows spiders & other arachnids are vital for healthy ecosystems, yet most have no conservation status.
https://www.umass.edu/news/article/scared-spiders-real-horror-story-world-without-them
02.03.2026 20:31
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IOB, Now in issue!
State-Dependent and Social Modulation of Circulating #Glucocorticoids in a Nomadic #Songbird, the Red #Crossbill (Loxia Curvirostra)
(cover photo) Neil Paprocki
Vernasco et al
doi.org/10.1093/iob/...
#birds #biology #hormones #ecology #endocrine
02.03.2026 12:27
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Theunis Piersma roept op: "Geef wetenschappers de tijd voor goed onderzoek"
Geef onderzoekers de ruimte om de natuur voor een langere periode te onderzoeken. Die oproep deed de Friese trekvogelprofessor Theunis Piersma op Texel.
www.omropfryslan.nl/nl/nieuws/18...
@niozsearesearch.bsky.social @han-dolman.bsky.social @waddenacademie.bsky.social @jorienbakker.bsky.social @fryskeakademy.bsky.social @rug.nl @thomasoudman.bsky.social @allertbijleveld.bsky.social @marionkoopmans.bsky.social @dewaddenvereniging.bsky.social
01.03.2026 13:53
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Latest Wadertales blog on why timing of breeding advances more in short-distance migrants: wadertales.wordpress.com/2026/02/28/m..., from neat new @ecol-evol.bsky.social paper led by VerΓ³nica MΓ©ndez using 16 years of data on Icelandic waders: onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10....
#ornithology
28.02.2026 09:58
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White House stalls release of approved US science budgets
The US Congress rejected sweeping cuts to science agencies. But the NIH, the NSF and NASA have had their spending slowed.
Congress rejected massive cuts to US science budgets for 2026, but much of the money still isnβt flowing to researchers.
The culprit? The White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB) is quietly slow-walking the release of funds. π§΅π
27.02.2026 16:06
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NSF officials break silence on how AI and quantum now drive agency grantmaking
Leaders acknowledge White House role in controversial moves
NSF leaders have just acknowledged what many scientists have long suspected: Presidential directives to boost AI and quantum have upended its traditional way of doing business. www.science.org/content/arti...
26.02.2026 22:35
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Graphic with two parts, a map and a chart. Top section: A map showing intact tropical forests in northern South America, most of them in the Amazon River basin. Three locations are called out: 1 is in Panama; 2 is on the eastern border of Ecuador, near the borders with Colombia and Peru; and 3 is in Brazil, on the Amazon River. Undisturbed tropical forest areas are defined as areas where no disturbances were detected in a comparison of satellite imagery from 1990 to 2024. Bottom section: Dot plot with confidence intervals. For each of the three map locations, the chart shows the average annual change in mist net captures for insectivores and for the total bird community. For all three locations, the average annual change for insectivores is in the negative and is lower than for the total bird community.
Intact tropical forests are seeing mysterious bird declines. Is another βsilent springβ brewing?
Learn more: https://scim.ag/4aCs0Er
26.02.2026 22:54
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Fig. 1 from the article: Illustration of the two main wing muscles β pectoralis and supracoracoideus β of a migratory passerine.
Fig. 4 from the article: Representation of the diverse ways in which myokines can influence the function of different organs throughout the body.
Fig. 5 from the article: (A) Conceptualization of a behavioral control system, as outlined by Fuxjager et al. (2023). Behavioral control systems are shown through the lens of spring (B) and autumn (C) migrations, with skeletal muscle (dark red) playing a role in the regulation of physiological systems that all promote one singular behavioral node (migration, dark orange) at the expense of others (dimmed behavioral nodes).
New paper: a review of how skeletal muscles support long-distance bird migration, highlighting their plasticity, coordination via endocrine signals, and interactions with other organ systems.
β‘οΈ vist.ly/4sdqf
#ornithology #birds #migration #physiology #signals #adaptation #evolution
21.02.2026 10:03
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Happy to share our new paperβled by Ethan Abercrombie in collaboration with Adam Smith @earthskysea.bsky.social and Lyle Usdin @washu.eduβexploring responses of small-mammal communities to a century of climate change in the Sierra Nevada mountains ποΈ πΏοΈ
doi.org/10.1002/ecog...
18.02.2026 22:19
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Global Trends in Drought Impacts on WildlifeβA Review
We reviewed peer reviewed literature pertaining to instances of anomalous drought (any drought event that deviates from standard conditions (e.g., dry season) when compared to a long term average) an...
New paper from our lab, led by Leah McTigue
We reviewed 40+ years of research on drought affects on wildlife: 66% of single-species responses were negative, only 2% positive.
As droughts intensify under climate change, wildlife are in trouble. πππ§ͺ
π onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/...
18.02.2026 16:22
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