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8 posts total
Alex Wild

Several of us overly online biologists spent years quietly doing an experiment on Twitter, trying to find out if tweeting about new studies from a set of mid-range journals caused an increase in later citations, compared to set of untweeted control articles.

Turns out we had no noticeable effect; the tweeted papers were cited at the same rate as the control set.

Our paper, headed by Trevor Branch, was published today in PLOS One:

journals.plos.org/plosone/arti

Several of us overly online biologists spent years quietly doing an experiment on Twitter, trying to find out if tweeting about new studies from a set of mid-range journals caused an increase in later citations, compared to set of untweeted control articles.

Turns out we had no noticeable effect; the tweeted papers were cited at the same rate as the control set.

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Craig Aaen Stockdale

@alexwild Thank you for doing this! What about other types of impact? Citations in policy docs, for instance?

levampyre

@alexwild I wonder, if it were the same for posting on Mastodon. My feeling is, that there are more science interested folks around here.

Alex Wild

It's unfortunate that I have to contend with so many companies just swiping my photos for their marketing material without permission or payment. But this is the absolute weirdest: a live insect trafficking company, of dubious legality, has copied my self-portait from a few years back in Ecuador, and uses it on their "Our Story" page, as if I'm the dude out there poaching the ants for them.

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LionelB

@alexwild

Graze and Nightshade useful for disrupting AI harvesting.

Lisa 🦔

@alexwild Eww :( Any chance serving them a DMCA takedown notice via their hosting service would be effective?

Alex Wild

The red state brain drain is already happening, as educated professionals do not want to live and work under extremist Republican rule.

newrepublic.com/article/176854

Alex Wild

Do you want to photograph every insect species on earth?

If you started now, shooting 100 species per day, it’d take about 30 years to get through just the known species.

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Toby

@alexwild and that’s assuming they stand still!

MJA

@alexwild it’s very tricky with new species coming into existence with (I assume) a known frequency, and old species going out of existence with some known frequency, even leaving aside borderline new species and borderline extinct species.

Marianne Denton

@alexwild look I’d give it a try nevertheless

Alex Wild

I have a new favorite fly. I thought it was a little mirid bug when I first saw it in the field, but no.

This is Stictomyia longicornis, a tiny picture-winged fly whose larvae feed on damaged cactus tissue.

Photographed at Seminole Canyon, Texas.

James Umbanhowar

@alexwild Great photo, cool fly, but it needs more hair.

Soh Kam Yung

@alexwild My current favourite local Singapore fly is the Drone Fly, Monoceromyia javana. Fooled me the first time I saw it into thinking it was a wasp. 🙂

On iNaturalist [ inaturalist.org/observations/9 ]

Alex Wild

When you arrive to Mastodon, try to follow at least 200-300 accounts.

As there is no algorithm shoveling delayed content into your feed, this place will feel sparse until you hit the right threshold of active connections. It really springs to life, though.

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💛🤍d0min1kA l1liA💜🖤

@alexwild its not really necessary to follow that many. i follow like around 50 accs, and my timeline is full

kaleb

@alexwild

I only follow who follow me. So begining is always slow

Kristen78

@alexwild hard disagree. I’m quite happy with just a handful of accounts, and one “group” account for Trek fans. That alone guarantees lots of delightful, silly, or thoughtful Star Trek content when I check in, and a smattering of other things I want to see.

I don’t want hundreds of new posts in my feed every day. I just want content that doesn’t leave me angry and rage-replying to everyone.

Alex Wild

John Roberts’ family making millions of dollars from Supreme Court-related business is another reminder that this court is corrupt, illegitimate, and some of its members should probably be tried for financial crimes.

msn.com/en-us/news/politics/jo

Alex Wild

I show this bug every year to my intro entomology students to see if they can figure out what body part all that undulating spiny weirdness is.

Heteronotus sp. treehopper, Ecuador.

Adam Yates

@alexwild I would guess pronotum, largely because that is what gets elaborated in other treehoppers but it kind of looks like it is growing straight out of the vertex of the head.

Alex Wild

Answer: the weird structure is of uncertain function- possibly an ant mimic, or maybe a spiny defense- and is made from a greatly enlarged pronotum, which is the plate on the thorax just behind the head. The bug’s true abdomen is visible under the wings.

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