Andrew Iwaniuk
@evoneuro.bsky.social
2.6K followers 1.7K following 1.8K posts
neurobiologist, ornithologist, scruffy looking nerfherder, social distancing since 1974, currently at U Lethbridge, Treaty 7 lands 🇨🇦 🇦🇺 stuff open access link for our book: https://direct.mit.edu/books/oa-monograph/6000/Bird-Brains-and-BehaviorA-Synthesis
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evoneuro.bsky.social
In celebration of me avoiding becoming department chair for the next 3 years and receiving a new research chair, please enjoy one of my favourite parrot photos from two years ago.
Crimson rosella (Platycercus elegans)
#birds #birding #academicsky #WildOz #parrots 🪶🦜🇨🇦🇦🇺
A bright red parrot with a silver beak, blue cheeks and blue wing patches is perched on the top of a shrub against a cloudless blue sky.
evoneuro.bsky.social
Post-secondary operating funds are provincial. Research infrastructure and research grants are almost entirely federal. Also thanks for assuming I'm an idiot.
evoneuro.bsky.social
So because of the kids in the background you are going to invest in education from K through to post secondary, right? Right?
Reposted by Andrew Iwaniuk
evoneuro.bsky.social
It’s a group equipment grant that I didn’t have time to take the lead on. Nothing I can do at this stage other than try to fix it as my students will need to access the equipment. Fun times…
evoneuro.bsky.social
For example, we could all stop listening to researchers who proclaim “better ways” of studying brain size in primates and maybe focus on getting better comparative data on brain structure to advance the field beyond opinions. I am so sick of armchair biologists adding no data of their own 🤬
evoneuro.bsky.social
There is a special place in hell for the dept colleague who wants to take the lead on a group grant and then sends you a half-arsed version of it to you 72 hours before the deadline so you feel compelled to drop everything to fix it.
#academicsky
evoneuro.bsky.social
As a former resident of Melbourne, better public transit would also help a lot too. The train-bus-tram system there sucks, especially if you are more than a couple of km from the CBD.
evoneuro.bsky.social
Although most birders see grouse as rather spherical (or "borb-like"_, they do have quite long necks. This typically occurs when perched in a tree and anxious about a predator and helps them look more "branch-like".
#birds #birding #Alberta #wildlife 🪶🇨🇦
A mottled brown, grey, and white chicken-like bird is perched on a bare branch with its neck extended and crest up. This Ruffed Grouse is likely a female based on the lack of dark ruff feathers and the relatively short crest.
Reposted by Andrew Iwaniuk
geneanderson.bsky.social
#CBC Alberta at Noon program with a guest representing (and defending obvs) private charter schools had me yelling at the radio. If you’re wanting a private choice for education, then YOU should be paying for it, not w/taxpayer $. I will vote yes on the petition to defund Alberta charter schools.
evoneuro.bsky.social
@mark-carney.bsky.social you might want to take note of this. One of your nation building plans could be supporting research across Canada rather than another oil pipeline that contributes further to climate change.
#Canada
evoneuro.bsky.social
Wishing I was here instead of working on grant applications and admin paperwork this long weekend.
Taken last year at Buck Lake, Alberta, 🇨🇦
(*note the two grebes paddling past along the lake)
#Canada #birds
A fall scene of yellow-orange poplars and a few scattered spruce trees along a lakeshore. The lake is mostly calm, reflecting the colours of the fall leaves. Across the surface of the lake, two western grebes are swimming past.
Reposted by Andrew Iwaniuk
teamswiftparrot.bsky.social
Look at how greenly gorgeous this little regent parrot is💚💚💚
evoneuro.bsky.social
And their “quartering” flight allows them to localize sounds better than other hawks. In fact they do it as accurately as owls and evolved changes to their brains that are similar owls to enable accurate sound localization.
see @evolsara.bsky.social for more!
#themoreyouknow #birds
evoneuro.bsky.social
The Spanish bilingual program has been amazing. We have been extremely happy with all the teachers and the program as a whole.
evoneuro.bsky.social
And don’t forget our Spanish bilingual program
Reposted by Andrew Iwaniuk
jocelynanderson.bsky.social
A Sora looking for tasty things to eat in the shallow waters. Those long toes disperse the Sora's weight and help the bird walk through the marsh without sinking into the mud.
evoneuro.bsky.social
I understand all too well. You probably have another couple of years to visit the Rockies before our idiot premier tries to make Alberta into a Republic (or worse).
evoneuro.bsky.social
No worries! Lethbridge does not offer much and any extra time is far better spent in Canmore-Banff-Lake Louise at this time of year.
Reposted by Andrew Iwaniuk
mcsweeneys.net
"Thank you for gathering here at what will be a state-of-the-art condo building: Muwekma Gardens. See what we did there? We took an Indigenous name and put 'Gardens' after it. It’s called whitewashing, and we in the real estate business are obsessed with it."
www.mcsweeneys.net/articles/as-...
As an Indigenous Person, Here Are Some Land Acknowledgments I Hope Never Happen
Ribbon Cutting Ceremony for a Luxury Condominium Building in Palo Alto Thank you for gathering here at the site of a what will be a state-of-the-a...
www.mcsweeneys.net
evoneuro.bsky.social
You raise a very valid point!
evoneuro.bsky.social
I just saw that a new edition of Evolution of Nervous Systems is coming out (shop.elsevier.com/books/evolut...).

Despite being my main area of research, I was excluded this time, likely because of one of the editors. Charming behaviour by someone many look up to as an expert.
evoneuro.bsky.social
Fun fact: as far as scientists know, blue phase Ross's geese are all Ross-Snow hybrids. This helps explain why they are so rare compared with blue phase Snow geese.
Reposted by Andrew Iwaniuk
fisherspeaks.bsky.social
In October 2025 you can actually watch flocks of North America's cranes - both Sandhills and Whooping, wing their way south #SK #birds.
About 30 adult and young Whooping Cranes gather on a cultivated field on migration. A flock of Sandhill Cranes rise up over a cultivated field.