Joshua Twining
@joshuaptwining.bsky.social
300 followers 130 following 31 posts
Wildlife Ecology | Conservation | Population Ecology | Assistant Professor at Oregon State University in Fisheries, Wildlife, and Conservation Sciences | Subject Matter Editor @ Ecology | Editor @ Mammal Communications
Posts Media Videos Starter Packs
Questions and inquiries welcome, my email is [email protected]
Feel free to email me at [email protected] with any questions!
It’s got everything you could dream of - loads of fieldwork, small mammal trapping and handling, simulations to inform sampling designs and hierarchical modeling, all in the beautiful Pacific Northwest!
Are you looking to get a graduate degree in Fisheries, Wildlife, and Conservation Sciences? This funded MS project at OSU is focused on testing a range of non-invasive method for small mammals (enclosed camera trapping + thermal cameras mounted on drones) against SCR applied to live trapping data.
ahah I am Gabby. Started just a few months back.

Thank you!
I agree! Thanks for sharing Jess.
I am recruiting two funded graduate students (1 MS, 1 PhD) to join the lab and the Fisheries, Wildlife, and Conservation Sciences program at Oregon State University!

If you are into population ecology and a combination of fieldwork and modeling - then check this out!

Please share/repost widely!
Reposted by Joshua Twining
About time. Not that I'm a fan of ranking journals, and of course there are genuine articles published in those journals, but this is just stating facts. If it's in most of MDPI/Frontiers, we can't trust it's been properly peer reviewed.
Big news from Finnish publication forum. Almost all MDPI and Frontiers journals will be downgraded to level 0 and thus are not considered as properly peer reviewed trustworthy scientific journals.
julkaisufoorumi.fi/en/news/chan...
Changes to the classification
julkaisufoorumi.fi
Reposted by Joshua Twining
⏰New Research ⏰

We quantified the direct impact of diversionary feeding on capercaillie productivity. We show an increase in the proportion of hen with a brood in DF sites (37% -> 85%) and, as a result, a 131% increase in chicks per hen. Read more here: www.researchgate.net/publication/...
1/7
Reposted by Joshua Twining
Advent Sci-Fact 9:

Invasive squirrels do not avoid predator scent!

Grey Squirrels (Invasive in the UK) do not avoid feeders with Pine Marten scent. Native Red Squirrels visit scented feeders less frequently, for shorter visits and are more vigilant!
Paper: tinyurl.com/23u944wq
#SciComm #SciArt 🧪🌍🐿
Two panel diagram. Left panel shows red (native) squirrel and grey (invasive) squirrel eating a peanut.
Right panel shows a peanut covered with Pine Marten (Native Predator) scent. The grey squirrel is eating the peanut, the red squirrel does not.  Text shows it is avoiding the feeder and behaving more vigilantly.
Well this made my day! Thanks Galatea for the great sci comm. I love the graphic you made!
Forgive me, my responses were to a question about modeling plant interactions as opposed to impacts of habitat on animal abundance (the latter of which these models do - you can add any covariates that you hypothesize influence the state process (I.e. abundance) of your species of interest).
My inkling is that using this model with plant communities wouldn't be an optimal approach but I am uninformed on standard practices when it comes to thinking about plant interactions!
With mobile animals we have to contend with ubquitous issue of hetereogenity in detectability (so we explicitly address by modeling observation process.) I am niave to whether this is an issue, or even considered / worthwhile when sampling plants (which are stationary and simpler to survey?).
Thanks Alyssa! I think it *could* be applied to plant systems, but I imagine (I don't know) that there may be more information-rich models used in plant world which contain more info about underlying abundances (here we used detection/non-detection data, but with plants you could just count them?)
Reposted by Joshua Twining
Are you interested in species interactions and how we model them?

Then this thread is for you!

Our new paper in Ecology on the role of abundance in species interactions provides new statistical tools for modelling species interactions.

shorturl.at/Sqz9m

🧵(1/13)🧵
Abundance‐mediated species interactions
Species interactions shape biodiversity patterns, community assemblage, and the dynamics of wildlife populations. Ecological theory posits that the strength of interspecific interactions is fundament...
shorturl.at
Reposted by Joshua Twining
Very cool model and paper!
Are you interested in species interactions and how we model them?

Then this thread is for you!

Our new paper in Ecology on the role of abundance in species interactions provides new statistical tools for modelling species interactions.

shorturl.at/Sqz9m

🧵(1/13)🧵
Abundance‐mediated species interactions
Species interactions shape biodiversity patterns, community assemblage, and the dynamics of wildlife populations. Ecological theory posits that the strength of interspecific interactions is fundament...
shorturl.at
I would love to join if possible!

I develop and use hierachical models for estimating population sizes, distributions, and species interactions to inform evidence-based management and conservation of wildlife populations.
Thanks Alexej! I hope you are well. We should catch up soon!