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opwallscience.bsky.social
Opwall Science
@opwallscience.bsky.social
66 followers 47 following 35 posts
The dedicated account for science and research news from Operation Wallacea's global network of field sites.
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Welcome to Opwall Science! This account is dedicated to sharing research news from our global network of fieldwork sites, as well as to highlight news and stories that might be of broad interest to the biodiversity and conservation science community.
Congratulations to Rachel Gunn et al. for their new Aquatic Biology paper which, from examining cleaner gobies on the reefs of Utila, Honduras, shows that cleaner behaviour is complex ,being influenced by a range of behavioural and ecological variables tinyurl.com/ys2bwdw8
Congratulations to Joseph Oakley & Natalia Argüelles-Valle for their new note documenting the first record of the Salamander Bolitoglossa dofleini in Mexico! This extends the northern range of the species by >100km tinyurl.com/ycyuwttf
Photo: Joseph Oakley
Reposted by Opwall Science
Raman was one of our @opwall.bsky.social research assistants in Croatia a couple of years ago, and watching her impact as a young conservationist makes me so proud!!
Winner of The Marsh Award for Young Ornithologist is Ramandeep Nijjar! Ramandeep has put tremendous effort into promoting ornithology through various platforms including as a BTO Youth Rep, an organiser of local events and through public speaking, podcasts and webinars. @marshawards.bsky.social
Great new paper by Richard Bodmer et al. examining the ecology of River dolphins at fish aggregations in Amazonian Peru. It found that Pink dolphins formed feeding aggregations in both small and large rivers, while Grey dolphin aggregations largely occurred in large rivers; tinyurl.com/ezxjtmaa
Nice review by @thereremouse.bsky.social et al. of a new harp design that was extensively field-tested by the Croatia bat team in our Krka National Park field site this summer:
Our @opwall.bsky.social bat survey team in Croatia had the opportunity this summer to really put some Hunbat carbon fibre harp traps through their paces. Here's our review in @insideecology.bsky.social magazine. #bats #fieldwork #research #chiroptera #harptraps 🦇
An extremely strong month for the Utila marine research team! Congratulations to @jamesboon.bsky.social, @salkeith.bsky.social et al. on another great paper, this one examining how reef structure influences fish anti-predation behaviour!
New paper by Catherine Sheppard et al. examining aggressive behaviour in damselfish in the coral reefs of Honduras. Results showed predicting aggressive responses can be complex, extending beyond simply whether the subject of the aggression is a “neighbour” or a “stranger”: tinyurl.com/mr3vhef9
Familiarity mediated by body size predicts intraspecific aggression in farming damselfishes - Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology
Abstract Aggressive territoriality can have significant benefits for resource acquisition yet is a costly behaviour. Selection should therefore favour mechanisms that allow individuals to modify their...
tinyurl.com
Reposted by Opwall Science
The most gorgeous of larvae

These are immature Simuliidae - black flies. They sucker on to a fast-flowing river bottom & filter feed. They have beautiful cephalic fans which are filtering fans

@opwallscience.bsky.social @opwall.bsky.social #Honduras

#FlyFriday
Reposted by Opwall Science
Check out the most badass of larva - this is an immature lacewing

How cool is nature - from the cloud forests of Honduras @opwall.bsky.social @opwallscience.bsky.social

#NationalInsectWeek @royentsoc.bsky.social
Reposted by Opwall Science
For #Flyfriday & #NationalInsectWeek, Check out this golden boy

Eliozeta helluo (Fabrioius, 1805) is found across Europe, scattered parts of Russia, China, the Middle east, Korea, Japan & Mongolia!

This one was found in Romania, collected on an @opwall.bsky.social @opwallscience.bsky.social trip
Congratulations to @thereremouse.bsky.social et al. for their fantastic new paper provided a much-needed update to the terrestrial mammal inventory for Krka National Park, Croatia! Great output that should be highly useful for Park managers! Open access too so please take a look!
Our latest paper from the Croatian @opwall.bsky.social science team: Updated checklist of the terrestrial #mammals of Krka National Park!

You can read the open access manuscript here: publikace.nm.cz/en/file/7b9f...
Thanks! Glad its a useful overview; good to get a summary of all our core methods published in one place!
New blog post out; our "fieldwork dictionary" summarizing the main survey methodologies used at our terrestrial and marine fieldwork sites: www.opwall.com/article/the-...
Was great to work on this collaboration with the IUCN (Simon Valle) and University of Birmingham (Tom Matthews and @david-peartree.bsky.social)
New paper out highlighting the threat tropical storms pose to global island biodiversity. It shows the Caribbean especially has many species likely to be at risk of extinction from storms, and identifies 60 'high-risk' species that could be wiped by a single future storm event: shorturl.at/EAqOS
New open-access paper by Asela Buenfil-Rojas et al. describing a method to extract RNA from Morelet's Crocodile scuts (partly based on samples obtained from our Calakmul site), just out in MethodsX - shorturl.at/PXBFO
New paper by Rodney Roundtree et al. examining the acoustical ecology of dolphins and fish in the Pacaya-Samiria Reserve, Peru. They document distinct dolphin sounds seemingly used in different situations, and show a correlation between dolphin & fish acoustical activity: shorturl.at/gxerkhttps:/...
Indeed - very much an amazing place!
Amazing species to be found in the cloud forests of Honduras!
Todays best animal goes to this baby cranefly - yep this is a Tipulidae larvae & it was found in the streams high up in the Honduran cloud forests

How cool is nature?!?!?

@opwallscience.bsky.social
New paper by Hrvoje Čižmek et al. on the ecology of the Critically Endangered Noble Pen Shell off Miljet, Croatia. Results show the population to be dominated by older individuals, making it vulnerable to the mass mortality events posing a particular risk to the species: www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/17...
New paper showing patterns in neotropical monitoring programs (incorporating relevant Opwall sites). Results indicate spatial and taxonomic bias in these programs, and crucially that many span <10 years in duration, meaning they may not pick up important ecological trends shorturl.at/alx37
Bias in neotropical and reef biodiversity monitoring programs may prevent detecting changes in species diversity through time
Biodiversity monitoring networks are essential to quantify changes in biodiversity over time. Despite the importance of monitoring, studies using thes…
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