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Steven J. Cooke

Steven J. Cooke is a Canadian biologist specializing in ecology and conservation physiology of fish. He is best known for… more

Steven J. Cooke
H-index: 116
Environmental science 66%
Geography 17%

Reposted by Steven J. Cooke

Join us on 5th November to hear our Founding Editor Steve Cooke @sjcfishy.bsky.social speak about #Collaboration, #CoProduction and #Impact!

Sign up here: www.sebiology.org/events/ems-e...

@sebiology.bsky.social #ECR #PhD
In BC for NSERC Alliance Grant kickoff meeting with BC Hydro. Developing decision support tools for fish and fish habitat in the face of climate change.

Reposted by Steven J. Cooke

We're excited to announce Community Conversations, a new #webinar series in partnership with @sebiology.bsky.social 🤝 This is geared towards #EarlyCareer researchers. Our first speaker is @sjcfishy.bsky.social

Sign up here: buff.ly/MTC7R6B

#ConPhys #SEBcareers #ECR #PhD #conservation
Community Conversations: Webinars for building a career in conservation physiology. Speaker Dr Steven Cooke presents his "Reflections on Co-production and Impact in Conservation Physiology". The webinar is online and takes place on 5 November 2025 14:00-15:00 GMT
Good call - I knew I missed a few! US Army Corps is yet another group doing such work.
Thinking about all of my US colleagues today that work for USGS, USFWS, US Parks Service, NOAA and the EPA. From front line environmental practitioners to scientists and policy makers, these folks ensure that waters are swimmable, fish are edible, that natural areas are accessible, etc, etc, etc.
A good day... Online grad class w guest speaker from the Great Lakes Fishery Commission; Moderated a panel on evidence-informed decision-making in Canada w @cdnsciencepub.com; UBC PhD defence; fed/sort of managed 3 kiddos at home from school for PD day; Served as principal for our kitten daycare.
Upside - Pretty good internet on airplanes these days. Downside - Pretty good internet on airplanes these days.
Greetings Cooke Steven J: We have genuinely emailed you quite a lot of times re PSYCHIATRY JOURNAL but received no response, so we'd like to try once more as consideration... Take a hint - I'm a fish ecologist.

Reposted by Steven J. Cooke

Reimagine peer review! Biologist @sjcfishy.bsky.social shares how a collaborative approach can tackle misinformation and rebuild trust in science. Read more on the #CSPblog 💡▶️ buff.ly/f45wvLy

#PeerReviewWeek #PRW2025
Beyond criticism Creating a collective future for peer review

Reposted by Steven J. Cooke

(10/n) If conservationists are to influence these drivers, they need to make the case for bending the curve in terms that chime with the priorities of policymakers & business leaders in these sectors.

Our paper describes those priorities, and potential implications for freshwater biodiversity.

Reposted by Steven J. Cooke

New on global conservation science:

Public engagement is vital for biodiversity but barriers e.g. lack of knowledge, misaligned values & low personal relevance persist. Tailored approaches are needed in different contexts.

Gregg et al. in Conservation Biology doi.org/10.1111/cobi...
Hanging at @utoronto.ca today with Irena Creed and Stu Livingstone who lead a grad class on conservation. The amazing Justina Ray from @wcscanada.org is covering terrestrial issues in Canada and I am covering aquatics.
Colleague leading a paper I am co-author on just requested a brief extension for returning revisions to a journal for a paper we are working on. The editors response was: Just for context, deadlines are not up for negotiation, I’m afraid. WTF. Apparently some editors are indeed not human.

Reposted by Steven J. Cooke

🚨Deadline extension for our #BioLogging Special Issue 💻🐆

You now have until the end of the year to submit your work!

Full info here ➡️ academic.oup.com/conphys/page...
Welcome to the fall semester lab backyard party.
Starting the week off tomorrow with a riverbank mudpuppy meeting! Cool animals that are often forgotten/ignored. We intend to help shine a light on their awesomeness.
Biology is cool with sooo many exceptions. It also means we lie every time we generalize when teaching.
Ended 1st wk back on campus w "work at home" day which included podcast w Fish'n Canada show, zoom calls (e.g., with grad student in BC, partners in NS and USA), freedom of info request, AFS journal duties, a run, student wellness issue, dealing w nail in tire + hammering on "to do" list. Wine time!
I recognize that some of those things mean privilege (e.g., having $ and a vehicle to enable getting a Drivers Licence). I have yet to figure out a way around that given we work in remote areas and need multiple drivers for safety.
Last thing... My rubric often includes things that are really pragmatic. Can they swim? Do they have a full drivers licence? Do they have boating experience? Although we are a place for training we also have to operate as a "workplace" when it comes to safety and we need to be insurable!

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