For today's episode, we're joined by Avery Paxton, who is a Research Marine Biologist with NOAA's National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science, Chris Taylor, Research Ecologist, also with NOAA's NCCOS, and Melanie Damour, who is a Marine Archeologist and the Environmental Studies Coordinator with the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management's Gulf of Mexico Region Office. They were here to discuss their recent BioScience article on "Shipwreck Ecology," and the ways in which these sites can be hotspots for biodiversity—and also for research.
Read the article here.
Captions can be found on YouTube.
ASGSR Annual Meeting - Maryland
Biodiversity and the Extended Specimen Network
Inequality and the Human Right to Food
Half-Earth Preservation with Natura 2000
Chromatin Looping: Seeing DNA in 3D
Saving Species with Better Monitoring
Using the Plant Microbiome to Restore Native Grasslands
Tracking Aedes aegypti across the Ages
Scientists Warn that Proposed US–Mexico Border Wall Threatens Biodiversity, Conservation
Big Data is Synergized by Team and Open Science
Synbio Ethics: What the Researchers Think
Undergraduate Research Makes for Better Science
Bonus Episode: Disease-Carrying Ticks and How to Avoid Them
Bridging the Gaps in Global Conservation
One Thing Leads to Another: Causal Chains Link Health, Development, and Conservation
ASGSR Annual Meeting
Urban Mind: Measuring the Benefits of Nature in Real Time
Specimen Collection, Populations, and Biodiversity Science
A Waterway Bounces Back following the Passage of the Clean Water Act
Interdisciplinary Approaches to Wildlife Trade Management
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