Harpo Faust's Avatar

Harpo Faust

@softcorebotany.bsky.social

Botanist. Collections Manager at the University of New Mexico Herbarium. #collectionsareessential

156 Followers  |  392 Following  |  10 Posts  |  Joined: 15.11.2024  |  1.8785

Latest posts by softcorebotany.bsky.social on Bluesky


Preview
The Great Basketball Escape: Albuquerque, New Mexico The howl of women's basketball, past & present, is right here.

open.substack.com/pub/wnbaroug...

28.01.2026 17:50 — 👍 0    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
WNBPA STATEMENT REGARDING CBA MEETING IN INDIANAPOLIS
 
INDIANAPOLIS, IN, Thursday, July 17, 2025 –– Earlier today, the Women’s National Basketball Players Association (“WNBPA”) and the Women’s National Basketball Association (“WNBA”) met in person to discuss their ongoing negotiations for a new Collective Bargaining Agreement (“CBA”). Alongside  WNBPA staff and our CBA Advisory Team, more than 40 Players, including All-Stars, Executive Committee members, and Player Representatives, attended the meeting. This marked the largest in-person player turnout in Union history during CBA negotiations.
 
The WNBA’s response to our proposals fails to address the priorities we’ve voiced from the day we opted out: a transformational CBA that delivers our rightful share of the business that we’ve built, improves working conditions, and ensures the success we create lifts both today’s players and the generations that follow.
 
We’ve told the League and teams exactly why their proposal falls so short. This business is booming – media rights, ratings, revenue, team valuations, expansion fees, attendance, and ticket sales – are all up in historic fashion. But short-changing the working women  who make this business possible stalls growth. The only thing more unsustainable than the current system is pretending it can go on forever. 
  
It’s not complicated. 
 
We are committed to the fight. We are committed to returning to the negotiating table. And we will not stop until we achieve the transformational CBA this moment demands. 
 
###

WNBPA STATEMENT REGARDING CBA MEETING IN INDIANAPOLIS   INDIANAPOLIS, IN, Thursday, July 17, 2025 –– Earlier today, the Women’s National Basketball Players Association (“WNBPA”) and the Women’s National Basketball Association (“WNBA”) met in person to discuss their ongoing negotiations for a new Collective Bargaining Agreement (“CBA”). Alongside  WNBPA staff and our CBA Advisory Team, more than 40 Players, including All-Stars, Executive Committee members, and Player Representatives, attended the meeting. This marked the largest in-person player turnout in Union history during CBA negotiations.   The WNBA’s response to our proposals fails to address the priorities we’ve voiced from the day we opted out: a transformational CBA that delivers our rightful share of the business that we’ve built, improves working conditions, and ensures the success we create lifts both today’s players and the generations that follow.   We’ve told the League and teams exactly why their proposal falls so short. This business is booming – media rights, ratings, revenue, team valuations, expansion fees, attendance, and ticket sales – are all up in historic fashion. But short-changing the working women  who make this business possible stalls growth. The only thing more unsustainable than the current system is pretending it can go on forever.     It’s not complicated.    We are committed to the fight. We are committed to returning to the negotiating table. And we will not stop until we achieve the transformational CBA this moment demands.    ###

Statement from the WNBPA after their meeting with the WNBA today, which lasted a couple hours and featured a record turnout of more than 40 players.

17.07.2025 22:22 — 👍 128    🔁 35    💬 5    📌 25
Post image Post image Post image Post image

Still coming off an alpine high from our trip last week in the Wheeler Peak Wilderness documenting alpine flora apart of Western N. America Alpine Plant Surveys. Highlights included this alpine poppy not documented in New Mexico for over a century! 🌱 @jkleinkopf.bsky.social @hannahmarx.bsky.social

08.07.2025 16:15 — 👍 6    🔁 1    💬 0    📌 0
Post image

Please Share Widely! Funds needed urgently to support temporary infrastructure of Carrizo Mountain Herbarium. 🌱

23.06.2025 14:40 — 👍 5    🔁 4    💬 0    📌 0

Please don't stop talking about Palestine.

13.06.2025 03:12 — 👍 461    🔁 240    💬 0    📌 1
A world map showing the locations of new plant species discovered through iNaturalist. Each species is represented by a photograph and text explaining the family and year of description.

A world map showing the locations of new plant species discovered through iNaturalist. Each species is represented by a photograph and text explaining the family and year of description.

Check out this new #AJB essay by @thebeachcomber.bsky.social, @hsauquet.bsky.social & @willcornwell.bsky.social!

#Citizenscience records are fuelling exciting discoveries of new plant species

doi.org/10.1002/ajb2... #botany #plantscience #iNaturalist #herbarium

16.05.2025 15:27 — 👍 20    🔁 9    💬 0    📌 1
The cover of the March-April issue of Applications in Plant Sciences. The image shows a curated set of 28 digitized herbarium specimens of the genus Acer, retrieved from the digital collection of the University of Michigan Herbarium (MICH) using the mvh pipeline.

The cover of the March-April issue of Applications in Plant Sciences. The image shows a curated set of 28 digitized herbarium specimens of the genus Acer, retrieved from the digital collection of the University of Michigan Herbarium (MICH) using the mvh pipeline.

Post image Post image

The new issue of #AppsPlantSci is online!

Highlights include the PteridoPortal, a publicly accessible collection of #pteridophyte records; an R tool to assemble and organize virtual #herbaria; and more

bsapubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/toc/21680450... #botany #DeepLearning #paleobotany #iNaturalist

29.04.2025 18:24 — 👍 18    🔁 9    💬 0    📌 2
Post image

🌿 Join iDigBio on May 6 at 1 PM ET for a webinar on how advocacy helped save the Duke Herbarium—and what we can learn moving forward.

BSA was proud to support the petition to save the herbarium—and now, we hope you'll help amplify this important event.

Event Info: www.idigbio.org/content/spec...

22.04.2025 15:34 — 👍 20    🔁 11    💬 1    📌 0
Preview
The Flower Files Inside the Shirley C. Tucker Herbarium, the largest collection of plants and fungi specimens in Louisiana

The LSU herbarium is featured in the most recent Country Roads. Check out the article here!

countryroadsmagazine.com/lsu-herbarium/

25.03.2025 22:13 — 👍 29    🔁 8    💬 2    📌 1
Post image Post image Post image

Got to host an amazing seminar by Ben Legler, a forever mentor to me, on moonworts which was everything and more!

13.03.2025 23:48 — 👍 5    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
Interstices | The Hidden Histories of Women in Botany
“Individual contributions are all too often forgotten, overshadowed, or never acknowledged; lost in the gaps among objects.” - Professor Stephen A. Harris, Druce Curator of Oxford University Herbaria. (Adapted from the foreword to Gem Toes-Crichton’s book.)” In this talk, Gem Toes-Crichton shares h Interstices | The Hidden Histories of Women in Botany

This #InternationalWomensDay, watch our fascinating talk from Gem Toes-Crichton on her visual research exploring pioneering women in botany.

She features Elizabeth Blackwell, Anna Atkins, and the 1994 winner of our Jill Smythies prize, Rosemary Wise.

Watch: www.youtube.com/watc...

#IWD2025

08.03.2025 10:00 — 👍 25    🔁 9    💬 1    📌 0
Preview
Postdoctoral Researcher: Colonial History of Botanic Gardens Interested in colonial history, botanical gardens and decolonisation? Join our international team of scholars!

*Job Claxon*: we're hiring a Postdoc to research the Colonial History of the Botanic Gardens at Universiteit Utrecht.

www.uu.nl/en/organisat...

#skystorians #jobs #histofscience #colonialhistory #botanicalgardens

04.03.2025 08:23 — 👍 151    🔁 138    💬 2    📌 13
Post image

Hello botany enthusiasts! With March Madness right around the corner that means it's time for… Herb-Madness!
32 plant genera are set to compete in the 2025 Herb Madness Championship.
We have an exciting lineup for this year’s Herb Madness, but we can’t do it without YOUR HELP.

#herbmadness2025

04.03.2025 21:30 — 👍 9    🔁 4    💬 1    📌 1
Arnold Clifford, Navajo Botanist, holds up a pressed herbarium specimen of an undescribed species of thistle found in Carrizo mountain.

Arnold Clifford, Navajo Botanist, holds up a pressed herbarium specimen of an undescribed species of thistle found in Carrizo mountain.

The roof of Carrizo Mountain Herbarium caving in, leaving herbarium cabinets inside vulnerable to snow and rain.

The roof of Carrizo Mountain Herbarium caving in, leaving herbarium cabinets inside vulnerable to snow and rain.

🚨Urgent: Help Save Decades of Work by Navajo Botanists🚨

For decades, Arnold Clifford has built up the Carrizo Mountain Herbarium. Now, this collection is at risk—snowstorms are causing the roof to cave in, putting >30,000 specimens in danger.

#IndigenousScience #Conservation #MutualAid #botany

04.03.2025 04:58 — 👍 59    🔁 51    💬 1    📌 2
Post image

Urgent support needed for a leaking roof of the Carrizo Mountain Herbarium! Digital Donations can be made through Venmo to @ShawnaB3- with the note "Carrizo Mountain Herbarium Urgent Support"

03.03.2025 21:57 — 👍 2    🔁 3    💬 0    📌 1
Preview
Meet the 'wooly devil,' a new plant species discovered in Big Bend National Park The plant, formally known as Ovicula biradiata, is especially notable for being the simultaneous discovery of a new species and genus. It was found with help from the community science app iNaturalist...

The plant, formally known as Ovicula biradiata, is especially notable for being the simultaneous discovery of a new species and genus. It was found with help from the community science app iNaturalist. By @jamesdoubek.bsky.social

26.02.2025 22:07 — 👍 1152    🔁 164    💬 21    📌 28
Preview
The woolly devil: a landmark U.S. plant discovery Belonging to the sunflower family, the tiny plant was found in Big Bend National Park, Texas.

For the first time in nearly 50 years, a new plant genus and species has been discovered in a U.S. national park.

🔗 @pensoft.net blog post: blog.pensoft.net/2025/02/19/t...

🔗 Research paper: doi.org/10.3897/phyt...

@calacademy.bsky.social @ca-naturalist.bsky.social

24.02.2025 08:06 — 👍 11    🔁 6    💬 0    📌 0
Preview
'Devil'-like flower with 'horns' found in Texas is new species: Its location is secret In a rugged stretch of desert in one of the nation's most remote national parks, a volunteer's eyes were caught by a colorful sight sprouting up from the beige and brown of the Chihuahuan Desert—"devi...

🌿 new plant species found in national park.

We can’t sell off our natural parks if for no other reason than that they hold undiscovered species like this new one. Plus all the other reasons we can’t sell our shared natural heritage.

22.02.2025 19:14 — 👍 188    🔁 32    💬 0    📌 3
New research prepares way for future botanical research To plan for the future, it’s sometimes necessary to look to the past. To improve natural history collection and analysis in the future, a team of researchers is looking at collections of plants from a...

"To plan for the future, it’s sometimes necessary to look to the past." Nice highlight of our work synthesizing temporal, taxonomic, and spatial trends in botanical collections to facilitate new research avenues @emlombardi.bsky.social @softcorebotany.bsky.social

20.02.2025 14:34 — 👍 8    🔁 3    💬 0    📌 0

this haptic display absolutely rocks. basketball is for everyone.

06.02.2025 21:56 — 👍 21347    🔁 6848    💬 248    📌 1041

no funding if it seems like the research MIGHT involve a woman or a nonwhite person

04.02.2025 02:34 — 👍 20980    🔁 6116    💬 594    📌 208

A bright spot in a dark week. The International Compositae Alliance (TICA) has just put out the newest volume of the bi-annual publication Capitulum 3(2) and this issue has STYLE. 😎🌼

OA, here: www.compositae.org/capitulum_03...

#botany #plantscience #ecology #biodiversity #evolution #asteraceae

30.01.2025 21:57 — 👍 13    🔁 4    💬 0    📌 0

Awesome work by my favorites! @emlombardi.bsky.social @hannahmarx.bsky.social

Check it out!

30.01.2025 17:45 — 👍 3    🔁 1    💬 0    📌 0
Federal Actions | UMass Amherst

UMass has a new webpage to track federal actions as a community resource
www.umass.edu/news/federal...

29.01.2025 19:49 — 👍 316    🔁 162    💬 6    📌 8

Our insect collection manager thinks its likely a moth and is working on identifying right now as there is a pupae in it.

28.01.2025 23:09 — 👍 0    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 0
Post image Post image Post image Post image

Found a larvae on my Selaginella specimen, was collected in the Sandias last year. Not finding much on larvae on Selaginella in North America- currently talking any thoughts and input.

28.01.2025 23:09 — 👍 1    🔁 1    💬 1    📌 0
What ‘unexplored’ means: Mapping regions with digitized natural history records
YouTube video by PeerJ What ‘unexplored’ means: Mapping regions with digitized natural history records

Very proud of this paper led by @lsu.bsky.social students where we examine what ‘Unexplored’ means in a natural history context - we recommend ‘biodiversity blindspots’ instead for places that lack digitized public data

Paper here peerj.com/articles/185...

Video abstract youtu.be/QZ8wUrgJEao

17.01.2025 12:32 — 👍 61    🔁 20    💬 0    📌 2
World map showing biodiversity collection hotspots (red) and blindspots (blue).  BALL ET AL./PEERJ  (2025)

World map showing biodiversity collection hotspots (red) and blindspots (blue). BALL ET AL./PEERJ (2025)

Our records of the world’s biodiversity are patchy—but that's not because lots of places are "unexplored." That story and more of the best in @science.org and science in this edition of #ScienceAdviser: www.science.org/content/arti... 🧪

21.01.2025 16:56 — 👍 57    🔁 22    💬 3    📌 3
Post image

🚨New Paper Alert🚨 @emlombardi.bsky.social @hannahmarx.bsky.social

esajournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/...

07.01.2025 21:04 — 👍 9    🔁 4    💬 0    📌 0
Post image

I have a @hannahmarx.bsky.social sized hole in my herbarium heart! The UNM Herbarium is losing a great one. Cheers to one of the greatest curators I've ever had the privilege of working with, to all of the great work you will continue to do at Cornell & all the new ways we get to collaborate!

03.12.2024 18:25 — 👍 4    🔁 0    💬 0    📌 1

@softcorebotany is following 20 prominent accounts