@jwejeglinski.bsky.social What a fabulous talk that was!!
I hope we can catch up at the conference tomorrow - if not on the birding tour this afternoon.
@jwejeglinski.bsky.social What a fabulous talk that was!!
I hope we can catch up at the conference tomorrow - if not on the birding tour this afternoon.
Has anyone else let a career milestone slip by quietly? Let's hear about it! π§ͺ
11.04.2025 20:04 β π 8 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0Hereβs to the next chapter, and to noticing the #workmilestones when they come!
11.04.2025 20:03 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0
...But, these days especially, it feels important to celebrate the work as it is: sometimes leading, sometimes supporting β and still worthy of pride. π₯³
To everyone Iβve written with, learned from, or been encouraged by along the way β THANK YOU. π€π€
I recently realized Iβve crossed a milestone I almost missed:
50 peer-reviewed publications! πππππ
This milestone crept up slowly, quietly, in between drafts and revisions and collaborations β and if Iβm honest, I nearly talked myself out of acknowledging it at all. π€·ββοΈ
Just read the article "What Do We Do About John James Audubon?", after attending an event by the same name hosted by @fieldinclusive.bsky.social . I highly recommend checking out the article and event recording:
www.audubon.org/magazine/spr...
www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZTI5...
πͺΆ
Avian flu has had devastating consequences on many seabird populations, but after disastrous breeding seasons in 2022-2023, Roseate Terns on Coquet island, UK, produced more chicks in 2024 than ever before. Good news for one of our rarest seabirds. www.rarebirdalert.co.uk/v2/Content/C...
17.12.2024 11:18 β π 50 π 16 π¬ 1 π 0A screenshot of a social media post from USFWSPacific that reads: "SHE DID IT AGAIN! Wisdom, the worldβs oldest known wild bird, is back with a new partner and just laid yet another egg. At an approximate age of 74, the queen of seabirds returned to Midway Atoll National Wildlife Refuge last week and began interacting with a male." This tweet is paired with an image of two Laysan Albatrosses at Midway Atoll National Wildlife Refuge. Wisdom, the oldest known wild bird, is shown alongside her new partner, demonstrating her enduring legacy as a remarkable seabird.
We humbly interrupt your scroll to bring you the news that Wisdomβthe world's oldest known wild birdβis breeding again, age 74.
Go on girl. π
SkΓΊgvoy seabird populations: Fulmar -89%
Kittiwake -87%
Arctic skua -84% since 2001! #seabirds and all these species are legal to hunt year roynd π§ͺπ
Article by @emilyanthes.bsky.social!
13.12.2024 14:53 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0
The devastating toll of H5N1 on wild birds is hard to fathom, and sadly, they're not alone. Honoured to contribute to this @nytimes.com story alongside colleagues* working to understand this crisis. www.nytimes.com/2024/12/13/s...
* @duckswabber.bsky.social @johannaharvey.bsky.social
Thanks to my coauthors Liam Taylor, Tania Barychka, Sea McKeon and Natasha Bartolotta for their collaboration on this project!
13.12.2024 14:45 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0Conclusion: Our study suggests that #iNaturalist data can help characterize a mass mortality event, but with major limitations. It is a valuable complement to, but *not* a replacement for, comprehensive mortality assessments!
13.12.2024 14:45 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0Figure 3. Spatial comparison of avian deaths between iNaturalist data and a comprehensive dataset of mortality linked to highly pathogenic avian influenza in waterbirds, eastern Canada 2022. Spatial distribution is defined as the 95% isopleth of mortality locations (kernel smoothing parameter hβ=β0.3). Black contours show spatial distribution from the iNaturalist dataset. The comprehensive occurrence distribution (orange) treats mortality records from the comprehensive dataset as individual points, regardless of reported mortality, whereas the comprehensive concentration distribution (red) duplicates mortalities based on the number of dead birds reported at each location. Orange dashed line indicates the full extent (convex hull) of mortality from the comprehensive dataset.
The cons:
πiNaturalist vastly underestimated deaths (~200 reported vs. 40,000+ confirmed)
πMissed some species & regions, especially in remote areas
Figure 1. Taxonomic comparison of avian deaths between iNaturalist data and a comprehensive dataset of mortality linked to highly pathogenic avian influenza in waterbirds, eastern Canada 2022. Gray bars show the proportion of deaths among different waterbird taxa within the comprehensive dataset (Nβ=β40,109 reported mortalities). Black bars show the proportion of deaths within the smaller iNaturalist dataset (Nβ=β283 reported mortalities). (a) Organized by species, showing only the 10 most commonly reported taxa from the comprehensive dataset; (b) organized by taxonomic family, showing all records. See Appendix S1: Table S1 for original taxonomic labels.
Figure 2. Temporal comparison of avian deaths between iNaturalist data and a comprehensive dataset of mortality linked to highly pathogenic avian influenza in waterbirds, eastern Canada 2022. Records are binned by week. Shaded regions mark the shortest interval containing 51% of reported mortalities. (a) Weekly proportion of reported mortality; (b) weekly proportions after excluding gannet colony surveys, which offered delayed snapshots of mortality, from the comprehensive dataset.
The pros:
πIdentified key species (e.g., Northern Gannets)
πPinpointed hotspots & timing of high mortality
In 2022, seabirds in eastern Canada faced a devastating avian influenza outbreak. π¦π We analyzed iNaturalist records to see how well they captured seabird mortality.
13.12.2024 14:45 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0
π¨ New research alert! π¨
Can citizen science platforms like #iNaturalist help monitor wildlife disease and mortality? Our new study, published in #Ecosphere, uses the massive 2022 #avianflu outbreak in eastern Canada as a case study! π¦
https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.70051
This research offers a deep dive into the effects on #Newfoundland #seabirds, but for the regional picture, check the study that summarizes what we know of the 2022 #HPAI mortality event in Eastern Canada! esajournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/...
13.12.2024 14:26 β π 4 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0
Grateful to collaborate with Bill Montevecchi's amazing team at the @memorialu.bsky.social! Letβs continue advancing research & conservation to safeguard seabird populations. πͺβ¨
Have questions or thoughts about our findings? Letβs discuss!
This research highlights the urgent need to prioritize a One Health approach to addressing HPAI in North America. The impact on seabird populations is a wake-up call. ππ¦
Read the full study: doi.org/10.1139/cjz-...
Northern Gannets, Common Murres, Atlantic Puffins, & Black-legged Kittiwakes were the hardest hit. Mortality peaked in July & August, spreading west to east across Newfoundland. Species traits like nesting density & migration patterns may have influenced susceptibility.
12.12.2024 13:09 β π 2 π 1 π¬ 1 π 0
In 2022, HPAI H5N1 caused unprecedented seabird mortality across the North Atlantic. Newfoundland experienced one of the worst outbreaks in Canada, with ~13,517 estimated seabird deaths from April to September. π
Hereβs what we found. π
π¨ New research alert! π¨
Our paper on the devastating effects of the 2022 highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) H5N1 outbreak on Newfoundland seabirds has just been published in @cdnsciencepub.bsky.social πͺΆ
Dive into McPhail et al., 2024 here: doi.org/10.1139/cjz-...
Morning welcome to Super Seabird Sunday where we ask you to share videos, photos & artwork of Seabirds to brighten up the day. Here is my contributionβ¦those inquisitive Puffins of the Isle of May #SuperSeabirdSunday #Seabirds
01.12.2024 08:15 β π 105 π 23 π¬ 14 π 0Seabird researcher Stephanie Avery-Gomm exchanges looks with a Common Murre on an island in eastern Canada.
Iβm a conservation scientist with Environment and Climate Change Canada. I lead research on the cumulative effects and impacts of offshore wind energy, avian influenza, and plastic pollution on seabirds.
π stephanieaverygomm.weebly.com
π scholar.google.ca/citations?us...
π orcid.org/0000-0003-28...
Researcher Stephanie Avery-Gomm is exchanging perturbed looks with a Common Murre on a seabird colony in Newfoundland, Canada.
Hi! Iβm a seabird biologist with Environment and Climate Change Canada. I lead research on cumulative effects and migratory bird impacts from offshore wind energy, avian influenza, and plastic pollution.
π stephanieaverygomm.weebly.com
π scholar.google.ca/citations?us...
π orcid.org/0000-0003-28...
And now I see why I'm suddenly getting followers. I'm in the seabirder starter pack! Thanks again for reaching out Katharine :) I have high hopes for bsky!
25.11.2024 14:37 β π 1 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0A group of scientists at the AGU meeting holding up signs saying "cut ties to fossil fuels" and "stand up for science" and "protect our communities" This was over a decade ago!
To kick-start Bluesky, search for feeds + starter packs on topics you're interested in.
I've got this feed with 2800 scientists who study climate + 8 starter packs on climate-related topics.
Use SkyFollowerBridge to find your X follows + BlueArk to move your tweets over.
bsky.app/profile/did:...
Thank you! An advice on how to find a 'starter pack' of seabird scientists?
25.11.2024 14:32 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 2 π 0