How Life Thrives Under the Ocean’s Crushing Pressure
Like most deep-sea biologists, I have a large collection of decorated Styrofoam cups. A couple dozen line the bookshelf of my office, each displaying a…
If you haven’t read the FAIL Blog yet, you are missing out one of life’s great pleasures: laughing at other’s failures! It was imperative I…
View More FAIL Boat Sails HomeThe first Carnival of the Blue of its 2nd year. Carnie creator Mark Powell posts edition #13 and brings it all full circle with the…
View More Carnival of the Blue Lucky #13A placoderm fossil called “mother fish” has been recovered from Gogo, an ancient coral reef site off the Kimberley coast of Northwest Australia. The fossil…
View More Live-birth from 375 million years agoBeware when you go on tropical holiday. Species richness of bacteria is higher in those waters. For many organisms on land (birds, mammals, snails, plants,…
View More More Types of Bacteria In Tropical Waters“Epsilonproteobacteria, it turns out, are one of the predominant groups of extremophiles in marine systems. In one environmental DNA sample taken from a hydrothermal vent,…
View More Epsilonproteobacteria EverywhereIf you read Blogfish, MBSL&S, and DSN, I think you see that Rick, Mark, and I are not advocating a complete ban on eating seafood.…
View More The Big 3: Shrimp, Tuna, and SalmonI am a big fan of Slinkachu out of London. The art is best described by the subtitle of the project itself “A Tiny Street…
View More Friday Deep-Sea Picture: Little People Attacked by Giant SquidI really love that quote from Alex Wild, by the way. Brian Fisher (my former Evolution T.A. from ye ole UC-Davis days) and Alex Smith…
View More PLoS ONE Get Its “Taxonomy Barrier” BrokenI really love that quote from Alex Wild, by the way. Brian Fisher (my former Evolution T.A. from ye ole UC-Davis days) and Alex Smith…
View More PLoS ONE Get Its "Taxonomy Barrier" Broken