8本のエピソード

A podcast about ecology, evolution, and everything in between. Contributors to the Molecular Ecologist blog discuss the science they've been reading and writing about.

The Molecular Ecologist Podcast The Molecular Ecologist

    • 科学

A podcast about ecology, evolution, and everything in between. Contributors to the Molecular Ecologist blog discuss the science they've been reading and writing about.

    Darwin Day, a glow-in-the-dark phylogeny, and pandemic PopGroup

    Darwin Day, a glow-in-the-dark phylogeny, and pandemic PopGroup

    In this episode, Stacy Krueger-Hadfield, Kelle Freel, and Rishi De-Kayne chat with Jeremy Yoder about a pandemic-focused Darwin Day symposium, the phylogenetic conservation of a bioluminescence symbiosis, and the online iteration of a venerable population genetics conference. Links to the things we discuss:


    The UAB Darwin Day event — and online video of the talks
    The phylogenetics of cardinalfishes, which host light-producing, environmentally acquired symbiotic bacteria
    Rishi's PopGroup conference interviews

    The music in this episode is Leroy Anderson's "The Syncopated Clock," performed on piano by Markus Staab and available under a Creative Commons license via Musopen.


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    • 42分
    Science and scholarship through the pandemic year

    Science and scholarship through the pandemic year

    In this episode, Stacy Krueger-Hadfield, R Shawn Abrahams, and Jeremy Yoder chat about their experiences managing research, teaching, and scientific conferences in the year of COVID-19.

    (This episode was recorded back in October, but production’s been delayed because of, well, everything. It’s still a pretty good retrospective on a  strange and challenging year!)

    Links to things we discuss:


    The Research Coordinated Network for Evolution in Changing Seas
    One of the most widely-tweeted talks from the online Botany 2020 meeting is this presentation on the evolutionary genetics of flower development by Min Ya — there doesn’t seem to be a central list, but lots of talks from the conference turn up in a YouTube search.

    You can find the podcast hosted on Anchor.fm, or on Apple Podcasts, Pocket Casts, and Spotify — or you can add the RSS feed directly to your podcast-management app of choice. Whatever service you use, consider taking a moment to rate or even review the podcast, which will help us build an audience.

    The music in this episode is Leroy Anderson’s “The Syncopated Clock,” performed on piano by Markus Staab and available under a Creative Commons license via Musopen.


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    • 1 時間
    What do you look for in a journal?

    What do you look for in a journal?

    In this episode, we turn to a question that every academic scientist has to answer at some point: How do you choose a scientific journal to receive your paper? Kelle Freel, Shawn Abrahams, Katie Grogan and Jeremy Yoder chat about what they like in a journal, what they consider when picking a publication venue for a new paper, and the various meanings of an "impact factor."


    JANE, the Journal/Author Name Estimator, will select candidate journals based on a sample of text from your paper's abstract.
    The Wikipedia article on impact factors is a quick overview of the metric's history and criticisms.
    There have been multiple studies of the effect Twitter attention may have on a paper's eventual citation count — one for ecology specifically was published in PLOS ONE in 2018.
    The study establishing a "chaperone effect" in which papers are more likely to be published at a high-impact journal if one of the authors has published in the journal before is on the PNAS website.
    The recent study of unprofessional peer reviewer comments by Nyssa Silbiger and Amanda Stubler is on the PeerJ website.

    You can find the podcast hosted on Anchor.fm, or on Apple Podcasts, Pocket Casts, and Spotify — or you can add the RSS feed directly to your podcast-management app of choice. Whatever service you use, consider taking a moment to rate or even review the podcast, which will help us build an audience.

    The music in this episode is Leroy Anderson's "The Syncopated Clock," performed on piano by Markus Staab and available under a Creative Commons license via Musopen.


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    • 50分
    Rivers and rabbit resistance

    Rivers and rabbit resistance

    In this episode,


    Sarah Shainker tells us about how population genetic structure works differently in river drainages;
    Kelle Freel recaps her reading on the history of rabbits and rabbit-killing viruses in Australia;
    Jeremy Yoder reports on his misadventures in sourdough starter cultivation and the community genetics of everyone’s new favorite hobby; and
    Katie Grogan talks about the sites she follows for professional development tips, going all the way back to grad school.

    You can hear more about the history of rabbit introduction and (attempts at) ecological management in Australia on these two episodes of Stuff You Missed in History Class.

    There’s more testimony and recommendations to fight racism in science, and our fields specifically, in this Nature feature, this editorial in Nature Ecology and Evolution, and this open letter to the EEB community on Medium.

    You can find the podcast hosted on Anchor.fm, or on Apple Podcasts, Pocket Casts, and Spotify — or you can add the RSS feed directly to your podcast-management app of choice. Whatever service you use, consider taking a moment to rate or even review the podcast, which will help us build an audience.

    The music in this episode is Leroy Anderson’s “The Syncopated Clock,” performed on piano by Markus Staab and available under a Creative Commons license via Musopen.


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    Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/molecular-ecologist/message

    • 59分
    Color me viral edition

    Color me viral edition

    The Molecular Ecologist Podcast is a conversation about ecology, evolution, and everything in between, with contributors to The Molecular Ecologist discussing the science and science-adjacent issues they've been reading and writing about. In this episode, 


    Patrícia Chrzanová Pečnerová discusses resources for using color to make scientific figures clear and appealing;
    Stacy Krueger-Hadfield tells us about the complex considerations surrounding tracking and controlling species invasions in the Antarctic;
    Melissa Walker gives us a tour of the truly weird biology of viruses big enough to measure in millimeters
    Katie Grogan recaps her series of posts on the costs — in terms of time, money, and emotional impact — of applying for tenure-track faculty jobs; and we also mention Laetitia Wilkins's contribution on the costs of not (yet) landing one of those jobs.

    You can find the podcast hosted on Anchor.fm, or on Apple Podcasts, Pocket Casts, and Spotify — or you can add the RSS feed directly to your podcast-management app of choice. Whatever service you use, consider taking a moment to rate or even review the podcast, which will help us build an audience.


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    • 57分
    A #NewPI chat about teaching, both before and after COVID

    A #NewPI chat about teaching, both before and after COVID

    On this episode, we're taking our #NewPI Chat conversations among early-career faculty to the podcast format. In this chat, Rob Denton, Stacy Krueger-Hadfield, and Jeremy Yoder discuss teaching: the transition from postdoc life to managing classrooms and curricula, juggling instruction time and research — and how all of this has changed while our campuses are locked down to help contain the COVID-19 pandemic.

    To send us questions about life as new PIs, or suggest topics or guests for future chats, you can leave us a voice message from the podcast's Anchor.fm page, hit us up on Twitter or Facebook, or email Jeremy.

    You can find the podcast on Apple Podcasts, Pocket Casts, and Spotify — or you can add the RSS feed URL directly to your podcast-management app of choice. Whatever service you use, consider taking a moment to rate or even review the podcast, which will help us build an audience.

    The music in this episode is Leroy Anderson's "The Waltzing Cat," performed on piano by Markus Staab and available under a Creative Commons license via Musopen.


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    Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/molecular-ecologist/message

    • 40分

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