Andrew is a post-doctoral researcher in North Carolina focused on population and conservation genetics in hydrothermal vent communities.



David is a graduate student in Florida. He studies the ecology and conservation of sharks.




Amy is a graduate student in North Carolina studying local ecological knowledge within small scale fisheries.



Chuck is a graduate student in North Carolina focusing on apex predators and how they interact with fisheries.




Lyndell is a graduate student in North Carolina, studying the feeding ecology of cownose rays.




Iris is a graduate student in Washington studying habitat use and feeding habits of juvenile Pacific salmon and herring in Puget Sound.



Michael is a graduate student in Maryland investigating the visual systems of mantis shrimp.



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Who should you be following for oil spill news?

Update: we’ve promoted this post to a full page on the blog. Please go here for the most up-to-date version. The comment thread will remain active here.

11 comments to Who should you be following for oil spill news?

  • Sam

    I think I’ll be coming back to these in the coming days, thanks.

    To paraphrase, “No ecosystem can stand against oil-power of that magnitude!”

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  • @Oceana

    Also, how do you rate Grist and TreeHugger coverage?

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    • I haven’t been following much of Grist or Treehugger, so they don’t pass the “is Andrew going to them for news test”. Beyond that, they’re providing good news coverage and a few smart editorials, but not the kind of in depth discussions that I’m finding at sites like the Oil Drum or Deep Sea News – which have a more thorough news coverage or Jen-Michel and The Spill, which have much more thorough discussions of the environmental impact.

      @Oceana is great, but I’m trying to keep the twitter list as short as possible. My goal is to have a list where, if you follow them, you’ll get 100% of the news and 90% of the commentary without tons of repetition.

      I did just find The Gulf Oil Blog, which is pretty exceptional – link to gulfblog.uga.edu

      If you have any one off articles that are absolutely must reads, I’d love to see them.

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  • Also, several blogs on Scienceblogs.com are doing a good job, especially Speakeasy Science and Pump Handle.

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  • Sharl

    Another suggestion for your list of who to follow on the oil spill: Mother Jones’ human rights reporter* Mac McClelland is back in the Gulf area, for the moment at least, tweeting on the plight of the fishing community, BP’s lock-out of media from damaged shore and wetlands, and the miserable situation in general. One plus (maybe a coping mechanism) – she can be pretty damn funny.

    *MM’s last big thing was covering the human rights atrocities in Burma – see a short interview with Harper’s here – so she’s somewhat battle-hardened in some respects, though probably not immune to toxins. Hope she (and everyone else down there) takes care.

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  • You might want to check out http://SpillBabySpill.com – The BP disaster in the Gulf unfiltered.

    The News Feed updates every 15 minutes with the latest news and commentary.

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  • Ocean Lover

    Call me a shameless self-promoter, but to keep up on the policy response to the disaster, the Natural Resources Defense Council’s team has a comprehensive blog page: link to switchboard.nrdc.org

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  • This whole oil issue is a tragedy. I wish BP gave a crap about the disaster.

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