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Texting about ichthyology and climate change’s effects on indigenous culture: Thursday Afternoon Dredging, February 1st, 2018

Posted on February 1, 2018February 1, 2018 By David Shiffman
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Cuttings (short and sweet): 

  • Follow Skye Augustine, a marine biologist studying traditional indigenous fisheries management practices, on twitter!
  • A plate of lies: seafood mislabeling. By Meghan Fox, for the Fisheries Blog.
  • 2017 was the hottest year yet for the world’s oceans. By Sarah Gibbens, for National Geographic.
  • Helping sound out of water: new materials could help scientists to eavesdrop on marine mammals. From Nature’s research highlights.
  • Is your child texting about ichthyology? Prosanta Chakrabarty explains how to decode these messages, because if you don’t talk to your kids about ichthyology, who will?
https://twitter.com/preaux_fish/status/957479899605995521

Spoils (long reads and deep dives):

  • Tribal culture is underwater, and falling through thin ice. By Debra Utacia Krol, for the Revelator
  • How drones can protect Amazon river dolphins. By Sophie Yao, for the Guardian.
  • How a scientist counted the fish in a huge marine reserve in just 8 days. By Matthew Berger, for OceansDeeply.
  • Where plastic goes, coral disease follows. By Andrea Thompson, for Scientific American.
  • Was Your Seafood Caught With Slave Labor? New Database Helps Retailers Combat Abuse. By Clare Leschin-Hoar, for NPR

 

Please add your own cuttings and spoils in the comments!

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Tags: amazon river dolphins climate change global warming indigenous culture is your child texting about is your child texting about ichthyology nanomaterials ocean warming seafood mislabeling

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