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How close did the world’s first deep-sea mining come to the dredging the world’s largest cold-water coral reef?
March 17, 2026
Here are some ocean conservation technologies that I’m excited about
February 19, 2026
Walking Backwards Into the Future: Applying Indigenous Knowledge to Deep Sea Mining
February 5, 2026
The Urgency Does Not Exist: My statement on Deep-sea Mining to the Subcommittee on Energy and Mineral Resources
January 24, 2026
Bipartisan Concern Expressed Over Deep Sea Mining at Congressional Hearing
January 23, 2026
That’s not a blobfish: Deep Sea Social Media is Flooded by AI Slop
December 19, 2025

365 days of Darwin: February 17, 2010

Posted on February 17, 2010February 10, 2010 By Andrew Thaler
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Charlie and the Southern Fried Dad in the Everglades.

Tuesday Morning Blogaerobics

Posted on February 16, 2010 By Andrew Thaler
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A couple fun things going on at the Duke Marine Lab by way of the blogosphere. Legendary Duke Marine Lab professor Dr. Dan and his undergrads have made an appearance over at Wild Shores of Singapore during their Urban Tropical Ecology class field trip to Singapore. Yes, we run very good field trips. The Climate … Read More “Tuesday Morning Blogaerobics” »

Ocean Story Slam – Tales from the Microbial Laboratory

Posted on February 16, 2010February 16, 2010 By Andrew Thaler
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The dinosaur saliva studying nobel laureates suffer an outbreak of Pseudocoralliilyticus pseudovibrii? And was that a monster bursting out of the door? Don’t forget to submit your Ocean Story Slam, and thank Pam for saving you for this week’s edition of “pictures from hog lagoons“. ~Southern Fried Scientist

365 days of Darwin: February 16, 2010

Posted on February 16, 2010February 16, 2010 By Andrew Thaler
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Charlie enjoys the view from the sawgrass.

365 days of Darwin: February 15, 2010

Posted on February 15, 2010February 10, 2010 By Andrew Thaler
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Charlie gears up to go adventuring on the Mini-Beagle. Find out about the new Beagle here.

365 days of Darwin: February 14, 2010

Posted on February 14, 2010February 10, 2010 By Andrew Thaler 3 Comments on 365 days of Darwin: February 14, 2010
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Charlie hangs out with a juvenile Monarch Butterfly.

365 days of Darwin: February 13, 2010

Posted on February 13, 2010February 10, 2010 By Andrew Thaler
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Bluegrass and Charlie hanging out in Florida.

The Conservation Context in Population Genetics, Part 1

Posted on February 12, 2010 By Andrew Thaler 3 Comments on The Conservation Context in Population Genetics, Part 1
Conservation, Science

This is the first entry in Crowdsourcing ConGen. This entry is meant to be half of an Introduction which lays out the framework for what conservation genetics is, its philosophical basis in population genetics, and why it’s a meaningful method of inquiry for conservation. This first section is meant to outline foundational concepts in population genetics. It is not meant to be a detailed summery of population genetics, but needs to be accurate and clear.

Read More “The Conservation Context in Population Genetics, Part 1” »

scientific literacy in the wine bar

Posted on February 12, 2010 By Bluegrass Blue Crab 2 Comments on scientific literacy in the wine bar
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Researching rural development in coastal communities presents a lot of land mines. I’ll let you imagine and populate that list yourself. Each one of those things deserves its own blog entry at least, or perhaps even a book. But one topic above all others permeates both my personal life and my dissertation research – climate change.

Yes, there are the newly minted signs in my neighborhood declaring the area under the “high water” mark. There’s also the friend who advised me against purchasing a house not because of financial concerns but because said house may be under water soon. There’s also the shift in local fishery species on which the community depends. But let’s set aside the physical realities for a moment…

Read More “scientific literacy in the wine bar” »

Crowdsourcing ConGen

Posted on February 12, 2010June 16, 2010 By Andrew Thaler 8 Comments on Crowdsourcing ConGen
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Conservation genetics provides essential information for the management and protection of species and ecosystems. Despite it wide applicability and concrete, quantifiable output, very few people in management and policy making positions, as well as in the general public, understand what conservation genetics is and how it can be used. Concepts like F-statistics, effective harmonic population size, the coalescent, along with a host of complex and convoluted equations tend to make the literature impenetrable. Add to that an ever changing host of molecular markers – allozymes, AFLPs,RFLPs, SNPs, microsatellites, mtDNA, 28s, and others – each with their own methods, assumptions, and caveats, and the field becomes almost unapproachable, even to other geneticists.

Read More “Crowdsourcing ConGen” »

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