Die zweite Woche des Probelaufs für NQFF. Sind die Follower-Listen hilfreich oder interessieren Sie sich nur für die Geschichten? Ich frage, da die Formatierung der Listen von Twitter-Konten viel länger dauert als die der Geschichten. Der Grund, warum ich sie einschließe, ist, dass ich dachte, es könnte praktisch sein, wenn Sie Leuten folgen möchten, die die Geschichten oder Papiere teilen, die Sie am meisten interessieren, aber ich weiß nicht, ob dies passieren wird.
Wie auch immer, hier sind die beliebtesten Geschichten und Zeitungen dieser Woche, die zunächst vom Guardian dominiert werden.
1. Schottlands seltene Bergpflanzen verschwinden, wenn sich das Klima erwärmt, finden Botaniker
Wenn Sie nächsten Monat Ben Lawers besuchen, könnte das gerade rechtzeitig sein, um seltene, verschwindende Pflanzen zu sehen #Klimawandel #Botanik https://t.co/sKcmM7UDQG
– Sophie Harrington (@sa_harrington) August 18, 2016
As the climate warms plants move to cooler locations further north and further up. But when you live on a Scottish mountain there’s soon a limit to how much further north or up you can go.
Sharers: PlantTeaching, alan_elliot, sarabotanical, plantbiology, Wagner__Markus, SeymourDaily, fossilplants, amandabamford, ForageWildFood, widdowquinn, aristolochia, LJA_1, RJLilley, ZarahPattison, JohnBryant1404, DKnott8, nemumDave, QuaveEthnobot, clareten, KateGold24, BrianLaney2, NaturePlants, AltroMare, DrTrevorDines, dawngarden, KewUKOTs, Fritillaria3, kathfarell, nicrodemo, UKPSF, HerbariumDonna, SLeguil, ScottishRockGC, IHStreet, BotanyRules, NikolaiAdamski
2. All hail the humble moss, bringer of oxygen and life to Earth
https://twitter.com/JulietCCoates/status/765478327993921536
The first plants on land were mosses, according to a new paper from PNAS. The coverage came from the Guardian, which was popular with botanists this week.
Sharers: SeymourDaily, DJ_gibbs, Antarcticmoss, forestofavon, dyanilewis, PlantTeaching, santosh7bhai, ReskiLab, JulietCCoates, MelanieCarmody, BTIscience, NaturePlants, OshnGirl, menyanth, ringstem, EvoEcoAmy, MossPlants, NikolaiAdamski, Prof_GD_Foster, fmartin1954, susieoftraken, howarthsg, Seminisia, subbaeticus, DanChitwood, UKPSF
3. Kew Gardens in race to collect and preserve Madagascar’s seeds
https://twitter.com/Botanygeek/status/765143708060745728
When Madagascar sheered off from Africa, it almost created a time capsule of life on Earth. Unfortunately, the rest of the planet has caught up with it, meaning that many plant species that cannot be found anywhere else are in trouble.
Sharers: gardeningtrials, Wagner__Markus, botanistlaura, nemumDavem, Botanygeek, 2blades, IbuAnggrek, KewGIS, KewUKOTs, TeamKMCC, NatureEcoEvo, KateGold24, Toby_Bruce, PlantSciNews, AngryWagtails, FAOForestry, BotanyEm, KewScience, CECHR_UoD, UKPSF
4. Biodiversity: The ravages of guns, nets and bulldozers
https://twitter.com/ManuSaunders/status/763648050401161216
With all the focus on climate change, you might think the old threats to species had disappeared. A new report reveals they’re alive and well and still driving species to extinction.
Sharers: arinovy, NatureEcoEvo, ConservBytes, GrasslandSocSA, mrillig, ManuSaunders, NaturePlants, wild_donal, wildlifeinwater, Knotweed_Doktor, carlzimmer, James_Borrel, keholsinger, DylanJCraven, leakey77, villareal_lab, PlantTeaching, nemumDave, CECHR_UoD
5. A picture is worth a thousand bullet points
How to create images that illustrate a concept and ‘stick’ in your audience’s mindhttps://t.co/88in2V6Hp9 pic.twitter.com/4quwX5JmOo
— Biop (@HMGU_Biop) August 16, 2016
Anne Osterrieder highlights Mary Williams’s work on how to find and use images in your presentations.
Sharers: IHStreet, PlantTeaching, ejrollinson, jjchm2, AnneOsterrieder, AGuleren, teemehkin, ThePlantCell, BiswapriyaMisra, mattVDiLeo, Toby_Bruce, HMGU_Biop
Popular Papers
Are We There Yet? Reliably Estimating the Completeness of Plant Genome Sequences
Detailed comparison of methods to asses genome assembly+gene space completeness. Extra methods in Suppl. #ourlatest https://t.co/oMQRuEAbKp
— Vandepoele lab @vandepoelelab.bsky.social (@plaza_genomics) August 11, 2016
Elisabeth Veeckman, Tom Ruttink, Klaas Vandepoele, 2016, ‘Are We There Yet? Reliably Estimating the Completeness of Plant Genome Sequences’, The Plant Cell, p. tpc.00349.2016 http://dx.doi.org/10.1105/tpc.16.00349
Sharers: ThePlantCell, JaneLangdale, PlantTeaching, wbmei, liforrest, plaza_genomics, NaturePlants, Crinklers, UCDflowerpower, mrriceguy, fmartin1954, sau916, GinaPham, JamesPBLloyd, Seminisia, Dunechka_yunchu, AaronListon, yanivbrandvain
Fast-Flowering Mini-Maize: Seed to Seed in 60 Days
#Minimaize with 2-month cycle produced by Birchler lab: https://t.co/bk7djuqd5R. I am tempted. pic.twitter.com/Gs4RuDqYOw
— Luca Comai (@lucacomai) August 13, 2016
M. E. McCaw, J. G. Wallace, P. S. Albert, E. S. Buckler, J. A. Birchler, 2016, ‘Fast-Flowering Mini-Maize: Seed to Seed in 60 Days’, Genetics http://dx.doi.org/10.1534/genetics.116.191726
Sharers: lucacomai, kisywd, GeneticsGSA, Seminisia, JimBradeen, Peter_Etchells, NoahFahlgren, DanChitwood, Twisted_Helix
#Ramularia genome just out.Colleagues @SRUCResearch @Rothamsted #EdinburghGenomics well done https://t.co/GTXgKvoCtL pic.twitter.com/7td69vZBvv
— Scottish Crop Doctor (@FBurnettCropDoc) August 10, 2016
Graham R. D. McGrann, Ambrose Andongabo, Elisabet Sjökvist, Urmi Trivedi, Francois Dussart, Maciej Kaczmarek, Ashleigh Mackenzie, James M. Fountaine, Jeanette M. G. Taylor, Linda J. Paterson, Kalina Gorniak, Fiona Burnett, Kostya Kanyuka, Kim E. Hammond-Kosack, Jason J. Rudd, Mark Blaxter, Neil D. Havis, 2016, ‘The genome of the emerging barley pathogen Ramularia collo-cygni’, BMC Genomics, vol. 17, no. 1 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12864-016-2928-3
Sharers: fmartin1954, Rothamsted, widdowquinn, PlantTeaching, Dr_JM_Fountaine, roseheather1, NikolaiAdamski, luciadesouza
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