After an intro ecology class, you might think that women had nothing to do with big, historical developments in the field. If you’re lucky, your class may have mentioned Jane Lubchenko or Rachel Carson. One of the amazing ecologists left out of your textbook was E.C. Pielou. She is a mathematical ecologist and author with a pretty extraordinary academic path. Jacquelyn Gill has a nice profile up. I also recommend MacArthur’s super bitchy response to Pielou correcting a mathematical error in one of his papers.
Music for sending drafts to your supervisor and feeling pretty damn good
While you’re waiting for the bus
Why haven’t you read more George Eliot?
Science fiction and real wars (via Per Square Mile):
Fiction does not replace policy analysis. But science fiction is the literature of “what if?” Not just “what if X happens?” but also “what if we continue what we’re doing?” In that way, science fiction can inform policy making directly, and it can inform those who build scenarios for wargames and exercises and the like. One of the great strengths of science fiction is that it allows you have a conversation about something that you otherwise couldn’t talk about because it’s too politically charged. It allows you to create the universe you need in order to have the conversation you want to have
What does the current economy have in common with 14th century Venice?
I spend a lot of time feeling like a total idiot failure at work. This makes me feel a whole lot better about it.
Berry Go Round
You saw September’s Berry Go Round, right? That monthly delight full of all sorts of interesting things about the most interesting things on the planet (i.e. plants)? Well if not, now’s a good time. And if you like it, you should volunteer to host the next one!
A poem
A Few Words on the Soul
by Wislawa Szymborska
We have a soul at times.
No one’s got it non-stop,
for keeps.
Day after day,
year after year
may pass without it.
Sometimes
it will settle for awhile
only in childhood’s fears and raptures.
Sometimes only in astonishment
that we are old.
It rarely lends a hand
in uphill tasks,
like moving furniture,
or lifting luggage,
or going miles in shoes that pinch.
It usually steps out
whenever meat needs chopping
or forms have to be filled.
For every thousand conversations
it participates in one,
if even that,
since it prefers silence.
Just when our body goes from ache to pain,
it slips off-duty.
It’s picky:
it doesn’t like seeing us in crowds,
our hustling for a dubious advantage
and creaky machinations make it sick.
Joy and sorrow
aren’t two different feelings for it.
It attends us
only when the two are joined.
We can count on it
when we’re sure of nothing
and curious about everything.
Among the material objects
it favors clocks with pendulums
and mirrors, which keep on working
even when no one is looking.
It won’t say where it comes from
or when it’s taking off again,
though it’s clearly expecting such questions.
We need it
but apparently
it needs us
for some reason too.
(via mathbabe)
Science-ese (with implications)
The AoB blog reports on a study that shows many plants that normally germinate in the spring could start germinating in the autumn as climate changes:
Emergence in autumn could have major implications for species currently adapted to emerge in spring.
Translation:
All the baby plants are going to freeze.
Sick at conferences
This past summer I wrote a little about what it was like to attend a scientific conference as a person with a chronic illness. I’m not the only one who struggles with this aspect of an academic career. I wonder if there’s something about conferences that could be changed to make them easier for sick people? I always fantasize about a room at the convention center with cots for quick naps!
