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47 votes
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Abortion laws are driving academics out of some US states—and keeping others from coming
29 votes -
Specimens are deteriorating at the Florida State Collection of Arthropods; this neglect could interfere with research
https://undark.org/2023/07/05/neglect-of-a-museums-collection-could-cause-scientific-setbacks/ IN A DUSTY ROOM in central Florida, countless millipedes, centipedes, and other creepy-crawlies sit...
https://undark.org/2023/07/05/neglect-of-a-museums-collection-could-cause-scientific-setbacks/
IN A DUSTY ROOM in central Florida, countless millipedes, centipedes, and other creepy-crawlies sit in specimen jars, rotting. The invertebrates are part of the Florida State Collection of Arthropods in Gainesville, which totals more than 12 million insects and other arthropod specimens, and are used by expert curators to identify pest species that threaten Florida’s native and agricultural plants.
However, not all specimens at the facility are treated equally, according to two people who have seen the collection firsthand. They say non-insect samples, like shrimp and millipedes, that are stored in ethanol have been neglected to the point of being irreversibly damaged or lost completely.
When it comes to how the FSCA stacks up with other collections she’s worked in, Ann Dunn, a former curatorial assistant, is blunt: “This is the worst I’ve ever seen.”
Experts say the loss of such specimens — even uncharismatic ones such as centipedes — is a setback for science. Particularly invaluable are holotypes, which are the example specimens that determine the description for an entire species. In fact, the variety of holotypes a collection has is often more important than its size, since those specimens are actively used for research, said Ainsley Seago, an associate curator of invertebrate zoology at the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh.
A paper published in March 2023 highlighted the importance of museum specimens more generally, for addressing urgent issues like climate change and wildlife conservation, with 73 of the world’s largest natural history museums estimating their total collections to exceed 1.1 billion specimens. “This global collection,” the authors write, “is the physical basis for our understanding of the natural world and our place in it.”
9 votes -
Neglect of a museum’s collection could cause scientific setbacks at Florida State
12 votes -
How scientific conferences are responding to US abortion bans and anti-LGBTQ+ laws
32 votes -
Independent journalist uncovers a ring dedicated to publishing low quality articles and increasing publishing credits
35 votes -
Is the staggeringly profitable business of scientific publishing bad for science?
8 votes -
Lord of the Rings–quoting performance wins this year’s ‘Dance Your PhD’ contest
5 votes -
Over-reliance on English hinders cognitive science
4 votes -
N=1: Single-subject research
3 votes -
Finnish astronomers acquitted in defamation case related to protesting harassment – astrophysicist Christian Ott argued protests cost him postdoc position
5 votes -
Science has a nasty Photoshopping problem
7 votes -
Office of Science and Technology Policy issues guidance to make US Federally funded research freely available without delay
12 votes -
Two decades of Alzheimer's research may be based on deliberate fraud
31 votes -
‘Zombie papers’ just won’t die. Retracted papers by notorious fraudster still cited years later.
9 votes -
Climate activist Greta Thunberg has compiled a handbook for tackling the world's interconnected environmental crises, with contributions from leading scientists and writers
13 votes -
The attack of zombie science - They look like scientific papers. But they’re distorting and killing science.
8 votes -
Why the new pollution literature is credible
4 votes -
Where the humanities aren't in crisis
3 votes -
I spent forty-four years studying retirement. Then I retired.
9 votes -
African researchers say they face bias in the world of science. Here's one solution.
6 votes -
Evidence of fraud in an influential field experiment about dishonesty
6 votes -
‘Tortured phrases’ give away fabricated research papers
16 votes -
I signed up to write college essays for rich kids. I found cheating is more complicated than I thought.
29 votes -
How our brutal science system almost cost us a pioneer of mRNA vaccines
8 votes -
Stephen Krashen on Second Language Acquisition (SLA), reading and research
5 votes -
Why is academic writing terrible?
13 votes -
What academics can do now to prevent a coup later
5 votes -
On the use of a life
14 votes -
What's wrong with social science and how to fix it: Reflections after reading 2578 papers
22 votes -
Academics are really, really worried about their freedom
27 votes -
The 450 Movement
5 votes -
scholar.social: Academic and research-focused microblogging platform
11 votes -
Jason Brennan's Good Work If You Can Keep It
6 votes -
Scientists make mistakes. I made a big one
10 votes -
The replication crisis of scientific papers and why it's happening
6 votes -
The problem with sugar-daddy science
11 votes -
How giraffes ruined science: An overview of the replication crisis
4 votes -
How life sciences actually work
5 votes -
Absolute English - Science once communicated in a polyglot of tongues, but now English rules alone. How did this happen – and at what cost?
6 votes -
A female historian wrote a book. Two male historians went on NPR to talk about it. They never mentioned her name. It’s Sarah Milov.
20 votes -
The war to free science: How librarians, pirates, and funders are liberating the world’s academic research from paywalls
17 votes -
The tricky ethics of using YouTube videos for academic research
6 votes -
A union fight at Marquette University
6 votes -
In Swiss academic science, charges of bullying and gender bias
5 votes -
Considering going back to school
I'm having a bit of a reckoning where I'm working a call center job, and when I like it, it's okay, and when I don't, it's a drag, but just recently my wrists have started to seriously act up and...
I'm having a bit of a reckoning where I'm working a call center job, and when I like it, it's okay, and when I don't, it's a drag, but just recently my wrists have started to seriously act up and impact my work and life some, and my work insurance won't cover treatment. On a related note, Mom is willing to
love and supportbribe me back into going to school since I can go back on her insurance as long as I'm taking classes full time. Normally, I would respectfully decline because I'm prideful and petty, left school on academic probation 4 years ago after blowing off classes and am still nursing an underlying fear of failure and psychological hang-ups due to previous academic overextension. But I do have savings to fall back on, I am at a point where I can reasonably pivot, Mom will likely never let this one die, and my job causes me pain. So, what do?10 votes -
Academic papers should be free
24 votes -
Science’s Pirate Queen
13 votes -
The fake sex doctor who conned the media into publicizing his bizarre research on suicide, butt-fisting, and bestiality
14 votes -
"Deep Adaptation": A paper that predicts an inevitable near-term social collapse due to climate change
26 votes