The message is clear

Natural communities, complex and context-dependent as they like to be,  make it hard for ecologists to reach consensus about even the most fundamental questions. But, although a rare case,  this IS sometimes possible, and scientist can get together and send out a loud and clear message to the public and decision makers.  In a recent article published in Nature, B. Cardinale and collegues (with Diane included!), were able to summarize the evidence from the last 20 years of research on the practical consequences of  biodiversity loss. Although we still have  information and policy gaps to fill, in a nutshell,  less biodiversity translates into less effective ecosystem functioning and services.

Image from http://mariaruthbooks.blogspot.ca/2010_03_01_archive.html

Support parataxonomists!

I found this article about parataxonomists in Costa Rica and Papua New Guinea in Science today: Uncertain Future for Tropical Ecology

These people are locals but usually way better taxonomists than most of the foreign scientists who go there (e.g. me ;-)). They do amazing work, and could for example help Angie identify trees this field season. I also love the idea because it engages local communities and helps build relationships between conservation areas and the people who essentially live in or around them. Unfortunately, many of these programs are facing budget problems right now. So if you have a rich grandmother or cousin: get them to support parataxonomists!

This is a picture of Calixto Moraga, one of the parataxonomists working for Dan Janzen at Pitilla, doing a guided tour for US undergrads during our last field trip:

Random ball games

Thank god, someone with an intuitive example (at least to the average North American male) for why species abundance distributions might not mean a thing:
Universal Ecological Patterns in College Basketball Communities.
There are others in this earlier paper, e.g. the compositional similarity of global cuisine ingredient lists over space, garden seed offerings and Cowboy Junkies song performances over time. Hail to thee, creative scientists with opinions!