This could be your dream job!
PhD in ecology, and English and Japanese language skills required... working for POKEMON!!!
www.ign.com/articles/the...
@siobhanleachman
Wikimedian, citizen scientist, digital curator, volunteer, nature nerd, wine geek, partner & mum. She/her. Inordinately fond of linked open data, moths & weevils. Other contact links see my ORCID. https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5398-7721
This could be your dream job!
PhD in ecology, and English and Japanese language skills required... working for POKEMON!!!
www.ign.com/articles/the...
Time to pass a law that any party spokesperson of media outlet that opines with hindsight reckons on pandemic management has to show this chart in the background at all times #nzpol
Hindsight is 20/20. Multitudes of lives were saved. It wasn't perfect but by god it was better than practically EVERY other government in the world. Will be forever grateful we didn't have what happened to northern Italy, New York & multitudes of other areas & cities. www.rnz.co.nz/news/top/589...
We've put together a starter pack of official museum accounts on Bluesky! Who are we missing? go.bsky.app/Ko2Bvky
Another fantastic event coming up in Tāmaki Makaurau Auckland with Architecture+Women NZ 🏛️📐👷♀️
Women make up only 20% of biographies on Wikipedia— help close the gender gap with a walking tour and Wikipedia editing workshop at Te Uru Gallery.
🗓️ Sun 22 March
⏰ 10am–2pm
Get more info and book below 👇
SARS-CoV-2 in Wastewater and Reported COVID- 19 Case Numbers - National, last 6 months, on linear scale (NZ)
SARS-CoV-2 in Wastewater and Reported COVID- 19 Case Numbers Auckland, last 6 months, on linear scale (NZ)
This was last updated 26 Feb because lack of government funding doesn’t allow for more frequent reporting, but you can see we’re in a new Covid wave.
Anecdotally, three separate people today mentioned they were WFH because they had it, or knew someone with it.
Politicians/NZ media, please push:
🧵
Full-time science photography job at the BioEconomy Science Institute - Maiangi Taiao, in Auckland, NZ. a great gig: careers.sciencenewzealand.org/jobdetails?a... #science #photography
I wrote a Wikipedia biography of Clemence "Clem" Acland, a pioneering bird photographer and early radio broadcaster
Thanks to @btobirds.bsky.social for the inspiration.
Need I point out there are dozens of great photos of the beehive, some professional quality, available in Wikimedia Commons absolutely free, no effort required. Well, you do have to credit the photographer, which most papers find overly taxing. commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Categor...
Diagram showing that New Zealand is the island worst affected by invasive weeds in the world.
Ouch. #isbcw
Screenshot of a Wikidata WikiProject page background is green with mostly black text and an image of a moth specimen illustrates the page.
I've been working on data models for #Wikidata type specimen items & structured data for #WikimediaCommons specimen images. This is part of my WiR & is a collaboration with Brodie Satherley from Auckland Museum.
See www.wikidata.org/wiki/Wikidat...
#Wikidata #NaturalHistory #TypeSpecimen #DataModel
Female #kakapo are utterly focussed on their chicks. Stella came back to the nest while I was checking her very young chicks two nights ago. Apparently unconcerned by me being there, she jumped in and started brooding them in front of me. #conservation #parrots #birds #kakapo2026
A female Kākāpō on a nest with a young chick. Credit: Andrew Digby
Eva at her nest tonight on a very wet Pukenui/Anchor Island. Her chick Evohe-A2 is doing ok and her foster egg underneath her is about to hatch. #kakapo #conservation #kakapo2026 #birds
Tile with text that reads: Measles, new cases and locations of interest
New measles cases: More locations of interest confirmed, public asked to monitor for symptoms. Locations of interest: healthnz.govt.nz/health-topics/…
You know that feeling when you're struggling to stay awake? #kakapo chicks Tiwhiri-A3 and Tiwhiri-A4 in Tiwhiri's nest on Pukenui/Anchor Island. Both around two weeks old, and doing well. #kakapo2026 #conservation #parrots
Illustration of a red-headed woodpecker perched on a tree branch, showing its distinctive bright reddish-brown head, black and white wings, and tail feathers. The bird is facing right with its beak close to the bark, highlighting its natural behavior of pecking wood. The background is plain, emphasizing the details of the woodpecker’s plumage and the textured tree branch. The image is a detailed, hand-colored lithograph from 1851, reflecting rural wildlife. Text below identifies the species and publisher, George P. Putnam, New York.
🌄 Rural hours
New York, George P. Putnam, 1851.
[Source]
NZ politicians from *all* parties should recognise that science is not something to 'conveniently' repackage to suit your government’s short-term goals, but a long-term driver of good for the country.
When you cut at it, you cut at *everyone’s* longer-term future.
1/n
Thanks to this article, I went from "I must get my booster before winter" to "I will get my booster this week". So today, between meetings, I went to my local pharmacy as a walk-in. The entire process (including the precautionary hanging around afterwards) took 15 mins. Get to it Kiwis #nz
ICZN call for new Commissioners:
Rakiura kākāpō's youngest chick is a quiet eater but *very* hungry - and mum is happy to oblige. Timestamp 10.09.10
www.youtube.com/live/BfGL7A2...
Image of the holotype BRACHYTHECIACEAE: Brachythecium macrogynum Cardot. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Carl Skottsberg https://bionomia.net/Q942078 collected the holotype BRACHYTHECIACEAE: Brachythecium macrogynum Cardot in Argentina https://gbif.org/occurrence/473996917 #TypeSpecimenToday
Women in Red is a global volunteer project dedicated to turning red links—articles which don't yet exist—into blue links, making the history of women more openly accessible.
Get more info at WomenInRed.org and help make the internet more equitable.
This Sunday, 8 March 2026 we're celebrating International Women's Day 👩🔬💪🎉
Despite their impact on history, science, and the arts, thousands of notable women are missing from Wikipedia, where they make up only 20% of articles about people.
For background on the project see "BioNames: linking taxonomy, texts, and trees" (https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj. 190 L) and "Ten years and a million links: building a global taxonomic library connecting persistent identifiers for names, publications and people" (https://doi.org/BDJ.11.e107914 L). Database Statistics Distinct name clusters Names with publications Names with DOls Names with free PDFs Total names 5,464,929 4,496,603 1,782,674 504,962 286,091
Slowly adding content to bionames.org and tweaking the interface. Hope page loads faster now and looks a little better on mobile. Lots of DOIs and PDFs for taxonomic papers, but so much to do. Half a million names linked to DOIs, wish it were more.
Regrettably, I have decided to decommission SimpleMappr, www.simplemappr.net on September 1, 2026. You may read about its origins, what others have accomplished in its 18 year run, and the reasons why I must turn it off in a document I wrote last night bit.ly/simplemappr.
There is a COVID wave currently hitting NZ atm. Go get your booster if you are eligible and wear masks if you want to protect yourself, loved ones etc www.stuff.co.nz/nz-news/3609...
@biodivlibrary.bsky.social Just in case you weren't aware, I've come across this publication about you! doi.org/10.22456/fei...
A female kākāpō looking out of a nest, with one small chick showing. Credit: Andrew Digby
Female #kakapo Kohengi on her nest with a newly-hatched chick and an egg (unseen). We removed the egg from underneath her and gave it to another female (Phoenix) who had infertile eggs. We're trying to ensure each female on Anchor Island has 1-2 fertile eggs to hatch. #kakapo2026 #conservation
We agree it’s the best news, but BHL provides an even greater date range of invaluable research materials than many know. BHL’s 63+ million page “incredible free open treasure trove of nature papers and books” spans the 1100s to 2026!
It's important to champion the increase in bird numbers around Wellington.
But at an ecosystem level, it's uneven recovery. Plants, lizards, wetlands, freshwater fish, pāua etc all continue to decline.
David Klein: For the love of birds (and Wellington) www.rnz.co.nz/national/pro...