Dr Rachel Hale Marine Biologist
@seafloorscience.bsky.social
8.7K followers 900 following 2K posts
Dr of small crawly things that live on the ocean floor. I study what they do, how they do it, and how they respond to disturbance, including climate change. Marine Biologist, Ocean Optimist, Invert Advocate, "Worm Girl" Opinions mine. She/her
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seafloorscience.bsky.social
Is it time for a bsky introduction?
Hello I’m Rachel Hale, a Marine Biologist based in Aotearoa NZ. I study benthic ecosystems. I am interested in small animals that live on the seafloor, what they do, & how the diversity & behaviour of these ecosystems is affected by stresses like climate change
seafloorscience.bsky.social
Omg I miss weird (and tasty) crisp flavours. All the random Christmas ones in Aldi 😘🤏
Reposted by Dr Rachel Hale Marine Biologist
ketrinadrawsalot.bsky.social
Not all skeletons are made of minerals or chitin
#skeletober #inktober #skeleton #hydroskeleton #invertebrates #education #art #SciArt
An illustration about hydrostatic skeletons:
How do some squishy animals maintain their shape?
(Left to right: an earthworm, an anemone, an octopus, a jellyfish, and a nudibranch)
They have a skeletal system made of one or more water-filled chambers!
(Cross section of an earthworm and an octopus tentacle)
Water pressure inside keeps the chamber supported, like a water balloon!
Hydrostatic skeletons allow boneless animals to...
(An octopus in a bottle) Fit into tight spaces!
(A wiggling worm) Move quickly due to less weight!
(A planarian regrowing itself) Regenerate faster when injured!
Reposted by Dr Rachel Hale Marine Biologist
goa-on.bsky.social
#OAWeek will kick off on Monday, 13 Oct. at 7:00 UTC with a session led by the International CO2 Natural Analogues Network: “ICONA Research: From Understanding and Predicting to Action”. 🌊🐚🌍 Register for this free, virtual session today! tinyurl.com/ICONAOA25
Reposted by Dr Rachel Hale Marine Biologist
goa-on.bsky.social
🌊 GOA-ON is excited to invite you to OA Week 2025 — a virtual forum showcasing OA knowledge from around the world!

📅 13-17 October, 2025
🌏 Learn from over 50 international ocean acidification experts across 22 sessions!

🔗 View the schedule and register for sessions here: tinyurl.com/OAW2025
Reposted by Dr Rachel Hale Marine Biologist
goa-on.bsky.social
📢Ocean Acidification Week will highlight OA knowledge from around the world, ranging from co-development of research and OA Education to Technology Development in OA Research and mCDR 🌊🌏📝📚📡🫧

Find details on these and other sessions on our website: tinyurl.com/OAW2025
seafloorscience.bsky.social
I live at the top of the South Island in New Zealand. There are eels everywhere here.
seafloorscience.bsky.social
An abundance of eels at the bottom of my road!
Lots of eels in a shallow river.
seafloorscience.bsky.social
I love how marine mammal sightings are always slightly disappointing but if you see a nudibranch it's genuinely the shit 🥹
Inverts will never be beat for sheer beauty.
Reposted by Dr Rachel Hale Marine Biologist
nisreenalwan.bsky.social
Being anti vaccines for babies is one of the surest signs of a declining civilisation. There could be no clearer evidence on childhood vaccination saving lives and preserving health and yet we’re being distracted by debating this issue.
Reposted by Dr Rachel Hale Marine Biologist
seismatters.bsky.social
I strongly second this! 👏🏾

When talking about science communication, I also always stress that *all* forms and forums of communication matter 🔄

Whether it’s a big, factually correct but details-lite TV show or movie…or just chatting to granny or your mates in a pub 🗣️
thebalelab.bsky.social
Fantastic piece in Nature Reviews Neuro by @nicolecrust.bsky.social on the importance of science communication. My take? Everything matters - just do something. It will make a difference for how science is valued and trusted, how community understands. Let's get out there and communicate! 👏
The unexpected value of communicating science to the public
Nature Reviews Neuroscience - As a group, our scientific community has a responsibility to unpack the ‘what’ and ‘why’ behind our work for the public, not least because much...
rdcu.be
Reposted by Dr Rachel Hale Marine Biologist
naturaearchive.bsky.social
Although minute in size, they represent remarkable taxonomic and ecological diversity.
Some species are widespread, while others may be highly localized or even undescribed.
For malacologists, such micro-snails offer valuable insight into biodiversity, biogeography, and conservation.
Reposted by Dr Rachel Hale Marine Biologist
naturaearchive.bsky.social
From a handful of forest leaf litter, a hidden world emerges.
These tiny land snails — each only a few millimeters across — were sorted from decomposed leaves and soil under the microscope.

#陸産貝類 #軟体動物 #貝類 #巻貝 #カタツムリ #無脊椎動物 #photography #mollusk #landsnail #invertebrate #マイマイ #Diplommatina
Reposted by Dr Rachel Hale Marine Biologist
beziostudio.bsky.social
Day 19 - Depths. blood belly comb jelly (Ctenophora), helmet jellyfish (Cnidaria). Animals in the deep sea are some of the most beautiful, particularly the jellies with bodies like abstract portraits that move ethereally in the abyss. Here are two drawings of jellies you can find in the deep sea.
seafloorscience.bsky.social
Yeesh
legallyfeminist.bsky.social
Some numbers:
46% of New Zealanders think that gender equality has been achieved
33% of male respondents aged 18-34 believe that gender equality has gone too far
47% of men believe Gender Equality has been achieved for senior management
40% don’t believe that sexism is still a significant issue
seafloorscience.bsky.social
"As empiricists, we can take encouragement from the fact that the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change itself recognises, with ‘high confidence’, that “collective action as part of social or lifestyle movements underpins system change”."
seafloorscience.bsky.social
"These movements provide vital opportunities to push for change and we argue there are myriad ways for the science community to support them."
Reposted by Dr Rachel Hale Marine Biologist
antarcticabella.bsky.social
Geologists of bluesky, great opportunity at Otago Uni, NZ for a Lecturer in Earth Science! Special shout out to my #biomarker colleagues, the dept has a well set up, near new Org Geochem lab without a PI, with GCMS/FID and HPLC, if anyone wants a change of scene! ⚒🧪🥼🌊
otago.taleo.net/careersectio...
Lecturer/Pūkenga - Geology
Click the link provided to see the complete job description.
otago.taleo.net
seafloorscience.bsky.social
I'm less fussy. Especially if it's tasty
seafloorscience.bsky.social
Surely there is enough cheese and other food products for all of us?! I'll share!
Reposted by Dr Rachel Hale Marine Biologist
noncompliantcyborg.bsky.social
I created a BioBlitz project on iNaturalist folks can join to celebrate:

www.inaturalist.org/projects/cte...
noncompliantcyborg.bsky.social
Okay, y’all, what are we doing for Ctenophore Day on October 4th?

I was trying to get to 1004 ctenophore observations on @inaturalist.bsky.social by then but I don’t think I’m gonna make it…

We need some festivities though…

🦑🐙🧪