Ellie Diamant
@elliediamant.bsky.social
78 followers 180 following 4 posts
Lover of birds, urban ecology and evolution, behavioral ecology, interspecies friendships, transdisciplinarity. Vegan. she/her. (Incoming) VAP at Bard College; former post-doc at BGU; UCLA PhD
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elliediamant.bsky.social
Big thank you to my postdoctoral advisors @odedberger-tal.bsky.social and @uriroll.bsky.social, as well as a wonderful team including @constantiro.bsky.social, Krista Oswald, Kevin Gaston, and Adewale Awoyemi for thinking through these ideas collectively! (4/4)
elliediamant.bsky.social
These patterns have concerning implications if solutions (or aesthetics) from temperate cities are used, without considering local ecological contexts and appropriate biodiversity metrics in dryland cities. Though, dryland cities remain vastly understudied, especially in lower-income countries.(3/4)
elliediamant.bsky.social
Species richness patterns can mask important differences in species composition. Specifically in drylands, greenspaces may benefit non-native species while gray- and yellowspaces differentially benefit native species. Socioeconomic factors can exacerbate these impacts within and across cities. (2/4)
Reposted by Ellie Diamant
mwtingley.bsky.social
Incredible, fast work by @uclasustainablela.bsky.social scientists demonstrating all the myriad ways that climate change led to extreme conditions causing larger, more intense burns in the #PalisadeFire and #EatonFire
sustainablela.ucla.edu/2025lawildfi...
Reposted by Ellie Diamant
mwtingley.bsky.social
The insanity of being a fire ecologist in the epicenter of a major fire event, bags packed and ready to evacuate, watching active fire from my window, while taking media requests and explaining to the public, for the 100,000th time how climate change is largely responsible for this
Reposted by Ellie Diamant
leafwarbler.bsky.social
1. Thrilled to share a new paper from my group out this week in Ecosphere where we critique the much researched “luxury effect” in urban ecology and offer a power-based socioecological framework to complicate our understanding of how wealth may or may not influence biodiversity. #oa
🧵:
Biodiversity is not a luxury: Unpacking wealth and power to accommodate the complexity of urban biodiversity
A positive correlation between wealth and biodiversity within cities is a commonly documented phenomenon in urban ecology that has come to be labeled as the “luxury effect.” We contend that both this...
esajournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com