Shubham Rathore Ph.D. MSc.
@shubhamtr.bsky.social
560 followers 890 following 180 posts
Neuroethologist interested in visual system development and sensory integration across time scales 🦟🪲🐜🕷️🐞🐁 Ph.D. : Buschbeck lab @ University of Cincinnati Prev. at : Hattar lab @ NIMH / NIH Postdoc : Reiser lab @ Janelia Research Campus
Posts Media Videos Starter Packs
Reposted by Shubham Rathore Ph.D. MSc.
vc40orthops.bsky.social
A Pine Ladybird being dwarfed between two f. spectabilis Harlequin Ladybirds, found today in an oak tree (there were lots of Larches & Yews around too) in north Shropshire. Similar but also rather different!
Reposted by Shubham Rathore Ph.D. MSc.
richardsever.bsky.social
Very sad to learn of the death of Sir John Gurdon. He made a huge contribution to developmental biology & should be an inspiration to anyone whose potential is dismissed in school. It was a pleasure to work with him when he was Chair of the COB Board. www2.mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk/john-gurdon-...
John Gurdon (1933 – 2025) - MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology
Renowned developmental biologist John Gurdon, former Group Leader and Head of the LMB’s Cell Biology Division, has died aged 92.
www2.mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk
Reposted by Shubham Rathore Ph.D. MSc.
ishmailsaboor.bsky.social
I’m extremely honored to be a recipient of the NIH Director’s Pioneer Award!
zuckermanbrain.bsky.social
Congratulations to @ishmailsaboor.bsky.social on receiving the NIH Director’s Pioneer Award, celebrating “scientists with outstanding records of creativity.” His lab will explore how the sense of touch can help build relationships. 🫶🧠💡

See zuckermaninstitute.columbia.edu/zuckerman-in...
Ishmail Abdus-Saboor
Reposted by Shubham Rathore Ph.D. MSc.
jemsjumpers.bsky.social
Clemmie moulted again, making her subadult! 😍 She's starting to show her bright orange colours famous in Phidippus Regius Soroas. Just look at her 🥹 One moult away from potentially becoming a mum 😭 We cannot! #cutespider #jumpingspider
shubhamtr.bsky.social
My favorite tetrad of cells, front and center ❤️
dev-journal.bsky.social
Issue 18 is complete!

On the cover: Clones on Drosophila retina with activated Mbt kinase (pink), expanding Sdk protein (yellow) from tri- to bi-cellular adheren junctions & distorting the ommatidial lattice (cyan).

See Research Article by Gandhi et al.

journals.biologists.com/dev/article/...
Reposted by Shubham Rathore Ph.D. MSc.
pzmyers.bsky.social
They shouldn't have killed it -- I would have like to see something about its sexual behavior and whether it could reproduce.

freethoughtblogs.com/pharyngula/2...
Damarchus gynandromorph
Reposted by Shubham Rathore Ph.D. MSc.
jekely.biologists.social.ap.brid.gy
Postdoc position in regenerative biology on "Tracking the cellular origins regeneration" in the @michalis_averof lab in Lyon, France. Fantastic lab, great institute, nice city!
https://www.averof-lab.org/pages/tracman

#postdoc
Reposted by Shubham Rathore Ph.D. MSc.
arachtober.bsky.social
Skipper and Crab Spider - #Arachtober 5th
I think this spider knows that is too much for a meal. She wasn't moving.
#spider #macrophotography #naturephotography #butterfly #skipper
A brown skipper butterfly and a small white crab spider maybe wondering if it is too big to eat.  Stereo 3D Macro Photography.
Reposted by Shubham Rathore Ph.D. MSc.
annikabarber.bsky.social
Heading to #CSHLDros this week, which means it’s time to get an embroidery project cued up to keep my hands busy while I listen!
🧪 🧬 🪰🪡
A wooden embroidery hoop with cream colored Aida lies on a wooden surface. At left a spectrum of thread skeins in green, yellow and brown. On top of the unstitched fabric is a bitty pair of TSA-permissible scissors.
Reposted by Shubham Rathore Ph.D. MSc.
neuroethology.org
How do primates cooperate to solve a task? Pairs 🐵🐵 of marmosets were tested in a cooperative lever-pulling task. They were successful in solving the task by coordinating through social vision. Also, social relationships shaped the strength of colaboration! Find out more www.cell.com/current-biol...
Diverse and flexible strategies enable successful cooperation in marmoset dyads
Meisner and Shi et al. show that common marmosets flexibly coordinate with partners using both gaze-dependent and rhythmic strategies. Cooperation depends on active social monitoring and is shaped by ...
www.cell.com
Reposted by Shubham Rathore Ph.D. MSc.
labonnelab.bsky.social
Every figure in this paper uses HCR @hcrimaging.bsky.social
Such a game changing technique for studying gene expression #xenopus #neuralcrest
shubhamtr.bsky.social
Happy #arachtober from this jumper on my shoe 🥰
Reposted by Shubham Rathore Ph.D. MSc.
mixaeljones.bsky.social
On the first day of #Arachtober my true love sent to me… a Fencepost Jumping Spider in my bathroom sink! 🕷️🚰

Not sure this adaptation of a classic festive song is going to catch on… but worth a go! 🎶

@britishspiders.bsky.social
#Spider #JumpingSpider
A small jumping spider with stripy legs and gleaming eyes stood on a white sink
Reposted by Shubham Rathore Ph.D. MSc.
duhe.bsky.social
Jane Goodall insisted the giving names to the chimps and realizing that they had personalities was critical for doing science. It was a critical methodological debate and she was entirely correct (and won). #philsci legend in addition to everything else.
Reposted by Shubham Rathore Ph.D. MSc.
seananderson.bsky.social
RIP Jane Goodall. There's of course no better way to understand Goodall than in her own words, of which there are volumes to explore. But I also love Stephen Jay Gould's introduction to her "In the Shadow of Man": archive.org/details/insh.... As Gould notes, and Goodall embodied, "Nature IS context"
Reposted by Shubham Rathore Ph.D. MSc.
twigtechnology.bsky.social
Jane Goodall was also the first to bring attention to wild tool-using vultures, which she spotted randomly one day while out driving. These birds use stones to break into ostrich eggs.

Be observant like Jane and who knows what you’ll see! 🧪🥚
A two page spread of national geographic magazine with a story by Jane Goodall and her husband reporting on egg-breaking, tool-using Egyptian vultures.