Scholar

Zoë A. Doubleday

H-index: 31
Environmental science 51%
Geography 14%

Reposted by: Zoë A. Doubleday

biodivcouncil.bsky.social
As the SA Government convenes an emergency meeting to discuss the threat of the toxic algal bloom to the Giant Australian Cuttlefish in the Spencer Gulf today, we asked cuttlefish expert @zoedoubleday.bsky.social about the population and why it is so special.

#oceans #nature #cuttlefish #marine
zoedoubleday.bsky.social
Let me introduce you to @louisehosking.bsky.social, a new PhD student in my lab and an ATSE Elevate Scholar. Here she is undergoing shark dissection training with her wonderful co-supervisor Bonnie Holmes. Lou will be developing geochemical methods to better understand #sharks.

Reposted by: Zoë A. Doubleday

aunz.theconversation.com
A harmful algal bloom of Karenia mikimotoi made dozens of surfers sick and killed seadragons, fish and octopuses on two South Australian beaches.
Mystery solved: our tests reveal the tiny algae killing fish and harming surfers on SA beaches
theconversation.com

Reposted by: Zoë A. Doubleday

aunz.theconversation.com
Sea foam is a health hazard. These bacterial smoothies can contain more harmful pathogens than a sewage treatment plant – and you wouldn’t go swimming in sewage.
Dozens of surfers fell ill after swimming in seas that turned into a ‘bacterial smoothie’ of sea foam. What was in it?
theconversation.com
zoedoubleday.bsky.social
Congrats Erica Durante for publishing amazing research (+ your 4th PhD paper!). Erica developed methods to extract estrogen & progesterone from cephalopod beaks. Now we can get lifetime reproductive data from species we know little about! @aslo.org
aslopubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/...
Zoe (author of post) is holding a beak of a giant octopus squid, a mysterious species we know little about.

Reposted by: Zoë A. Doubleday

joeofthedeep.bsky.social
🦑 It's #Crinoids Day! (plus a sneak little shrimp.) Crinoids should be much more popular what the variety of colors and entirely extraneous number of legs. #Bohol #Philippines
array of crinoid legs, the feet are black with yellow tips array of crinoid legs, the feet are red with tiny blue tips array of crinoid legs, the entire thing is a pale yellow. In the middle of the shot there is a shirmp that has the exact same color of yellow.
zoedoubleday.bsky.social
Swanning around on a sticky-hot long weekend. #birdlife #wildoz
Black swans looking at themselves in a mirror in an urban landscape

Reposted by: Zoë A. Doubleday

cp-cellrepsustain.bsky.social
Our one-year anniversary issue is here!

As we celebrate our first year as a journal, we reflect on the incredible multidisciplinary research we've had the privilege to publish, all striving to tackle today's grand challenges #sustainability

www.cell.com/cell-reports...
On the cover: Cell Reports Sustainability is celebrating its one-year anniversary. Sustainability covers a wide array of disciplines that are collectively needed to tackle the grand challenges we face today. Cover art by Julie Sung.
erictopol.bsky.social
Welcome immigrants from X interested in science to the friendlier skies of @bsky.app, as documented by a new @nature.com survey (but you already knew that 😉)
"Bluesky is much better for science. There is much less toxicity, misinformation, and distractions."
www.nature.com/articles/d41...
zoedoubleday.bsky.social
Congratulations @arielitristao.bsky.social for winning our Institute’s student award for your leadership as President of the PhD student association and stellar research on radiogenic isotopes (for biological applications)!
zoedoubleday.bsky.social
You can find out more by visiting www.marislab.org. Drop us a line if you would like to know more about what we do, or explore new and creative ideas with us. Happy 2025!
MARIS Lab
www.marislab.org
zoedoubleday.bsky.social
4. Our mission at MARIS is to ensure science is not hidden behind closed doors but rather communicated to the media and public. We not only undertake research on how to boost the readability and readership of what scientists write, we also do alot of sci comm! elifesciences.org/articles/60080
Meta-Research: The growth of acronyms in the scientific literature
A study of 24 million articles has revealed that scientists have created more than 1 million acronyms since 1950, most of which have been used fewer than 10 times.
elifesciences.org
zoedoubleday.bsky.social
I'm loving my new @bsky.app community, so here's a little about me: science, history, culture, and travel feed my curiosity; nature and gardening give me peace; and effective writing and communication always keeps me thinking.

I run a marine science lab in Australia and this is what we do:
A tote bag sitting on the beach with the inscription "University of South Australia"
arc-tracker.bsky.social
I've somehow made it onto @crikey.com.au's "2024 Shitstirrers Index Honourable Mentions"!

Thanks for the nominations – what a Xmas pressie! 💩🥄

"For giving researchers across Australia info that the ARC could totally tell them, but chooses not to."

[$]
www.crikey.com.au/2024/12/20/r...
Rex Patrick, Rick Morton, Jacqui Lambie: Who were readers' picks for shitstirrer of the year?
Some fan favourites did not make our esteemed list of shitstirrers this year. There will be no recount!
www.crikey.com.au
zoedoubleday.bsky.social
Hi Jessica - you could add @austsocfishbiol.bsky.social. Our local society, new to blue sky, who do all things fish, fisheries, and seafood!
zoedoubleday.bsky.social
Brand new review paper that sums up the thing I do. In short, there is a whole lot of overlooked chemical data ready and waiting inside aquatic taxa that can be used to monitor the environment and support species and ecosystem health.

aslopubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10....
Stylized tree of life diagram that demonstrates the range of useful chemical data that can be extracted from 19 classes of organisms.
sharkcolin.bsky.social
I'll go back to the early 1990's to a paper that showed that a small species of Australian shark fertilize their eggs and then pause embryonic development for 7+ months. The picture is a section through the resting blastodisc stage embryo. First time every reported in a shark doi.org/10.1071/MF99...
This is a histological section through a preserved egg of an Australian sharpnose shark. The granular material at the bottom of the picture is yolk. The plain material at the top is the egg case and egg membrane. And sandwiched between the two is the embryo at the blastodisc stage. It is shaped like a section through a shallow bowl. The embryo stays at this stage for 7.5 months.
whysharksmatter.bsky.social
Science friends 🧪🌎🦑, @altmetric.com tracks Bluesky posts now! Quote or reply to this post with a link to the paper you’re best known for or most proud of, and a brief plain-language summary of what you found and why it matters!

Let’s fill Bluesky with SCIENCE!
a man with glasses and suspenders is standing in front of a group of people and says science !!
ALT: a man with glasses and suspenders is standing in front of a group of people and says science !!
media.tenor.com

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