my book chapter is finally out

Well, I should say "our book chapter" - I was lucky enough to work with Dr. Kenneth Raposa, who is smart, funny, and a great wetland ecologist (with good taste in cocktails).​

The whole volume is great for those interested in tidal marsh management and restoration.​

Mr Wizard is like Mr Rogers

only mean.​

Man of science. Scourge of nescience. Brought to you by @DianeBullock and @mcs212. Check out our latest video, Cosby Watches Cosby: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=czhjJdGa8ug Mr. Wizard's World is a copyright and trademark of MTV/Viacom and Mr. Wizard Studios, Inc. All rights reserved. Visit http://mrwizardstudios.com for DVDs, t-shirts, coffee mugs, and more.

Open Access Journals

I am hardly on the cutting-edge of recognizing the increasing importance of open access to scientific endeavors, nor am I the most visible/vocal (e.g., see posts by the always-interesting Jarrett Byrnes). That said, I am continuing to be convinced that, despite some of my colleagues' misgivings about PLoS One and the like, this is a solid and respectable venue in which to publish. The fact that talented, accomplished, well-published scientists are publishing there;  Impact Factors (while a very imperfect metric) are pretty high; and that some 80+% of the papers published in PLoS One in 2010 have been cited (as of Spring 2012) - well, this is an outlet that it is foolish to ignore.

Check out this interesting ​post (and accompanying discussion) on the topic.

strangely quiet around here

never fear - I will get back to the occasional post, but we have become new homeowners, and currently - well, our bathroom looks like this: 

 

so we are occupied trying to make the place livable, as well as research and we each have a lot of undergrads in the lab this summer!

 

Will get back to posting bits of science trivia soon!

 

drew

 

blogtastic - check out these cool updates

lots of entries to catch up on - Hayley has a couple of great entries about southern CA species, the CA Horn Snail and “dead man’s fingers”. Check out http://hayley144.wordpress.com/

And Brian did a nice writeup on Cryptomya at http://bjuhl472.wordpress.com/2012/04/26/delving-deep-for-the-mysteries-of-the-cryptic-cryptomya-californica-14/

While Sam did a nice writeup on the bean clam at http://sammsanfran.wordpress.com/ , Morgan was busy covering Melampus and Zostera, and Kevin, not to be outdone, took to the books to learn all he could about a little-known bivalve http://kstolzenbach88.wordpress.com/

 photo credit stone bird via flickr