Rachel Larson, PhD

526 posts

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Rachel Larson, PhD

Rachel Larson, PhD

@RLarson92

Conbio postdoc at @sdnhm, urban ecologist 🏙🐿🦝🦌, artist 👩🏻‍🎨 (she/her) | art insta: @ sciurusstitches | also @ https://t.co/XglLPOyHxH

San Diego, CA Beigetreten Mayıs 2015
48 Folgt220 Follower
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Natural Habitat Shorts
Natural Habitat Shorts@Natural_habitok·
Fun Fact: Thorny devil lizards drink water with their feet. They step in water on the ground and the grooves on their skin channel water to their mouths through capillary action. This allows them to drink passively without lowering their guard.🦎🥤🐾
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Bryan McLean
Bryan McLean@sousliks·
PLEASE JOIN ME IN WELCOMING THE NEWEST MEMBER OF THE #squirrel TREE OF LIFE: Urocitellus idahoensis Snake River Plains ground squirrel
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Natural Habitat Shorts
Natural Habitat Shorts@Natural_habitok·
Fun fact: Baby birds often ‘gape,’ opening their mouths wide to signal hunger. Parents feed them by regurgitating food until they’re weaned and learn to eat on their own. 🐥🦜 BLACK FRIDAY MERCH HERE Naturalhabitatshorts.store
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Rachel Larson, PhD
Rachel Larson, PhD@RLarson92·
@masonfidino I literally have your post about integrated presence/absence + presence-only models open right now. Your blogs provide a great intro & help me understand posts on other sites. If I’ve never thanked you before, thank you for the work you put into your blog; it’s so helpful!
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Rachel Larson, PhD
Rachel Larson, PhD@RLarson92·
Summary metrics, like species richness, are useful but only part of the story. It's important to understand how individual species respond to urbanization, especially species of management concern like deer mice (they carry Lyme disease)
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Rachel Larson, PhD
Rachel Larson, PhD@RLarson92·
However, there were some pretty interested species-specific responses to both vegetation cover and habitat fragmentation - for example, deer mice do not like urban environments, but short-tailed shrews seem to benefit
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Rachel Larson, PhD
Rachel Larson, PhD@RLarson92·
More of my dissertation work is published in the Journal of Mammalogy! - "Variation in species-specific responses to habitat fragmentation and land cover structure urban small mammal communities" doi.org/10.1093/jmamma…
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Rachel Larson, PhD
Rachel Larson, PhD@RLarson92·
@LPZ_UWI Could it be the butt-end of a cottontail? The large hind legs and fur patterning seem correct
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Urban Wildlife Inst.
Urban Wildlife Inst.@LPZ_UWI·
Okay #cameratrap people. What do we think this coyote is carrying around? This is one of our more rural sites outside of Chicago.
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Rachel Larson, PhD
Rachel Larson, PhD@RLarson92·
My favorite part of #TWS2024 (besides meeting other passionate wildlife biologists, obviously) was walking away with more squirrel & coyote swag from @BlueAsterStudio - I love seeing artists with booths at conferences!
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Rachel Larson, PhD@RLarson92·
If you’re looking for more small mammal research after today’s talks, check out my talk tomorrow afternoon (3:30pm in Peale) on the relationships between predator occurrence and urban deer mouse abundance #TWS2024
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Rachel Larson, PhD@RLarson92·
I feel like I should sit down and play w/ @R_nimble after attending Perry de Valine’s talk at #TWS2024 Seems like a really useful tool for complex ecological models!
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Rachel Larson, PhD
Rachel Larson, PhD@RLarson92·
If you’re also at #TWS2024 this week and want to meet up, you can find me wearing my woodland cardigan (that I knit myself, btw!)
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