
Bradley Cardinale
1.1K posts

Bradley Cardinale
@CardinaleLab
The Cardinale Lab is a biodiversity research lab @PSUecosystems. See new textbook: Conservation Biology, 2nd ed. at https://t.co/x325e7ixlb





More than 7 million research papers were published in 2025. That number is about to explode. Think about all of the research agents and AI writing tools that were developed last year: @OpenAI’s Prism, @elicitorg, @FutureHouseSF, @k_dense_ai, etc. What happens as adoption of those tools inevitably increases? What happens to volume when the average researcher becomes fluent in @claudeai Code? Scientific infrastructure and peer review was designed for a different world than the one we are entering. Peer review is in crisis. (Data: DOI-indexed articles on @OpenAlex_org)

💼🌿 Many measures that help insects — less mowing, less intensification, less pressure on landscapes — require doing less, not more. If you want a candid look at the tension between biodiversity and economics, this episode with Roel van Klink (@UniHalle) delivers. 🎧 insidebiodiversity.podigee.io



🌼 Biodiversity loss can feel overwhelming — but there are concrete steps individuals can take. In #InsideBiodiversity, Dr Roel van Klink (@UniHalle & #iDiv) shares practical actions that can help insects: 🌱 Plant native species 🪨 Avoid stone gardens ✂️ Reduce mowing 🥩 Rethink and reduce animal‑based food consumption 💛 Support biodiversity‑friendly public land management 🐜 Small actions matter, especially when many people take them. 🎧 Hear the full conversation with iDiv host Dr Volker Hahn: insidebiodiversity.podigee.io


Peer review

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Pesticides changed. CO₂ dilutes plant nutrients. Climate shifts species ranges. But researchers still do not know how these drivers combine to shape insect trends. A clear, grounded explanation from Roel van Klink (@UniHalle & #iDiv) on #InsideBiodiversity. 🎧Give it a listen: insidebiodiversity.podigee.io

🪲 Researchers have been monitoring insects for decades — but throughout that entire period, ecosystems were already heavily shaped by human activity. That means researchers still don’t know what “natural” insect abundance looked like before major human impacts. In this new episode of #InsideBiodiversity, entomologist Roel van Klink (@UniHalle and #iDiv) explains why this matters, why insects are so astonishingly diverse, and what long‑term data can tell us. If you want a clear, nuanced introduction to insect trends, this conversation is a great place to start. 🎧 Listen to the episode hosted by iDiv's Dr Volker Hahn: insidebiodiversity.podigee.io







