28 Aug 2004 NYT article
An article in the Sunday 28 August 2004 New York Times Week in Review refers to our view that 2-3% annual rates of progress might restore nature. Support for our…
An article in the Sunday 28 August 2004 New York Times Week in Review refers to our view that 2-3% annual rates of progress might restore nature. Support for our…
The New York Times recognizes the work of the Antarctic team of the Census of Marine Life in an editorial today. Jesse had the privilege with the CoML Scientific Steering…
…Da Vinci DNA Project in Vienna’s Kurier; and –the Deep Life work of the Deep Carbon Observatory in hard copy of the New York Times (posted 19 Dec online). …
…rainforest in Papua New Guinea, an area 1 1/2 times as large as Costa Rica. (Note: alpha diversity is number of species at a given site; beta diversity refers to…
…little study so far on whether mitochondrial differences among species reflect functional adaptation (although see Ruiz-Pesini et al 2004 Science 303:223, Bayona-Balfaluy et al 2004 Mol Biol Evol 22:716). In…
…long-term history and foreseeable technology developments across disciplines. Data driven, our approach is anchored in statistical analysis of time-series datasets using models of growth and diffusion, particularly Lotka-Volterra dynamical systems….
The 11 June 2006 Londay Sunday Times magazine ran a feature article by Brian Appleyard on technological solutions to environmental problems that quotes Jesse several times….
…New York and New Jersey. We have also applied eDNA to freshwater fish, marine mammals, and terrestrial vertebrates, at diverse sites ranging from Sea of Galilee in Israel to twilight…
…tradition, ie “levels of genetic differentiation do not dictate taxonomic status” and gently suggest “barcode analysis illuminates those taxa and those segments of their ranges where further research is justified.”…
…differentiation.” The researchers chose 3 pairs of populations, subspecies, and species in 3 orders of birds that live in Alaska or Russia. The study design had two aims, first, do…