Southern Fried Scientist

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  • September 6, 2010
  • 12:30 PM
  • 1,363 views

Greenwashing – Is there really a sustainable Orange Roughy fishery?

by Southern Fried Scientist in Southern Fried Science


Wandering through the grocery store the other day, I noticed something strange in the fish bin. Now, in general I’m pretty conscious of where my fish comes from, how it was caught, whether the fishery as a whole or the specific population is sustainable. I pay attention to those details and I can usually tell [...]... Read more »

  • June 24, 2010
  • 09:30 AM
  • 1,263 views

Ghosts in the Molecular Machine

by Southern Fried Scientist in Southern Fried Science



The extent of migration among populations drives population structure. With enough migration, populations become homogeneous and behave as a single larger population. As migration rates decrease, populations drift apart and become differentiated. By measuring the amount of differentiation, we can determine the extent of migration between them. But what happens when there are unsampled [...]... Read more »

  • September 8, 2010
  • 04:00 PM
  • 1,244 views

Our favorite sea monsters – The Giant Manta Special Edition

by Southern Fried Scientist in Southern Fried Science


Sea Monsters, mythical beasts of legend and lore that ply the world’s oceans, sinking ships, terrifying sailors, swallowing entire crews whole. Sea monsters occupy a special place in our imagination. The ocean is huge, unfathomable. Of course mighty beast could dwell within, undetected.
Every once in a long while, the myths, the legends, the stories, turn [...]... Read more »

ANDREA D. MARSHALL1, LEONARD J.V. COMPAGNO, & MICHAEL B. BENNETT1. (2009) Redescription of the genus Manta with resurrection of Manta alfredi (Krefft, 1868) (Chondrichthyes; Myliobatoidei; Mobulidae). Zootaxa. info:/

  • April 27, 2010
  • 10:33 PM
  • 1,239 views

Tournament marlins get bigger?

by Southern Fried Scientist in Southern Fried Science


This week’s ResearchBlogCast featured the paper “Decline in top predator body size and changing climate alter trophic structure in an oceanic ecosystem”, originally discussed at Fish Schooled (Prey populations explode as predators get smaller). In both the podcast and the blogpost, the authors argue that prey abundance booms despite predator biomass remaining constant [...]... Read more »

Shackell, N., Frank, K., Fisher, J., Petrie, B., & Leggett, W. (2009) Decline in top predator body size and changing climate alter trophic structure in an oceanic ecosystem. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 277(1686), 1353-1360. DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2009.1020  

Jorgensen, C., Enberg, K., Dunlop, E., Arlinghaus, R., Boukal, D., Brander, K., Ernande, B., Gardmark, A., Johnston, F., Matsumura, S.... (2007) Ecology: Managing Evolving Fish Stocks. Science, 318(5854), 1247-1248. DOI: 10.1126/science.1148089  

  • September 8, 2010
  • 11:03 AM
  • 1,218 views

Ocean of Pseudoscience Shorty – Can methane bubbles sink ships?

by Southern Fried Scientist in Southern Fried Science


One of the often cited causes for ships that mysteriously and quickly disappear are methane bubbles, released from sub-seafloor gas pockets. The story goes that as methane rises to the surface, the bubbles cause the density of seawater to drop, and any ships in the area suddenly lose buoyancy and spontaneously sink. This effect has [...]... Read more »

May, D., & Monaghan, J. (2003) Can a single bubble sink a ship?. American Journal of Physics, 71(9), 842. DOI: 10.1119/1.1582187  

Hueschen, M. (2010) Can bubbles sink ships?. American Journal of Physics, 78(2), 139. DOI: 10.1119/1.3263819  

  • October 20, 2010
  • 08:00 AM
  • 1,216 views

Grampa Hagfish: say hello to your greatest uncle

by Southern Fried Scientist in Southern Fried Science


Image from http://www.zoology.ubc.ca/labs/biomaterials/slime.html
Today is Hagfish Day! Who knew?
What is a hagfish?
Hagfish are primitive eel-like chordates make famous for their relative unattractiveness*, profuse production of slime, and charismatic ability to tie themselves in knots. They are perhaps the only ‘fish’ that possesses a skull, but no vertebral column. But the question “What is a hagfish?” goes [...]... Read more »

  • November 15, 2010
  • 08:30 AM
  • 1,166 views

Shades of Gray: Gray literature, peer-review, and the struggle for data in fisheries management

by Southern Fried Scientist in Southern Fried Science

The dissemination of science follows the conventional route of rigorous peer-review followed by publication in an accredited scientific journal. This process has been the standard foundation from which the general public can trust that the science is, at the very least, valid and honest. Of course this system is not without its flaws. Scientific papers of questionable authority, [...]... Read more »

Flor Lacanilao. (1997) Continuing problems with gray literature. Environmental Biology of Fishes, 1-5. info:/

  • April 21, 2010
  • 01:14 AM
  • 1,137 views

Crowdsourcing ConGen: Effective size of a population in flux

by Southern Fried Scientist in Southern Fried Science



When presented with a threatened population in need of conservation, the simplest and most basic question a manager can ask is “how big is it?” Unfortunately, this is one of the most challenging questions to answer. Determining the number of individuals in a population is fundamental to effective management. Small, concentrated populations can be destroyed [...]... Read more »

  • February 15, 2009
  • 12:00 AM
  • 1,121 views

A curious case of convergent evolution?

by Southern Fried Scientist in Southern Fried Science

The title of this post is followed by a question mark. That is because what follows is not a statement of fact but a puzzle that I have been mulling over in my head since a photograph was published early last year. I do fervently hope the authors of the paper will forgive me for not citing the picture directly, the full citation can be found at the end of this post. I do this only because I want to lead off with a mystery.

Look at this picture. What do you see? Without scales, context, or attribution, many of my fried friends have responded that it is some type of coral (cnidaria), maybe a tunicate (chordata), but the vast majority have interpreted this image as that of some form of sponge (porifera). Indeed, this object does bear a remarkable similarity to a leuconoid sponge.... Read more »

  • September 16, 2010
  • 01:00 PM
  • 1,113 views

Non-Monophyly within Syngnathidae

by Southern Fried Scientist in Southern Fried Science



Objective 1: Develop the least publicly accessible title for a blog post about seadragons, mate selection, and evolution
Objective 1 Status: complete
Objective 2: Draw in whatever readers push passed the unwieldy title with an unconventional narrative structure.
Objective 2 Status: complete
Objective 3: Hook the reader with a fascinating, though brief, background on seahorses, seadragons, and pipefish.


Female [...]... Read more »

  • April 14, 2011
  • 02:28 PM
  • 1,113 views

A rig by any other name, could it be an artificial reef?

by Southern Fried Scientist in Southern Fried Science

There are currently more than 7,500 offshore oil platforms actively probing the earth’s crust for black gold. Their relatively minimal appearance at the surface belies the shear magnitude of human construction beneath the waves. Oil platforms are among the world’s tallest man-made structures. Compliant tower platforms reach up to 900 meters in depth (in contrast, [...]... Read more »

Macreadie, P., Fowler, A., & Booth, D. (2011) Rigs-to-reefs: will the deep sea benefit from artificial habitat?. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, 2147483647. DOI: 10.1890/100112  

  • May 13, 2011
  • 11:13 AM
  • 1,103 views

The moldy kingdom get a new neighbor

by Southern Fried Scientist in Southern Fried Science

A diagrammatic tree depicting the organisation of most eukaryotes into six major groups. The relationships amongst most of the major groups and the position of the ‘root’ of the tree are shown as unresolved (note however, the grouping of Opisthokonta and Amoebozoa). The arrow shows a possible precise placement of the root, [...]... Read more »

Simpson A, & Roger A. (2004) The real ‘kingdoms’ of eukaryotes. Current Biology, 14(17), 693-696. info:/

Jones, M., Forn, I., Gadelha, C., Egan, M., Bass, D., Massana, R., & Richards, T. (2011) Discovery of novel intermediate forms redefines the fungal tree of life. Nature. DOI: 10.1038/nature09984  

  • April 8, 2011
  • 12:00 PM
  • 1,094 views

Is it time for a sustainable pet movement?

by Southern Fried Scientist in Southern Fried Science

The world is rapidly approaching 7 billion people and the challenges of food supply, security, and sustainability will, along with climate change, be the defining issues of the 21st century. While the issues of the wealthiest nations revolve around the quality of our food, the environmental impact or our farming practices, and the value we place [...]... Read more »

Sleeman JM, Keane JM, Johnson JS, Brown RJ, & Woude SV. (2001) Feline leukemia virus in a captive bobcat. Journal of wildlife diseases, 37(1), 194-200. PMID: 11272497  

Roelke ME, Forrester DJ, Jacobson ER, Kollias GV, Scott FW, Barr MC, Evermann JF, & Pirtle EC. (1993) Seroprevalence of infectious disease agents in free-ranging Florida panthers (Felis concolor coryi). Journal of wildlife diseases, 29(1), 36-49. PMID: 8445789  

  • April 5, 2011
  • 11:00 AM
  • 1,081 views

Book Review: A year at Lazy Point

by Southern Fried Scientist in Southern Fried Science

I adored Song for the Blue Ocean. The first time I read it was a formative moment in my development as a young marine biologist and conservationist. When I picked up Eye of the Albatross and, later, Voyage of the Turtle, I expected that same magic, but could not find it. Safina’s subsequent books [...]... Read more »

Saraux C, Le Bohec C, Durant JM, Viblanc VA, Gauthier-Clerc M, Beaune D, Park YH, Yoccoz NG, Stenseth NC, & Le Maho Y. (2011) Reliability of flipper-banded penguins as indicators of climate change. Nature, 469(7329), 203-6. PMID: 21228875  

  • April 11, 2011
  • 01:19 PM
  • 1,071 views

Spanning the Bordeaux Belt – what does local mean in a global economy

by Southern Fried Scientist in Southern Fried Science

A small news article from Science has been taped above my desk for the last few years. I don’t remember who originally gave it to me, or why I even hung it up, but there it is, nestled between a couple XKCD cartoons. The article is titled “The Wine Divide” and it raises many [...]... Read more »

Tyler, Colman, & Päster, Pablo. (2009) Red, White, and 'Green': The Cost of Greenhouse Gas Emissions in the Global Wine Trad. Journal of Wine Researc, 20(1), 15-26. info:/

  • July 27, 2010
  • 07:00 AM
  • 1,053 views

Bottom trawling and the importance of plaice

by Southern Fried Scientist in Southern Fried Science


“The commons petition the King, complaining that where in creeks and havens of the sea there used to be plenteous fishing, to the profit of the Kingdom, certain fishermen, for several years past have subtily contrived an instrument called the “wondyrechaun” made in the manner of an oyster dredge, but which is considerably longer, upon [...]... Read more »

  • February 11, 2011
  • 03:00 PM
  • 1,051 views

Nothing to plunder – the evolution of Somalia’s pirate nation

by Southern Fried Scientist in Southern Fried Science

The droughts that shook the west African nations in the mid-1970′s and again in the 1980′s decimated the traditional nomadic clans of Somalia, leaving them without live stock to feed their families. Tens of thousands of the dispossessed, primarily of the Hawiye clan, were relocated to coastal areas. Fishing communities took root and began [...]... Read more »

  • November 3, 2010
  • 05:15 PM
  • 1,033 views

Watch me heal, day 1 – 4

by Southern Fried Scientist in Southern Fried Science

Those of you following me on twitter have probably heard that I had a little accident this weekend. And by “little accident”, I mean I got hit in the head with a machete. And by “got hit in the head” I really mean hit myself in the head while clearing brush. This has afforded me two [...]... Read more »

  • April 19, 2009
  • 11:25 PM
  • 1,008 views

The Serpent and the Platypus

by Southern Fried Scientist in Southern Fried Science

Longtime readers know that I get really excited by clear (or not so clear) cases of convergent evolution. Pound for pound, convergence is the most persuasive evidence for the truth of evolution out there; different lineages finding novel paths to the same solution. While I mostly talk about convergences in morphology, genetic convergence is often [...]... Read more »

Warren, W., Hillier, L., Marshall Graves, J., Birney, E., Ponting, C., Grützner, F., Belov, K., Miller, W., Clarke, L., Chinwalla, A.... (2008) Genome analysis of the platypus reveals unique signatures of evolution. Nature, 453(7192), 175-183. DOI: 10.1038/nature06936  

  • May 23, 2011
  • 06:23 PM
  • 1,005 views

The Global Extinction Crisis – species area relationships, habitat loss, and population dynamics

by Southern Fried Scientist in Southern Fried Science

We are in the midst of a global extinction crisis. Biodiversity is in decline as species after species disappear. Some estimates predict that up to 50% of species will be committed to extinction by 2050. Other estimates claim the current rate of extinction may be 10,000 times the background rate. Many ecologists and conservationists have declared the [...]... Read more »

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