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Bird ecologist and mapmaker turned professional gardener, based in SF. Italian / NYC-Bay Area transplant / Antarctican.
@SutroTower multiplied. Photo by Stephen Lam for the @sfchronicle.
It’s #caturday every day around here
This is brilliant
My cats Onyx and Topaz are really good at doing Sunday #catsofmastodon
Rhizomorphic — Interconnected strands of root like growth that support the thriving of biodiversity, creativity, interconnection, and reciprocal support. Photos from a magical excursion in the Mendocino woods after a week of rain. #fungi #symbiosis #mycology
It’s been many years since I’ve been to #Antarctica, but projects B031 & B200 continue to collect long term data on the ecology of #AdéliePenguins, #populationdynamics, #foragingbehavior, and #climatechange. Project people are now in the field and ready for a new season, with new GPS/Sat/dive tags ready to go. Here is a 2021 paper from our team: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-021-02451-4? Pics: Adélies on sea ice (©️Viola Toniolo), graphic of a weighbridge foraging cycle, new tags.
Foraging dive frequency predicts body mass gain in the Adélie penguin - Scientific Reports

Quantifying food intake in wild animals is crucial to many ecological and evolutionary questions, yet it can be very challenging, especially in the marine environment. Because foraging behavior can be inferred from dive recordings in many marine creatures, we hypothesized that specific behavioral dive variables can indicate food intake. To test this hypothesis, we attached time-depth recorders to breeding Adélie penguins also implanted with RFID tags that crossed a weighbridge as they traveled to and from the ocean to feed their chicks. The weighbridge reported how much mass the penguin had gained during a foraging trip. The variables that explained a significant amount of the change in body mass while at sea were the number of foraging dives per hour (46%) and the number of undulations per hour (12%). Most importantly, every increment of 1 in the rate of foraging dives per hour equated to a penguin gaining an average 170 g of mass, over the course of a 6–60 h foraging trip. These results add to a growing understanding that different metrics of foraging success are likely appropriate for different species, and that assessing the types and frequencies of dives using time-depth recorders can yield valuable insights.

Nature