It's my 13 year anniversary on Tumblr 🥳
taylor price
$LAYYYTER

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Discoholic 🪩
Jules of Nature
ojovivo

roma★
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
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JVL

★
AnasAbdin
Game of Thrones Daily

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
wallacepolsom
Not today Justin
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

titsay
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@dieudlamort
It's my 13 year anniversary on Tumblr 🥳
Richard Nadler
the notes are broken 😂
Reblogging partly for awesome computer shortcuts, and partly because I wish to once again take part in a Post That Broke The Notes.
The southern orrery.
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Twitter / Bsky / Shop / INPRNT / Patreon
Me: I hate gossip
Also me:
like I'm stuck in a dream
ig @matialonsor
imagine being a totally random dude and all you want to do is catch some fish and then you get stranded in this weird, gigantic foreign kingdom and they make you the utmost authority on your language and literally all you wanted was to catch fish
it used to be so easy to find a job
I’m just thinking this random fisherman probably didn’t speak the formal prestige dialect. So he was probably teaching them some rural dialect. So just imagine a Russian ambassador showing up to the Shogun saying the equivalent of “Howdy, y'all”
Hiroo Isono
Science Cheats: A Reading List on Unscrupulous Scientists
“I admire and, as we all do, depend on the work of scientists. But they’re imperfect, and they exist in a world that tends to reward the quantity and newsworthiness of their publications. When promotions or prestige are dependent on how many papers you churn out, inevitably some researchers will try to game the system.”
Today, Christine Ro brings us six stories highlighting the shady side of science scholarship. Check out the full list.
Royal Greenhouses of Laeken - Brussels - Belgium (by Alex Vasey)
UNMASKING THE BLUEBOTTLE REVEALING FOUR DISTINCT SPECIES THROUGH GLOBAL CITIZEN SCIENCE
For over two centuries, the Portuguese man o’ war (Physalia spp) was considered a single, cosmopolitan species, drifting across the world’s oceans and stinging unsuspecting swimmers. But new genomic research has overturned this long-held view, revealing that Physalia is not one species, but at least four: P. physalis, P. megalista, P. utriculus, and a newly described species, P. minuta. Researchers sequenced the genomes of 151 specimens from around the globe and found strong reproductive isolation between genetic lineages, even when their distributions overlap. This evidence aligns with historical descriptions from the 18th and 19th centuries, which proposed several species that were later dismissed due to limited data.
Crucially, the study integrated over 4,000 photographs from iNaturalist, using citizen science to match distinct morphologies with genetic lineages. These images, contributed by amateur naturalists, swimmers, and lifeguards, allowed researchers to confirm physical differences that earlier taxonomists could not consistently observe due to preservation challenges. The result is a rare success story in which modern genomics, historical records, and participatory science come together to clarify the taxonomy of one of the ocean’s most recognisable creatures.
The discovery not only rewrites the story of Physalia but also challenges assumptions about biodiversity in the open ocean, reminding us that even the most visible marine life can hold hidden complexity, and that everyone, from sailors of the past to today’s citizen scientists, has a role to play in uncovering it.
Reference: Church et al., 2025. Population genomics of a sailing siphonophore reveals genetic structure in the open ocean. Current Biology.
Hirō Isono