AA contributor Martha Muñoz’s work on altitudinal variation in the cybotoid anoles has already netted her the Raymond B. Huey awardand of course, been featured on AA. A big chunk of this work, co-first authored with Maureen Stimola, has just been published by theProceedings of the Royal Society B. If you haven’t read it yet, check it out. Leer más.





«A winter storm that hit the southern United States yesterday all but paralyzed the city of Atlanta, stranding people in cars at stores and children at their schools. The storm only brought a few inches across the region but with the ice caused major problems in America’s southern region.» Leer más.
For more than three decades, since the seminal work of Ray Huey, Al Bennett, and Steve Arnold, biologists have measured whole animal performance–how fast they run, how far they jump, how well they can swim–to understand how species are adapted to their environment. Leer más.
Ok, I’ve been e-mailed articles about axolotl extinction now by lots of friends and colleagues. First of all, thank you. It’s all over the news, with Yahoo. Leer más.
An ancient, predatory creature known as the devil frog may have looked even scarier than previously thought. Leer más.