PhD student in Evolutionary biology 🔸SciCom🔸Palaeoartist🔸Influenceuse corneilles🔸Chicken Wings Dinosaures🔸☕Café des Sciences
They/She
🔬Djigr🦖- D. Dabir-Moghaddam
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You can see I am peaking out of my flower because your email was indeed a disturbance.
🔬Djigr🦖- D. Dabir-Moghaddam
Ignore the spinach part, apparently they don’t even touch it
How your email finds me
Update:
So apparently this has always been there and I can self-diagnose myself with plant blindness
(the beetle is munching on it!)
My friend congratulating me on having went that far with comparative analyses in R by myself soothes my grief of having to put a full stop to said analyses to focus on writing the last segments of my PhD.
I’m at that stage where I *see* I’ve done so much (progress!) but still have so much to do!!
It’s so frustrating to log rare species on Inaturalist just for someone to ID it as an extremely common similar one - I’m not quite sure I remember which characters we used to confirm it back then but I trust my colleague!
(also made a new iNat account for work)
www.inaturalist.org/observations...
🔬Djigr🦖- D. Dabir-Moghaddam
In other news, my first Pelidnota punctata emerged! It’s a common Rutelinae from North America that primarily feeds on grape leaves, sometimes seen on Virginia creeper.
Completely unrelated note, I’m now searching for grapevines/spinach/Virginia creeper that would grow in Paris :’)
🔬Djigr🦖- D. Dabir-Moghaddam
🔬Djigr🦖- D. Dabir-Moghaddam
🔬Djigr🦖- D. Dabir-Moghaddam
🔬Djigr🦖- D. Dabir-Moghaddam
🔬Djigr🦖- D. Dabir-Moghaddam
Ruteloryctes morio être comme la chouette de Tengmalm.