Rebecca Bliege Bird
banner
parnajarlpa.bsky.social
Rebecca Bliege Bird
@parnajarlpa.bsky.social

Anthropologist at Penn State studying and posting about indigenous land/resource ecology, behavioral ecology, cooperation, sharing, costly signaling, women’s hunting, fire ecology, plant dispersal. Also a feminist.

Environmental science 42%
Psychology 16%
Pinned
Check out this blog post summarizing our latest paper on anthropogenic seed dispersal!Indigenous landscape fire and seed dispersal promotes native plants and increases access to traditional foods in desert Australia. Link to paper at the top of the post. 🧪
Seed dispersal by Martu peoples promotes the distribution of native plants in arid Australia
Many Indigenous peoples recognise that the abundance and fertility of some local ‘wild’ plants are dependent on their intervention. The loss of these types of ecological services due to the spread of ...
communities.springernature.com
We’re at the PREMIERE of “A Century after Nanook!” A documentary film by our own Dr. Kirk French!
What does US tax money (via #NSF research grants) pay for?

Example:
I employ 3-5 UG researcher in my lab w/NSF $$.
- They quit jobs in retail,
- Spend more time in scientific spaces,
- Gain confidence,
- GPAs rise,
- They graduate and join the workforce,

... and we get competent geoscientists.
🧪
Upon learning that yesterday would be my last day as a program officer at the National Science Foundation, I shared this parting message with my colleagues. The next few months will be frenetic and stressful for them. Here are some things that you can do to help them with the mission ahead. (1)
Michael Roth is one of the few university president who actually gets the urgency of the moment. slate.com/life/2025/02...
Dear Fellow College Presidents: We Need to Do More Than Wait This One Out
Why civil society needs university leaders to speak up.
slate.com
US farmers sold $2 billion of food to USAID. Not any more.

- US farmers provided 41% of food delivered by USAID
- $340M of purchases/shipments are now paused. Over 680,000 tonnes.
- Food stranded in Houston
- Aid stopped in transit.

The world’s poor starving, food rotting & US farmers screwed.
Gutting USAID threatens billions of dollars for U.S. farms, businesses
U.S. businesses that sold goods and services to USAID are in limbo, including American farms dealing in rice, wheat and soybeans.
www.washingtonpost.com
On February 17, we hope to see the largest peaceful protest event in American history. We want Donald Trump and his supporters in Congress to know that the American people will not surrender to fascism. Share this widely. Take your friends. Show up for your nation. #NotMyPresidentDay
Just in case you thought that removing DEI criteria would mean that everyone is competing equally: NIH is removing grad students from underrepresented backgrounds from the applicant pool altogether. Their applications will not be considered. Other students, not from these backgrounds, will be.
🚨BREAKING. From a program officer at the National Science Foundation, a list of keywords that can cause a grant to be pulled. I will be sharing screenshots of these keywords along with a decision tree. Please share widely. This is a crisis for academic freedom & science.

Surprisingly (!!) we (Penn State) appear not to be capitulating. Yet.
Despite patriarchy's persistence, growing numbers of men believe they have it worse off than women. And, new research shows this "male victimhood" ideology is most common among men who aren't facing hardship. Which means what they're really feeling is status loss. 1/
www.psypost.org/male-victimh...
Male victimhood ideology driven by perceived status loss, not economic hardship, among Korean men
Research published in Sex Roles suggests that male victimhood ideology among South Korean men is driven more by perceived socioeconomic status decline rather than objective economic hardship.
www.psypost.org
"The people shepherding livestock across the continent's great open grasslands have been widely seen as the enemies of its charismatic wild mammals — to be fenced out of protected areas and policed by armed rangers. But that image is outdated..." @yalee360.bsky.social. e360.yale.edu/features/afr...
How African Communities Are Taking Lead on Protecting Wildlife
A new analysis shows that African wildlife increasingly depend on lands managed by villagers and herders. In many areas, locally-run conservancies now more effectively protect wildlife than national p...
e360.yale.edu
The Hollywood Reporter asked for 700 words for a special section on the fires they have just published. Something looking at the fire itself.So I repurposed some sentences on 'fire as biology' and gave the notion a long leash. Alas, the title is *not* mine. www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/local-n...
What Fire Wants: Understanding the Enemy
What long has been considered merely a chemical reaction perhaps is best compared to another all-too-familiar scourge — a virus.
www.hollywoodreporter.com
New open publication in @annualreviews.bsky.social on
"Including People in Our Models of Nature and Modes of Science" by anth faculty member @iainmckechnie.bsky.social & co-author Anne Salomon #historicalecology
www.annualreviews.org/content/jour...
Anthropological Research in Science Education (ARISE) at Penn State is a summer institute in integrated anthropological sciences for historically underrepresented and underserved undergraduate students from the United States. APPLY NOW!
Gender roles have always been complex and flexible; time to retire for good the idea of “traditional” gender roles www.theguardian.com/science/2025...
Iron age men left home to join wives’ families, DNA study suggests
Study highlights role of women in Celtic Britain and challenges assumptions most societies were patrilocal
www.theguardian.com
Happy to share that we're publishing in at Science this article, fruit of two years of work between Indigenous and non-Indigenous scientists on how to indigenize conservation in the Amazon. A direct result of my time at Princeton, alongside the brillant co-authors.

www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
Indigenizing conservation science for a sustainable Amazon
Dialogues between Western and Indigenous systems are critical
www.science.org
I'm realizing a lot of you probably aren't familiar with March Mammal Madness so here's what it's all about. You fill out your bracket of animal 'battles'. Then each battle will be narrated live by scientists here on Bsky in the most absurd and nerdy way possible.

libguides.asu.edu/MarchMammalM...
LibGuides: March Mammal Madness: How to Play
The official location for March Mammal Madness tournament information and resources! If you're learning, you're winning!
libguides.asu.edu
🚨 New paper coauthored by Dr. Sagan Friant and colleagues in the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B!! “Towards a ‘people and nature’ paradigm for biodiversity and infectious disease” royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/...
Towards a ‘people and nature’ paradigm for biodiversity and infectious disease | Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Zoonotic and vector-borne infectious diseases are among the most direct human health consequences of biodiversity change. The COVID-19 pandemic increased health policymakers’ attention on the links between ecological degradation and disease, and sparked ...
royalsocietypublishing.org
🚨🏺🍑 Nature Ecology & Evolution (@natureecoevo.bsky.social) chose our work tracking the spread of peaches through Indigenous networks as one of ten ecology papers published in 2024 to be included in their Year in Review set! www.nature.com/articles/s41...

Original: www.nature.com/articles/s41...
Indigenous networks map peach spread - Nature Ecology & Evolution
Nature Ecology & Evolution - Indigenous networks map peach spread
www.nature.com
Choose 20 books that have stayed with you or influenced you. One book per day for 20 days, in no particular order. No explanations, no reviews, just covers. 💙📚
Day 15
#BookSky
#BookChallenge
Choose 20 books that have stayed with you or influenced you. One book per day for 20 days, in no particular order. No explanations, no reviews, just covers. 💙📚
Day 3
#BookSky
#BookChallenge

🎉Publication day! The third edition of my book 'Sense & Nonsense: Evolutionary Perspectives on Human Behaviour' co-authored with @kevinlala.bsky.social is now available!

Paperback and eBook formats (Kindle etc):
global.oup.com/academic/pro...

#evolsky #philsci #philbio #PsychSciSky #HPbio #EHBEA🧪🏺
read the article and check out the table in the supplementary materials for actionable goals and possibilities...
Brilliant paper demonstrating that dingoes represent a unique canid lineage that contrary to popular belief is not hybridized with dogs.

Dingoes should be protected as the unique animals they are, not persecuted.

academic.oup.com/evlett/artic...

🧪🌍🦊🐶 #AcademicSky
Genetic structure and common ancestry expose the dingo-dog hybrid myth
Abstract. The evolutionary history of canids has been shown to be complex, with hybridization and domestication confounding our understanding of speciation
academic.oup.com
Biomes are history!
Welcome to Anthromes! 🌆🌾 🌍
From urban jungles to cropland vistas, humans have reshaped the planet so much that we’ve created our own ecosystems. Nature + humanity = anthromes. The Anthropocene in action. #Anthromes #Ecology #ScienceFacts
anthroecology.org/anthromes/gu...
The term “modern humans” really did originate in the late 19th century at a time when biologists and anthropologists took seriously the idea of end-directed evolutionary process.

johnhawks.net/weblog/there...
There are no “anatomically modern” elephants. Why do we treat humans differently?
A quote from Phillip Tobias illustrates the strange way that we talk about human variation compared to other species.
johnhawks.net
Sustainability requires collective action. The bigger the thing to be sustained, the more people have to work together. We find having friends in different communities predicts more participation in resource management: conbio.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/.... 🧵 on why & implications /1
Long‐distance Friends and Collective Action in Fisheries Management
Much received wisdom in the conservation literature is that individual connections across community boundaries undercut natural resource management. However, when multiple communities access the same....
conbio.onlinelibrary.wiley.com