Ah – finally. The World of Hurt webinar (many thanks to @fang for showing me how to do this).
Young red kangaroos grow up quickly where hungry dingoes lurk
We’ve just published a new paper showing that young red kangaroos (Osphranter rufus) protected by the dingo-proof fence take more time to grow up than their counterparts on the other side, who quickly outgrow the risk of being a dingo’s next meal. Our Flinders University/ARC Centre of Excellence for Australian Biodiversity and Heritage study shows…
[…] are starting to see direct and indirect reductions in human health resulting from environmental degradation, but this is usually […]
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[…] today – evil atrazine. As my readers know, I am certainly pushing the empirical basis for the link between environmental degradation and deterioration of human health (my talk here at the ICCB on Wednesday will be on this very topic), so this topic interests me […]
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Brilliant! Yo da (watermellon) man!!
I would suggest that the environment institute podcast RSS feed + your own blog posts and this slideshare.net will do a hundred times more to promote the important science in your public lecture than the official video.
In fact, some quantitative measurements of that assertion (or similar hypotheses) might make a good data source for a paper on science communication…
p.s. Being able to jump to slide 27 and read for myself the comments on yr country ranking paper (that clearly got an audience reaction) was brilliant.
http://www.google.com.au/search?q=watermellon+man+youtube
(the text around the “stumbleupon” result is priceless)
Well done Corey.
Fang – Mike Seyfang
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Yes, I’m sold on slideshare.net + podcast. Very slick. Will use it from now on. Cheers x 1000, Fang.
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