A nod to (and from) the Sandwalk.

Larry Moran recently gave the lab a nice nod on his Sandwalk blog. It seems fitting to have one of the first posts on this new blog be an act of reciprocity. So here, in photographic form, is a personal nod to Sandwalk from the Sandwalk.

I’ll probably post a more detailed discussion of the association between genome size, metabolic rate, and flight another day. In the meantime, you can check out the original paper by Chris Organ and colleagues in Nature and the very nice piece about it by Carl Zimmer in Science that prompted Larry’s post. There is also a discussion by Greg Laden which seems pretty reasonable overall.
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Further reading:

Gregory, T.R. 2002. A bird’s-eye view of the C-value enigma: genome size, cell size, and metabolic rate in the class Aves. Evolution 56: 121-130.

Organ, C.L., A.M. Shedlock, A. Meade, M. Pagel, and S.V. Edwards. 2007. Origin of avian genome size and structure in non-avian dinosaurs. Nature 446: 180-184.

Zimmer, C. 2007. Jurassic genome. Science 315: 1358-1359.


My grad student made me do it.

One of the joys of advising graduate students is that you get to interact with people who have widely divergent backgrounds, expertise, and interests. It so happens that the newest member of the lab is an avid blogger, and has managed to convince me that this can be a useful means of communication (and perhaps a somewhat productive distraction from tedious duties). The net result, after consultation with our resident expert on options for the name, is Genomicron — a blog devoted to exploring genomic diversity and evolution. Due to time constraints I expect to only post semi-regularly for the foreseeable future, but this will provide a venue for discussing interesting and exciting developments in genomics, biodiversity science, and evolutionary biology*. Welcome.

TRG

* Assuming, of course, that anyone other than my students will read it.