Charlotte Eriksson
@ceeriksson7
🇸🇪 Postdoc at Oregon State University.
ID: 1270934372972027904
11-06-2020 04:22:35
104 Tweet
377 Followers
78 Following
check out this awesome shot of the breeding male from the Swikshak pack on the Katmai National Park coast feeding on a sea lion carcass! 😱 #coastalwolf
Living vicariously through Charlotte Eriksson and Ellen Dymit who are sharing videos of the dance party Wolves Across Borders @wolvesborders.bsky.social. Wolf biologists....not the worst dance moves
I'm just back from travels and hanging with my daughter, so not sure exactly when I'll make it up to #ESA2023. But folks may be interested in some talks from our lab starting today with Charlotte Eriksson talking about aquatic jaguars and their response to the 2020 Pantanal megafires
Excited to be at #ESA2023 Charlotte Eriksson discussed impacts of wildfires on jaguars in the Brazilian Amazon. Jaguars maintain a primarily aquatic diet, demonstrating rare behaviors such as adult play!
How do you do population genomics in a species without genetic variation? Find out in our new publication in Molecular Ecology titled "Population genomics of the muskox' resilience in the near absence of genetic variation" 🧵 ⬇️⬇️⬇️ onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/me… Photo credit: Lars Holst Hansen
Since we found this Pleasant Island wolf population that caused deer to crash and then lived on sea otters, Charlotte Eriksson has been genotyping their scats. Her new paper on the origin, connectivity, and individual specialization of island wolves is now out/1 onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ec…
I am psyched to share our compilation of neat observations documenting coyotes stealing prey from river otters in Point Reyes NPS! Out today in Ecology and Evolution, check it out: doi.org/10.1002/ece3.1…
this week we've got a very special feature... I call it DOUBLE #MonkeyMonday! we captured an interaction between a howler monkey (Alouatta pigra) and a spider monkey (Ateles geoffroyi) on one of our canopy camera traps with WCS Guatemala Program & Rony García-Anleu (1/2)
ocelot with an invasive Plecostomus catfish in Mirador-Rio Azul National Park, Guatemala. definitely one of my favorite trail camera videos from this project! WCS Guatemala Program Rony García-Anleu