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I haven't been able to respond to Michael Egnor's idiocy about evolution because I've been recovering from a meeting, but fortunately my fellow ScienceBloglings have. But I'll add my two cents anyway. Here's the really stupid part from Egnor (italics mine):
Doctors don't study evolution. Doctors…
Last summer, I had the good fortune to attend a conference in Washington D.C. on Vision and Change in Undergraduate Biology education. There were lots of inspiring speeches, cool videos, and talks about building more student-centered classrooms and strategies for change.
Surprisingly, many of the…
Sensuous Curmudgeon and PZ are both having fun poking through the background of Kansas gubernatorial candidate Joan Heffington. Heffington forthrightly calls for creationism to be taught in public schools, and pledged to demand advocates offer a âbiblical and constitutional reason exist for the…
Time for a new category here at the Refuge, namely "Hokey Haiku". It's just a fun way to communicate a simple thought or observation of the day in a mere 17 syllables. Don't expect Robert Frost or e.e.cummings though.
Summer's vanishing
Where is my calculator?
The semester starts
Yep. I'm back on…
Stop the presses! The fish depicted in the image (and described in the article as "silvery inch-long fish ... which look like a cross between goldfish and minnows") definitely are not Garra rufa. The real deal can be seen at http://cache.viewimages.com/xc/57356916.jpg?v=1&c=ViewImages&k=2&d=17A4…
I'm not 100% certain, but the fish shown above may be the other "doctor fish," Cyprinion macrostomum.
I think the claim of toothlessness seems a little dodgy for C. macrostomum, and know for certain that it's technically incorrect even for "sucker-mouthed" Garra (they've got pharyngeal teeth).
The recent hype about G. rufa, native of a politically tumultuous neighborhood where few fish exporters hold shop (Jordan, Orontes, and Tigris-Euphrates river basins), belies the fact that other Garra from the Afrotropics and SE Asia -- much cheaper and more readily available through the aquarium trade -- will apparently do much the same thing.
So, for that matter, will quite a few species of freshwater shrimp (notably, Macrobrachium spp. and Xiphocaris elongata). I've seen/felt this first-hand in Puerto Rican streams, and these critters' relatives elsewhere in the world appear to have the same fixation with dead epidermis. Might actually be blog about that in the near future.