Miguel Bedoya-Pérez (@ma_bedoyaperez) 's Twitter Profile
Miguel Bedoya-Pérez

@ma_bedoyaperez

Dad, husband and Postdoc. Behavioral/chemical/evolutionary ecologist. Passionate about cognitive parallels between people and animals.

ID: 2327927082

calendar_today05-02-2014 00:17:39

164 Tweet

243 Followers

290 Following

💧simon holmes à court 🦋 (@simonahac) 's Twitter Profile Photo

ok… russell crowe retweeted me! so now you _have_ to go and sign the #ClimateEmergency petition! second last day! 344,169 signatures so far! aph.gov.au/petition_list?…

ok… russell crowe retweeted me!

so now you _have_ to go and sign the #ClimateEmergency petition!

second last day! 344,169 signatures so far!

aph.gov.au/petition_list?…
Madeleine 🌹 (@zhiana) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Quiet reminder that when you look at a map of the world, the country sizes on the atlas are not accurate or to scale. Australia has almost the same land mass as the United States, and we are on fire. We need your outrage. We need your support. We are burning.

Quiet reminder that when you look at a map of the world, the country sizes on the atlas are not accurate or to scale. 

Australia has almost the same land mass as the United States, and we are on fire.

We need your outrage.
We need your support. 
We are burning.
Miguel Bedoya-Pérez (@ma_bedoyaperez) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Our latest paper submission to Scientific Reports is now available as a preprint during the review process. COVID19 restrictions disrupted urban rats populations, but they didn't move researchsquare.com/article/rs-111…

Miguel Bedoya-Pérez (@ma_bedoyaperez) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Our new article on physiological and behavioral stress to predator smell by rats is out finally!! link.springer.com/article/10.100…

Helsinki Urban Rat Proj @helsinkirats.bsky.social (@helsinkirats) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Rodent data in Sydney throughout pandemic: rapid changes in captures but not in citizen complaints. Visits to bait stations declined throughout. Also a change in geographical distribution of rodents suggesting that rodents respond to resource scarcity. doi.org/10.1038/s41598…

Rodent data in Sydney throughout pandemic: rapid changes in captures but not in citizen complaints. Visits to bait stations declined throughout. Also a change in geographical distribution of rodents suggesting that rodents respond to resource scarcity. 

doi.org/10.1038/s41598…
Matthew Combs, PhD 🐀🐭 (@rattus_mattus) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Best pandemic rat data I’ve seen yet! Citywide pop was stable but behavior changed locally, prob due to resource distribution: “number of rats captured per trap per day did not change, but the probability of capture did”