François Brassard (@ant__frank) 's Twitter Profile
François Brassard

@ant__frank

Scientist studying ant ecology and diversity at Charles Darwin University. I love Science, photography, doodling and nature adventures. 🐜🕷🐝 he/him

ID: 1058898061429301249

linkhttp://francoisbrassard.smugmug.com calendar_today04-11-2018 01:45:46

986 Tweet

1,1K Followers

594 Following

Ajay Narendra (@pipilika_aj) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Join us: We have a 4-year teaching and research position (Associate Lecturer, Level A) in Evolutionary and Developmental Biology Macquarie University School of Natural Sciences Science and Engineering @ MQU Apps Close on Nov 20. Apply/Info: mq.wd3.myworkdayjobs.com/en-US/Careersa…

Keiron Derek Brown (@keirondbrown) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The taxonomic biases in biodiversity data are growing over time. The amount of data we are collecting is growing, but the biases get bigger. We need to make a conscious effort to study the understudied! #SciComms #Science #Taxonomy image: Troudet et al 2018 Nature Portfolio

The taxonomic biases in biodiversity data are growing over time. The amount of data we are collecting is growing, but the biases get bigger. We need to make a conscious effort to study the understudied!

#SciComms #Science #Taxonomy

image: Troudet et al 2018

<a href="/NaturePortfolio/">Nature Portfolio</a>
François Brassard (@ant__frank) 's Twitter Profile Photo

New Guinea had several species with extremely elongated morphologies, such as this Strumigenys. I still wonder why 🤔. Near New Guinea Binatang Research Center, 🇵🇬 (2023). Thanks to Nils-C. Schumacher for finding this great specimen!

New Guinea had several species with extremely elongated morphologies, such as this Strumigenys. I still wonder why 🤔. Near New Guinea Binatang Research Center, 🇵🇬 (2023).
Thanks to <a href="/SchumacherNilsC/">Nils-C. Schumacher</a> for finding this great specimen!
Daniel Kronauer (@danielkronauer) 's Twitter Profile Photo

#1 Here are some photos of one of my favorite army ant action scenes, an intersection of two army ant emigrations. Army ants frequently relocate their colonies, and when they do so, they sometimes run into other army ant colonies that are doing the same.

#1 Here are some photos of one of my favorite army ant action scenes, an intersection of two army ant emigrations. Army ants frequently relocate their colonies, and when they do so, they sometimes run into other army ant colonies that are doing the same.
Myrmecological News (@myrmecolnews) 's Twitter Profile Photo

🆕Original Article: Competition for food and nesting resources in arboreal ant communities is higher in lowland than in mid-elevation rainforests. Hoenle, P. O., Schumacher, N. C., Fibich, P., Posman, A., Biul, M. & Klimes, P. myrmecologicalnews.org/cms/index.php?…

🆕Original Article: Competition for food and nesting resources in arboreal ant communities is higher in lowland than in mid-elevation rainforests.
Hoenle, P. O., Schumacher, N. C., Fibich, P., Posman, A., Biul, M. &amp; Klimes, P.

myrmecologicalnews.org/cms/index.php?…
Michael Branstetter (@bramic21) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Hey science folks, our research group had two postdocs and one lab technician fired due to the federal downsizing. If you need a molecular lab technician or a postdoc with experience in insect ecology please reach out. We would love to find these folks new jobs asap.

Nick Peoples (@cichlidnick) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Beyond excited to say my first PhD paper (and first first-author) is out today in nature 🤯. Taking a new approach to key innovations, we show rapidly gaining/losing complex teeth accelerates speciation in fishes. Look out for a longer thread soon…

Beyond excited to say my first PhD paper (and first first-author) is out today in <a href="/Nature/">nature</a> 🤯. Taking a new approach to key innovations, we show rapidly gaining/losing complex teeth accelerates speciation in fishes. Look out for a longer thread soon…
Entomological Society of America (@entsocamerica) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Arthropod Photo of the Week: February 26, 2025 Spider ants attack pony ant Leptomyrmex sp./Rhytidoponera sp. Hymenoptera: Formicidae By François Brassard (frank ant. martinez), Madang, Papua New Guinea #arthropodPOTW

Arthropod Photo of the Week: February 26, 2025
Spider ants attack pony ant
Leptomyrmex sp./Rhytidoponera sp.
Hymenoptera: Formicidae
By François Brassard (<a href="/ant_frank/">frank ant. martinez</a>), Madang, Papua New Guinea
#arthropodPOTW
François Brassard (@ant__frank) 's Twitter Profile Photo

New paper out in Oecologia on ants and fire 🐜 🔥. In « Large-scale pyrodiversity is not needed to beget ant diversity in an Australian tropical savanna » we show that fire, but not pyrodiversity, is key to preserve ant diversity. Read more here: link.springer.com/article/10.100…

New paper out in Oecologia on ants and fire 🐜 🔥. In « Large-scale pyrodiversity is not needed to beget ant diversity in an Australian tropical savanna » we show that fire, but not pyrodiversity, is key to preserve ant diversity.
Read more here: link.springer.com/article/10.100…
François Brassard (@ant__frank) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Glad that my photo made the journal cover for Ellen Rochelmeyer and her co-authors paper « The relative influences of long-term fire management and woody cover on termite abundance and activity in an Australian tropical savanna » Congrats Ellen and thanks for submitting my photo!

Glad that my photo made the journal cover for Ellen Rochelmeyer and her co-authors paper « The relative influences of long-term fire management and woody cover on termite abundance and activity in an Australian tropical savanna »
Congrats Ellen and thanks for submitting my photo!
Daniel Kronauer (@danielkronauer) 's Twitter Profile Photo

An old photo I took during my first field season with a macro lens - checks notes - 20 years ago, in May 2005. I hadn’t discovered flash diffusion yet. But it’s a rarely witnessed scene: Eciton burchellii army ant workers collective carry a massive male larva. Henri Pittier NP.

An old photo I took during my first field season with a macro lens - checks notes - 20 years ago, in May 2005. I hadn’t discovered flash diffusion yet. But it’s a rarely witnessed scene: Eciton burchellii army ant workers collective carry a massive male larva. Henri Pittier NP.