This is a really insidious problem in my field of translational/comparative medicine. They were spot on that perpetrators are essentially protected by their positions, so it's difficult to enact any lasting positive change, and those negatively affected do often leave academia.
I had never heard of this before! Very thorough read, thank you for sharing.
I'm between Coprinellus disseminatus and Parasola plicatilis. It seems like Parasola is more common this time of year and more likely to grow on leaves.
I spent all day Saturday weeding my vegetable garden and adding some radishes, leeks, summer squash, and wax beans I grew from seed. This is my first year growing ground cherries, and they're really taking off! They taste funky in a good way.
I love Daði Freyr, this song was my intro to them and still my favorite. My other fave is probably "Endurtaka mig"
I love a radler. Also, this is one of the things I really miss about living in Iowa - the organized beer rides and brewery bike tours were fantastic, you could do one practically every weekend in the summer.
Not positive, but I'm thinking Stropharia. I think that looks like a veil on the stem.
I echo the sentiment that we should not take a wait and see approach to bigotry and anti-science sentiment. We should defederate proactively.
This was an awesome read and I greatly enjoyed it, really engaging. I'm going to look for tofu sheets and skins next time I visit the international market.
A beautiful patch of oysters for sure!
That's awesome! Do you live near a water source or vernal pool?
I thought it might be "is shrimps bugs?"