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News, events, and resources from the Drexel University Libraries relating to biology, nutrition, food science and environmental science

July 01, 2008

Biodiversity Heritage Library

Ten major natural history museum libraries, botanical libraries, and research institutions have joined to form the Biodiversity Heritage Library Project. The group is developing a strategy and operational plan to digitize the published literature of biodiversity held in their respective collections. This literature will be available through a global “biodiversity commons.”

The participating libraries have over two million volumes of biodiversity literature collected over 200 years to support the work of scientists, researchers, and students in their home institutions and throughout the world. The 10 member libraries of the Biodiversity Heritage Library (BHL) members now have over 1.124 million pages of key taxonomic literature available on the web. Over 6000 titles are currently available online.

Participating institutions:

American Museum of Natural History (New York, NY)
The Field Museum (Chicago, IL)
Harvard University Botany Libraries (Cambridge, MA)
Harvard University, Ernst Mayr Library of the Museum of Comparative Zoology (Cambridge, MA)
Marine Biological Laboratory / Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (Woods Hole, MA)
Missouri Botanical Garden (St. Louis, MO)
Natural History Museum (London, UK)
The New York Botanical Garden (New York, NY)
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (Richmond, UK)
Smithsonian Institution Libraries (Washington, DC)

The BHL will provide basic, important content for immediate research and for multiple bioinformatics initiatives. For the first time in history, the core of our natural history and herbaria library collections will be available to a truly global audience. Web-based access to these collections will provide a substantial benefit to people living and working in the developing world -- whether scientists or policymakers.

June 17, 2008

International Polar Day - Land and Life

June 18th, 2008 marks the fifth quarterly International Polar Day, this time focusing on Land and Life. EastGreenland_thumb.jpg

Polar Days provide an interactive hands-on way to learn and get involved – they include press releases, contacts to experts in several languages, activities for teachers, on-line community participation, web-conferencing events, and links to researchers in the Arctic and Antarctic.

Polar landscapes and terrestrial ecosystems extend from southern cold maritime islands to dry continental deserts in Antarctica, and from tree line across the continental tundra to remote northern islands in the Arctic. Ice, in the forms of permafrost, snow and ice cover, plays a dominant role – polar biological communities survive through remarkable adaptations and extensive migration.

On June 18 & 19, global audiences will connect in real-time to polar scientists and with young people live at the UNEP Children’s Conference in Stavanger, Norway. Both events, each 30 minutes in length, will cover the same topics and are timed to accommodate different time zones.

To learn more about the upcoming Polar Day events and more about IPY, go to: http://www.ipy.org/index.php?/ipy/detail/land_life

June 09, 2008

Eating as an Automatic Behavior

By: Deborah Cohen, Thomas Farley

The continued growth of the obesity epidemic at a time when obesity is highly stigmatizing should make us question the assumption that, given the right information and motivation, people can successfully reduce their food intake over the long term. An alternative view is that eating is an automatic behavior over which the environment has more control than do individuals. Automatic behaviors are those that occur without awareness, are initiated without intention, tend to continue without control, and operate efficiently or with little effort.

Reprinted with permission from Preventing Chronic Disease, Vol. 5, No. 1, Jan. 2008, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [Epub Dec. 17, 2007].

RAND makes an electronic version of this document available for free as a public service.

To download the full text of this report:
http://www.rand.org/pubs/reprints/2008/RAND_RP1326.pdf

May 30, 2008

Selected Recently Added Bioscience Electronic Books

Applied demography for biologists with special emphasis on insects

Evolution by association: a history of symbiosis

Tropical environments: the functioning and management of tropical ecosystems

Field guide to western butterflies

May 22, 2008

Biology of the Snapping Turtle

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A new book just came across my desk, "Biology of the Snapping Turtle". Our own Dr James Spotila and Barbara Bell are co-authors of the chapter "Thermal Ecology and Feeding of the Snapping Turtle, Chelydra serpentina". The book is being processed and will be available for circulation soon.

Congratulations Dr Spotila and Ms Bell!

 

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