“Fish in rum” project highlighted in Science
Our NSF-funded Albatross Re-Collection project got written up in a nice piece by Erik Stokstad here!
Our NSF-funded Albatross Re-Collection project got written up in a nice piece by Erik Stokstad here!
We are thrilled to unveil our first ever lab logo! Last month, we invited members of our community to participate in a logo design contest. We received many incredible submissions and are grateful to everyone who shared their time and
Malin appeared on Nate Hagen’s “The Great Simplification” podcast today, and had a chance to talk through the links from ocean warming and deoxygenation to fish physiology, fish on the move, seafood, trade, and even conflict, plus the science and
Malin was at U. British Columbia this week to receive the Peter A. Larkin Award in Fisheries Science and to give the Larkin Lecture, “Marine fish on the move: challenges and prospects for fisheries adaptation” on October 3, 2024. A video
In September of 2023, Becca Selden (former postdoc) and Malin’s paper Fish and fisheries in hot water: What is happening and how do we adapt? was awarded Population Ecology‘s annual Most Cited Paper Award, alongside co-authors Eli Fenichel, Michael Fogarty,
On August 30th, 2023, a new study published in Nature reported our years-long investigation into marine heatwaves impacts on demersal fishes. This study was led by Dr. Alexa Fredston during her time as a postdoctoral associate in the Global Change
Pinsky Lab members Brendan Reid and Malin Pinsky (in collaboration with Bastiaan Star of the University of Oslo, Norway) recently published a paper in a special issue of Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B showing genomic evidence for rapid
A multi-year collaboration between Eden Tekwa and the Pinsky lab group has identified a bimodal conformance pattern, associated with organism body size, that is predominant across Earth’s biomass. In the recent publication The sizes of life the research team discusses
A new PBS NewsHour special on the ocean, climate change, and fisheries aired last night, with commentary from Malin along with colleagues Daniel Pauly, Kathy Mills, Andrew Pershing, Curtis Deutsch, Paul Greenberg, and others.
A new paper in Global Change Biology documents how Tiger Shark migrations have shifted poleward in response to 40 years of ocean warming. Notably, this has left the species more exposed to commercial fishing as its expanded range is largely