Would removing the non-native carp from the Arboretum Waterway improve its clarity? That’s the question the Carp-Dependent Urgent Management, or Carp-DEUM, Project set out to answer this spring before the coronavirus halted many research projects.
In the first part of the survey, conducted in early March, the team used nets to sample fish from the middle sections of the waterway. They found relatively few carp but a lot of fathead minnow, black bullhead, green sunfish, mosquitofish and a single goldfish. They also found numbers of turtles, crawfish and a cash register. (But no bicycles.)
Carp may be more abundant in the lower reaches of the waterway, which are easier to navigate for them, the authors write.
—Andy Fell
Read more on the Egghead blog.
Twitter: UC Davis Health shares #WhyIMaskUp
UC Davis: Follow along with #WhyIMaskUp to hear why it’s important to wear face coverings when you can’t be socially distant.
UC Davis Health: "Even if it’s not perfect protection, wearing a mask can reduce my viral exposure and help keep me safe, and it keeps you safer, too." - @dlubarskymd, CEO and vice chancellor of UC Davis Health. #whyimaskup
Med students pledge in many languages
Members of the School of Medicine’s class of 2024, the school’s most diverse ever, recited their Medical Student Pledge of Ethics in 17 languages, the school reported on Twitter. Hear some of those languages in the above video.
Facebook video: Bohart open house replay
Bohart Museum of Entomology: This is a live Q & A with Jeff Smith, who has been curating the UC Davis Bohart Museum of Entomology butterfly and moth collection for more than 32 years.