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John Wilkins is an eternal student, who thinks philosophy of biology is at least as interesting as politics or sport and twice as important. He has a PhD from the University of Melbourne and worked at the University of Queensland, in Australia, before taking up a research fellowship at the University of Sydney. After a varied career, involving factories, gardening, civil service, publishing, graphics, public relations but not, unfortunately for the CV, driving a truck, John finally completed his thesis on species concepts in 2004, which he has worked into two books.

This blog is designed evolved to host any random thoughts that happen to be passing through my forebrain at a given moment. So there will be errors...

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« Spin versus framing: the tragedy of PR | Main | Sterelny wins Nicod Prize »

Asia's empty forests

Category: BiodiversityEvolutionSpecies and systematics
Posted on: September 1, 2008 1:46 AM, by John S. Wilkins

The Annotated Budak has an absolutely wonderful post on megafauna, hominid impacts, biodiversity and biogeography up. Go read it immediately.

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Comments

#1

Interesting. I have a project coming up in south east Asia looking at biodiversity, land use, socio-economic trends, and climate change. To paraphrase old what's his face "it is the best of worlds, it is the worst of worlds".

Posted by: KiwiInOz | September 1, 2008 2:52 AM

#2

Thanks for the plug! The credit goes to Corlett though for his years of work in the region.

Posted by: budak | September 2, 2008 12:03 AM

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