this place

August 14th, 2009

some nights man…

data data data

July 22nd, 2009

My experiment is coming to an end. I’ve grown different amounts of tadpoles with other kinds of tadpoles, now it’s time to euthanize them so they can be weighed, measured, and staged (find out how close to becoming a frog they are). Some have grown more than others, and it will be interesting to see in what treatments this happened.

But this shit is tedious! The scientist in me has calculated the amount of time it will take to finish collecting all the data for every tadpole and the results are not encouraging. Over 100 hours of pulling tiny dead animals out of jars of ethanol, placing them on a piece of paper, measuring them, looking at them under a magnifying glass to count their toes, lifting them carefully onto a scale, waiting for the scale to agree on a weight, and then putting them back. This must be done for each tadpole in my experiment, so somewhere between 3000 and 3600 times! I think Jocelyn’s assistant (me) needs an assistant. This kind of science is not as glamorous as hiking through remote forests, jotting down notes and taking photos of rare frogs. I’m going back to just natural history observation type stuff after this.

But, once I ignore my future here for the next month and concentrate on what I’m doing in the lab during one moment it doesn’t seem so bad. I have an MP3 player again, and the lab is air conditioned (my room at the dorms is no longer, I broke the air conditioner somehow), so basically I get to hang out in an air conditioned room for 3-5 hours every day listening to music. If I bring in some coffee, it will go fast. Maybe.

now comes the work

July 3rd, 2009

Okay, I promise – the next post will be about something other than frogs or work… maybe…

My experiment has begun! This past week was spent collecting eggs, setting up buckets to raise tadpoles in, and finally, today, introducing tadpoles to the buckets. On a smaller scale it’s a breeze. I’ve raised dozens, even hundreds of tadpoles on my own in the basement. But now thousands?! This is a whole different game. Hours (days) of water changes, bleaching buckets, never ending prune fingers, and mud everywhere, on everything, regardless of how often I sweep or mop my bedroom floor and porch. This is how it should be.


Also, I got a new (borrowed) computer and Skype – username devin.edmonds. I’ll keep it open when I’m not in the field or at the lab, so feel free to say hi. I can only handle interacting with academics for so much of each day!

bucket thief

June 22nd, 2009

Someone is stealing our artificial breeding sites. We don’t know who. We don’t know why. But all of last week’s work hauling buckets out to different parts of the garden has been lost to the bucket thief.

An artificial breeding site, one the theif did not find Using the tricycle to carry buckets out to different habitats This is my bike, I spend multiple hours on it each day. It has a basket.

Some small creatures I caught recently:

A tadpole of Microhyla ornata, one of the species I'm raising. They look like little guppies. Baby house gecko, he would easily fit on a quarter. This is not a worm, but a snake! A worm snake that lives underground. That is the side of a floor tile next to it for size comparison!

average day at work

June 18th, 2009

They are making me do all the work!
Devin at work
Jocelyn (left) and Brenna (right) pretending to work
Jocelyn and Brenna at work

A “new frog” (a species we haven’t 100% identified yet). It may appear to be a boring brown frog, but would you believe it does not have free-swimming tadpoles? We found a female full of eggs last night, and if it is indeed Ingerana liui, then she was on the lookout for a male who had dug a little hole in the mud for her to put her eggs in. The eggs then develop in the hole as the male guards them, and out of the eggs hatch tiny miniature frogs instead of tadpoles!
this is my work

the forest

June 12th, 2009

There isn’t a lot of forest left in this part of China because it has been “converted” to rubber plantations. I’m fortunate to work in an area where there is a little left, and in it there are some good frogs. And also 10 inch long killer centipedes!


where i live and work

June 10th, 2009


These are the dorms, where they moved me after my apartment in town was broken into. Lots of scientists live here, from all over the world.


This is where I sleep


This is Menglun, the town across the river from the gardens where I eat every meal and go to buy things. It’s small, but not too small.


I walk across this bridge to go from the gardens to eat in Menglun. There is a cafeteria at the gardens, but it’s expensive and bad.


A view from the bridge…


The gardens


I climbed that mountain in the distance on Saturday, where I caught a bamboo viper.


These are the labs, one of many giant buildings the Chinese government has built inside the botanical gardens. I spend a lot of time on the roof, where I have a bunch of tadpoles in buckets to take care of.


On the roof, Jocelyn taking care of the tadpoles…


Tadpoles!


These are artificial breeding spots where we want frogs to breed. A lot of the time I’ll be walking around the gardens looking in them to see if there are eggs or tadpoles. So far we haven’t found anything.


Johny Worker Bushtit Whiskey