this post was submitted on 19 May 2024
153 points (96.9% liked)
World News
32351 readers
840 users here now
News from around the world!
Rules:
-
Please only post links to actual news sources, no tabloid sites, etc
-
No NSFW content
-
No hate speech, bigotry, propaganda, etc
founded 5 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
I'm guessing, but it's probably because they are testing for bird flu on a long-dead dolphin via necropsy?
Im just confused why it would take so long, does it normally take that long to examine/run tests and stuff?
Dolphin died March 2022, then the publisher received the manuscript in June 2023. Then review took until 10 April 2024.
More generally, they weren't doing this in response to the recent outbreak, it was sort of a coincidence that the disease gained media attention at the same time of this paper's publication. Academic researchers are expected to publish around 2 papers a year, and each paper tends to take a couple years.
tl;dr: it's an academic study, not the dolphin CDC. blame the publishers and universities, not the researchers.
Ah OK that makes more sense! Thank you for the clarification!