I was thumbing through my New Yorker magazine when the featured fiction story 
caught my eye.  The accompanying graphic showed several silhouetted ants and 
the opening line of the story read: "The Trailhead Queen was dead."  I began 
reading and got pulled into the plight facing the colony, which was profoundly 
affected by the death of its long-lived queen. 

Something about the fiction story was different though.  While it kept my 
attention it also fed me detailed and fascinating facts (e.g. "...ants are 
encased in an external skeleton; their soft tissues shrivel into dry threads 
and lumps, but their exoskeletons remain, a knight's armor fully intact long 
after the knight is gone.")  Halfway through reading, it struck me that this 
was just the sort of story a biologist could write.  I flipped back to check 
who authored the piece and was startled to see that it was a biologist.

Read more and comment at 
http://www.esa.org/esablog/conservation/tackling-fiction-with-what-he-knows-best/.

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