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Monday, October 24, 2011
Friday, September 30, 2011
Loose Feathers #310
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Common Yellowthroat / Credit: Bill Thompson/USFWS |
- A study found that weaver birds, which construct some of the most complex nests, learn how to build nests through trial and error.
- Workers are restoring a former wetland on Santa Cruz Island in California. The habitat restoration project is expected to benefit species such as the Island Fox and Island Scrub Jay.
- France is planning a cull of Canada Geese, which are not native to Europe.
- A study of forest types in Papua New Guinea found that birds are most abundant in primary forests, as opposed to primary forest edges, secondary forest edges and agricultural land.
- Mongabay has a photo of a Chestnut-breasted Coronet, a bird native to Andean forests.
- Tom Reed has already broken the big year record for New Jersey but faces strong competition to finish the year with the most species.
- Laura's Birding Blog: A closer look at North American field guides
- 10,000 Birds: New Zealand Storm-petrels; Back from the Dead
- Coffee and Conservation: Research: Types of fruit trees on shade coffee farms important
- ABA Blog: The Chittering Curlew
- Mike's Birding and Digiscoping Blog: Curlew Caper Resurrected!
- The Drinking Bird: Birder Jargon Project: Abbreviatory
- The colors of ancients beetles are preserved in fossilized beetle remains. However, the colors are red-shifted because of chemical changes, so that a blue beetle now appears green, and so on. LiveScience has a gallery of extinct and living metallic-colored insects.
- Madgascar is seeking CITES protection for its rosewood and ebony because of a period when a coup opened its forest to unrestricted logging.
- Research on katydids found that female katydids will search for males if the males offer a gift in addition to the sperm packet.
- Over 100 people were arrested for civil disobedience in Ottawa during a protest against the Keystone XL pipeline.
- One of the two major ice shelves in the Canadian Arctic melted almost entirely this summer.
- Scientists have installed a data-collection device on one of the Cape May-Lewes ferry vessels to gather information on the health of Delaware Bay. The device measures the temperature and salinity, as well as levels of dissolved oxygen and chlorophyll.
- Oil left from BP's oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico is still harming Gulf Killifish (Fundulus grandis), even without killing them.
- Now is the season to gather black walnuts.
- LiveScience has a gallery on the devastating drought in Texas.
Thursday, September 29, 2011
Review: Binocular Vision by Spencer Schaffner
Early field guides such as Birds through an Opera Glass and Birdcraft sought to make the professional study of ornithology into the widely accessible hobby of birdwatching. In the process, they hoped to turn public opinion against the millinery trade, which at that time made extensive use of real birds and their feathers for decorated fashionable hats. So they made birds as sympathetic as possible by anthropomorphizing them and emphasizing their useful and ethical qualities. Not all birds were portrayed as equally good, however. While some were praised for their beauty or songs, others were denounced for cannibalism or placing their eggs in the nests of other birds. This set up an ideology of birding in which some birds should be protected and appreciated by birdwatchers, while others were to be scorned or controlled.
In the 1920s and 1930s, field guides became more technical and less sentimental, with a narrow focus on helping birders identify birds by visual and auditory clues. Such trends culminated in Roger Tory Peterson's A Field Guide to the Birds and continued through most subsequent printed field guides up the present. While field guides presented all birds on equal footing, favoritism lived on culturally, both among birders and society at large. Schaffner examines how favoritism affected four "nuisance birds": Bald Eagle, Mute Swan, gulls, and crows. Each of their fates has changed as public and expert views of them have shifted; however, these shifts are not reflected in field guides. Schaffner argues that the persecution programs that have targeted those and other "nuisance birds" benefit birdwatchers by making those birds rarer, and thus more exciting to see. This is an argument, by the way, that I have not heard from birders, only from people seeking to justify projects that would harm birds.
Most contemporary field guides separate birds from their environments, either by depicting them against a plain background or showing minimal naturalistic backgrounds. These have an advantage of focusing attention on each bird and its key characteristics. However, it deprives field guides of the opportunity to make the user grapple with the environmental problems facing birds. One field guide, All the Birds of North America, breaks from that trend by showing birds in human-altered landscapes such as an airport and a garbage dump. Grappling with the environmental effects of modern society is left for artists outside of the field guide genre. Some companies attempt to make their products appear environmentally friendly by showing birds interacting with them or going about their lives with the products in the background. Meanwhile, some contemporary artists take the opposite perspective, showing birds and other animals being killed by human technology and waste. It would be interesting to read how Schaffner would interpret The Crossley ID Guide, which like All the Birds of North America shows birds in altered landscapes.
Electronic field guides provide new opportunities to help birdwatchers identify birds, as they have the ability to include recordings of bird vocalizations instead of just written descriptions or sonograms of them. Some audio tools like Identiflyer do this on a rudimentary level, but there are already sophisticated apps for mp3 players and smartphones that present audio recordings together with images and descriptions of birds. Meanwhile online guides (Schaffner discusses eNature.com and Cornell Lab or Ornithology's Online Bird Guide) present illustrations, descriptions, recordings, and life histories. It seems likely that tools will be available in the near future to automate identification of birds based on their appearance or sounds or provide birders with mobile access to vast databases of bird observations. Electronic guides offer the opportunity to present birders with a richer understanding of the birds they encounter than is possible in a standard printed field guide. However, they also link birdwatching to consumer culture, by expanding the number of "essential" products for birders to purchase.
From field guides, Schaffner moves to the phenomenon of competitive birding on polluted lands like landfills and sewage lagoons. This chapter has limited relevance to field guides, though such places are often included in bird-finding guides. However, it is important for Schaffner's major theme of the relationship between birding and environmentalism. Schaffner is fairly persuasive in arguing that birding is not a form radical environmentalism because birders use competitive birding to raise funds for conservation rather than to protest or highlight environmental degradation. (I am not sure that anyone would mistake it as radical, though.) I am less convinced by his argument that birders inadvertently support continued environmental degradation by looking for birds at toxic sites. He connects birding on toxic sites with projecting an image of toxic sites as being safe and friendly to birds if there is no overt mention of the toxicity, which is often hidden from view. Such an image of greenness becomes a tool for businesses or governments that want to minimize the scope of the toxic hazards that a landfill, Superfund site, or sewage lagoon contains. The reason I find this unconvincing is that many birders also engage in various forms of environmental activism from habitat restoration to political advocacy. What projects the image of harmlessness is less the birders than the birds themselves, and birders are at the sites because the birds are there, and not the reverse. Even without birders present, a person who sees a brownfield site covered in plants with birds singing in the shrubs is going to miss the toxins hidden in the soil underneath.
Spencer Schaffner poses important questions about the relationship between birdwatching and environmentalism and how that relationship is reflected in field guides. He offers a vision of a birdwatching that engages more with entire habitats and environmental problems. His prose is somewhat dense (especially towards the beginning of the book) but understandable and engaging. Overall, I think he provides a more useful account of twentieth-century birding than Scott Weidensaul did in Of a Feather, which I reviewed several years ago. I would recommend Binocular Vision: The Politics of Representation in Birdwatching Field Guides for anyone interested in the development of field guides or in re-imagining birdwatching for the twenty-first century.
Wednesday, September 28, 2011
Silver-spotted Skipper
Tuesday, September 27, 2011
Monarch Migration
Monarchs are probably the most familiar insects to the general public, as they are often used in schools as examples of biological phenomena like metamorphosis and mimicry. They are also large, colorful, and (at times) plentiful, so they are easily noticed even by people whose eyes are not tuned to insect movements.
Unlike most butterflies, Monarchs are fully migratory. In the fall, the eastern population migrates to wintering grounds in central and southern Mexico, while the western population retreats to southern California. In spring, these routes are reversed. No individual Monarch completes the entire round trip. Rather, females from the wintering population lay eggs in February or March, and subsequent generations complete the northward journey.
As with birds, geography influences Monarch migration. The best places to see large numbers of Monarchs at once are at southward-pointing peninsulas, like Cape May Point in New Jersey. Sometimes the air will be so full of Monarchs (and dragonflies!) that it can be hard to pick out birds from other flying things. One of my most memorable experiences of Monarchs was at Point Lookout State Park in Maryland on a chilly October morning when thousands of Monarchs were gathered at the point of the peninsula as they waited to warm enough to continue their journey. Migration occurs across a broad front, however, so you may see increased numbers in other butterfly gardens as Monarchs migrate.
Monday, September 26, 2011
Honey Bees
Sunday, September 25, 2011
A Threat to the Winter Refuge of Whooping Cranes?
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Whooping Cranes at Aransas National Wildlife Refuge / USFWS |
In drought-stricken Texas, heavy water use by chemical plants, refineries, and cities has left less fresh water for estuaries downstream, helping raise salinity levels in the coastal marsh 175 miles southwest of Houston. So environmentalists have sued state regulators to restrict water use along the river to protect the habitat of the last wild flock of whooping cranes that spend each winter there. But Dow Chemical (DOW), with a plant just upstream from the cranes, says it was there first. Citing the state’s first-come-first-served water-use regulations, Dow claims permits dating back to the 1940s allow it to use as much of the Guadalupe River’s output as it wants.It should be noted that this is not a simple conflict between birds and petrochemical companies. There are residents upstream who need drinking water, and there are fishermen downstream whose livelihoods depend on healthy estuaries. Ecotourism provides an additional economic incentive to maintain the estuaries. The endangered status of the Whooping Cranes may be the legal tool used to save the marshes, but if the suit succeeds, they are unlikely to be the only beneficiaries of a change in water rights.
All this will be aired in federal court in December in a case that threatens to upend long-standing water rights....
Due to Texas’ historic drought, the Guadalupe’s flow is down by more than 60 percent at Victoria, roughly 20 miles upstream from the Aransas National Wildlife Refuge, the cranes’ winter range. In September the refuge’s marshes were three times saltier than normal. The birds migrate from Canada each year to spend the winter feeding on crabs and berries along the Texas coast. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service counted 571 wild and captive whooping cranes in July 2010. The Aransas group makes up half that number and is the world’s last migrating flock that can sustain itself in the wild.
The coastline from just east of the cranes’ refuge to the Louisiana border bristles with the world’s largest concentration of petrochemical and refining complexes, many of which rely on river water. An association including owners of five petrochemical plants near the refuge, including Dow, DuPont (DD) and Lyondell Basell (LYB), several power plants, and a nearby steel mill, have sided with Texas authorities to defend the allocation system, while some coastal towns and businesses that rely on healthy bays and estuaries support the environmentalists.
The two sides are far apart. LaMarriol Smith, the river authority’s spokeswoman, says that giving more water to the cranes “could basically wipe out economic development, especially in the lower end of the basin.” Yet Charles Smith, a county commissioner in Aransas County, counters that his county’s economy depends on tourists who fish, hunt, and bird watch along the coast and commercial fishing that relies on proper salinity levels maintained by adequate freshwater inflows. Says Smith: “Estuaries are the most productive zones on the planet—the cradle of life—and I think our cradle is being robbed.
Saturday, September 24, 2011
Winter Finch Forecast
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Purple Finch / USFWS Photo |
This year the seed crops are good, so mass southward migration is unlikely. These species seem the most likely to wander south:
PURPLE FINCH: Purple Finches will be uncommon in Ontario, but probably in higher numbers in Atlantic Canada, New York and New England where cone crops are excellent. A few may frequent feeders in southern Ontario. The Purple Finch has declined significantly in recent decades. Some suggest it declined due to competition with the House Finch. However, the drop in numbers began before House Finches were common in eastern North America and also occurred where House Finches were absent. A better explanation for the decrease is the absence of large spruce budworm outbreaks that probably sustained higher Purple Finch populations in the past....Read the full report for information on the other species. To read more about which birds are classed as winter finches and their habits, see this essay by Ron Pittaway (pdf).
PINE SISKIN: The nomadic siskin is a spruce seed specialist. There are currently large numbers of siskins in Yukon including a high proportion of hatch year birds. They will move because the spruce crop is average in Yukon and Alaska this year, possibly coming to the East. Siskins are expected to be widespread across Ontario this winter. Good numbers are likely to be drawn to the excellent spruce and hemlock crops in Atlantic Canada, New York and New England....
RED-BREASTED NUTHATCH: This nuthatch is a conifer seed specialist when it winters in the north and its movements are triggered by the same crops as some of the boreal finches. There has been very little southward movement indicating that this nuthatch will winter in areas with heavy cone crops such as the boreal forest, Quebec, Atlantic Canada, New York and New England States.
Friday, September 23, 2011
Loose Feathers #309
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Chaffinch / Photo credit: Michael Apel |
- Recent research has identified the Italian Sparrow (Passer italiae) as a distinct species. The Italian Sparrow is an unusual example of a species that evolved out of hybridization between two other species, in this case, House Sparrow (Passer domesticus) and Spanish Sparrow (Passer hispaniolensis).
- A study of captive Humboldt Penguins at the Brookfield Zoo suggest that penguins have a well-developed sense of smell that allows them to identify relatives and reduce inbreeding.
- A disease called trichomonosis is spreading from Britain's finches to mainland Europe. The disease mainly affects Greenfinches and Chaffinches.
- The owners and operators of the Cosco Busan oil tanker have agreed to pay $44.4-million to settle civil suits arising from the 2007 oil spill in San Francisco Bay, which killed thousands of birds and coated beaches and wildlife habitat with oil.
- Satellite transmitters may have harmed some Red Kites, either by chafing and causing lesions or by hampering their breeding.
- San Francisco is implementing a bird-safe building code.
- NPR celebrates Bar-tailed Godwits for their toughness.
- The Sonoran Desert Bald Eagle population was removed from the Endangered Species List.
- Most primtive birds of the Cretaceous were probably killed by the same meteor that killed the dinosaurs.
- The size of a songbird's brain affects how many songs it can learn.
- Net Results: Geolocators on catbirds
- Biodiversity Heritage Library: Book of the Week: Birds and Their Nests
- Beetles in the Bush: Not all Florida tiger beetles are rare
- Myrmecos: The Current State of Ant Genomics
- mocosoco Birds: Hudsonian Godwit, Stilt Sandpiper, Bridgewater Shorebird Recap, 9-22-2011
- Earbirding: The Next Junco
- March of the Fossil Penguins: Baby Penguins in the Fossil Record
- Wanstead Birder: Semipalmated Sandpiper, Drift Reservoir
- Bird Light Wind: Gull Fate
- ABA Blog: BOU splits with AOU relevance
- Bug Eric: Spider Sunday: Pirate Spiders
- AnimalWise: They’ll Take Two in the Bush – Crows and Ravens Show Patience
- Tree rings reveal that bristlecone pines have grown more in the past half-century than at any other time in the past 3,700 years. Warmer temperatures are likely to be the cause of the change.
- Scientists have discovered a new disease carried by the same ticks that carry Lyme disease.
- Camera traps have turned up more Sierra Nevada red foxes than expected.
- Mapping indicates that Yasuni National Park in eastern Ecuador is the most biodiverse spot in the Western Hemisphere, and possibly the world, but it is threatened by oil exploration.
- Bowhead whales are using the newly melted Northwest Passage to move across the northern tier of Canada.
- The US Postal Service has issued a new stamp to fund conservation.
- The cost of removing four dams along the Klamath River is likely to be a third less than projected. Meanwhile, two dams are slated to be removed along the Elwha River to allow salmon to spawn upstream again.
- Twelve new species of frogs have been found in India, along with three extinct ones. One of the newly-discovered frogs makes cat-like sounds.
Thursday, September 22, 2011
S is for Snakeroot
Snakeroot seems to be much unloved. Part of the reason is its weediness; it often grows in dense patches, spreads rapidly, and can take over an area if left unchecked. While I appreciate the beauty of its white flowers, the large, rough leaves might not be aesthetically appealing to everyone. Another reason for its poor reputation may be its toxicity. White Snakeroot produces tremetol, a toxin that produces severe intestinal distress if it is ingested. In the 19th century, tremetol often poisoned humans who had consumed milk from cows that had eaten snakeroot, a disease known as milk sickness.
Despite its bad reputation, not every animal is harmed by the plant's toxins. Many insects find snakeroot useful for food. According to the HOSTS database, five species of moths have been recorded using White Snakeroot as a larval hostplant. They are Clymene Moth (Haploa clymene), a leaf blotch miner moth (Leucospilapteryx venustella), Hitched Arches (Melanchra adjuncta), Ailanthus Silkmoth (Samia cynthia), and another silkworm moth (Samia walkeri).
Besides that, many insects use snakeroot for nectar, like this Asian Tiger Mosquito (Aedes albopictus). I have also seen various bees and hoverflies nectaring at snakeroot, but I cannot find an image from my files.
Others just rest on its leaves, like this picture-winged fly (Delphinia picta).
Yesterday I found something I had not noticed before in the snakeroot patches in the backyard. Many snakeroot plants had long lines of tiny aphids up and down the stems. Of course, where there are aphids, there are likely to be ants, so there were also many ants walking up and down the stems to tend to the aphids. Thanks to Alex Wild for identifying these as winter ants (Prenolepis imparis). Click through the photo above to see more of the ants.
There was a particularly dense cluster of aphids near the top of the plant, and there were ants along with them. This cluster was harder to photograph because the flower head was in the way. While snakeroot may be nutritious to some insects, I still would not suggest eating it yourself. However, unless there is a risk of accidental ingestion (by a pet or small child, for example), it may be worth leaving some snakeroot in place for insects to use.
Wednesday, September 21, 2011
Least Skipper
Tuesday, September 20, 2011
Another Example of Crow Intelligence
Scientists captured 10 wild birds and placed them in large cages in order to record their behaviour in response to mirrors.Further tests ruled out the possibility that crows were using a sense of smell to find the food. Other animals that can interpret images in mirrors include African grey parrots, great apes, dolphins, monkeys and Asian elephants, but apparently these New Caledonian Crows were the first to do so without extensive prior contact with humans.
All the crows reacted to seeing their reflections as if they were encountering another crow; the birds made rapid head movements, raised their tails and even attacked the reflection.
Lead researcher Felipe S Medina Rodriguez said the crows' antagonistic reaction to their mirror image "was not surprising". He explained that an animal usually had extensive exposure to mirrors before it began to display an understanding that the image it was seeing was itself....
The second part of the experiment, though, revealed some surprising findings.
The scientists devised a task to test whether the crows could use mirrors to locate cubes of meat that were hidden from direct view.
All of the crows tested appeaed to understand how the meat's reflection correlated to its location.
"We were surprised by how quickly the crows learnt to use a mirror reflection to locate hidden food," said Mr Medina.
"Usually, it takes longer for an animal to start using the properties of mirrors to have access to otherwise non-visible objects."
The linked article also contains a summary of a study on the problem-solving skills of Great Tits and Blue Tits.
Monday, September 19, 2011
Backyard Insects on Goldenrod and Sedum
Goldenrod (Solidago sp.) is one of the most prominent plants of autumn meadows and wildflower gardens. Insects notice and take advantage of their rich yellow flower bracts. One of the insects making use of the goldenrod in my backyard was this fly. It appears to be Trichopoda pennipes, a new species for me. It is in a group known as "feather-legged flies," in reference to the hairy tufts on their hind legs.
Also nectaring at goldenrod were several mosquitos, including this one.
Finally, this wasp, which appears to be Eumenes fraternus, was sitting on top of one of the Sedum plants. It barely moved at all while I ran off a series of photos, which made me wonder if it was really sipping nectar or doing something else.
Sunday, September 18, 2011
Migration at Scherman-Hoffman Sanctuary
Fall wildflowers are blooming in the sanctuary's meadows, including many types of asters. There were, of course, a lot of New England Asters (Symphyotrichum novae-angliae). I have identified these three additional species as best as I can. The one above appears to be a Smooth Aster (Symphyotrichum laeve). The one below seems to be Purplestem Aster (Symphyotrichum puniceum). The one at the bottom looks like a Calico Aster (Symphyotrichum lateriflorum). If you see a better identification for any of them, please leave a comment.
Saturday, September 17, 2011
Local Migration Birding
Aside from the birds migrating through, there were other signs that fall is coming soon. For one thing, the air was very chilly, so chilly that I felt underdressed for the first time in months. Some trees are already starting to change into their fall colors, such as this winged sumac.
Fall wildflowers were also in bloom. Above is a calico aster, noteworthy for the mix of yellow and purple centers combined with white rays. Below is a grass-leaved goldenrod, whose flower heads have flat tops instead of the hanging stems characteristic of other goldenrods.
Friday, September 16, 2011
Loose Feathers #308
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Blackpoll Warbler / Photo credit: Donna Dewhurst (USFWS) |
- New York City Audubon is pushing building owners and architects to make their buildings safer for migratory birds. Several buildings have made successful modifications already, and some new buildings are incorporating bird-friendly elements into their designs.
- A new study argues that window strikes kill a lot of birds, but do not have an appreciable effect on overall bird populations because of a lack of correlation between a high number of window strikes and population decline.
- Feathers trapped in amber are giving palaeontologists a better idea of what feathers looked like in the Cretaceous period. The specimens, collected in Alberta, show a diversity of feather shapes and pigments. Not Exactly Rocket Science has a gallery of amber-coated feathers.
- Yesterday I posted on a tracked Whimbrel that was shot on Guadaloupe. It turns out that a second tracked Whimbrel was also shot there on the same day (pdf). BirdLife and other conservation organizations, including the Society for the Conservation and Study of Caribbean Birds, are calling for better regulation of hunting in the Caribbean to avoid killing species of conservation concern.
- Cornell Lab of Ornithology and NASA are collaborating to use eBird data and satellite imagery to learn more about how birds use different land types over the course of the year.
- A scientist reports on his expedition to Papua New Guinea to study endemic birds.
- A network of scientists is studying the fall migration of Northern Saw-whet Owls.
- This year a record 154 Western Snowy Plover chicks have fledged along the coast of Oregon.
- View from the Cape: Darners: It's What's For Dinner
- Coyote Crossing: Chuckwalla Valley
- Anything Larus: Case of the Hidden Tertial
- Search and Serendipity: Magnificent Frigatebird plumages (Tropical Storm Lee Part 2)
- Compound Eye: Why are media insects misidentified?
- Myrmecos: Forest changes following a foreign ant invasion
- BugBlog: A bit of slug romance
- Picus Blog: Leucistic Red-tailed Hawk Redux
- The Ocean Portal: New Archaeocetes from Peru Are the Oldest Fossil Whales from South America
- BirdFellow: A Picture is Worth a Thousand Birds!
- 10,000 Birds: Why Do Penguins Wear Tuxedos?
- eBird News: Understanding birds & weather: Fall birding basics
- EvoEcoLab: The Cost of Bearing Lanterns
- Per Square Mile: Salvaging disturbed forests may not save biodiversity
- Arctic sea ice reached its second-lowest minimum extent this summer, according to the National Snow and Ice Data Center. The Skeptical Science blog explains why the numbers on the decline in sea ice may differ from one report to another.
- The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife has created an interactive Google map of the best places in the state to watch wildlife. You can view the map here. It sounds like a great resource for travelers, and I hope other states follow Oregon's lead.
- Unchecked deer population growth is a conservation problem in the U.K. as well as in the U.S.
- A Republican scientist and a Democratic scientist co-authored an op-ed on the need for action on climate change.
- The new Times Comprehensive Atlas of the World contains numerous changes, many of which result from climate change.
- Mexico is planning to release five Mexican Gray Wolves in Sonora, close enough to the U.S. border that they could join other members of their subspecies in the U.S.
- The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is considering listing the Franklin's Bumble Bee as endangered, though it may already be extinct since no bees of that species have been seen since 2006.
- An expedition recently visited Haiti to document the rare endemic reptile and amphibian species that live there before the last forest remnants are cleared.
- New York is trying to prevent the spread of Emerald Ash Borers within its borders by quarantining lumber from affected areas of the state.
Thursday, September 15, 2011
Backyard Wasp and Weevil
Here is another view of the same wasp. Its face was yellow, which I think means that it is a male.
Another insect I found yesterday was this weevil, which is crawling through Sedum flowers. There are numerous species of weevils, and I am not sure which one this is, or even what its genus is. Curculionidae is one of the largest of all animal families, with over 40,000 species worldwide and 2,500 species in North America. If you are familiar with Sedum, you can get a sense of just how tiny this weevil is. It seems dwarfed by the flowers, which themselves are pretty small.
Wednesday, September 14, 2011
Whimbrel Navigates a Storm but Gets Killed Anyway
Machi being fitted with satellite transmitter in August, 2009. Image credit: Barton Paxton |
Scientists at the Center for Conservation Biology learned today that a whimbrel that they had been tracking via satellite for 2 years as part of a migration study had been shot by a hunting party this morning on the Caribbean island of Guadeloupe (French West Indies). The bird named “Machi” had just flown through Tropical Storm Maria and made landfall on Montserrat before flying to Guadeloupe. Machi had been tracked for over 27,000 miles (44,000 km) back and forth between breeding grounds in the Hudson Bay Lowlands of Canada to wintering grounds on the coast of Brazil. The bird was tracked on 7 nonstop flights of more than 2,000 miles. During the spring of 2010, Machi flew more than 3,400 miles directly from Brazil to South Carolina. Machi serves as an example of birds that interact with many landscapes and cultures throughout the year and a reminder of how international cooperation is required for their continued existence.The center argues that this is a persistent conservation problem on Caribbean islands since many are not subject to the Migratory Bird Treaty Act, which governs the treatment of birds crossing international boundaries in North America.
Guadeloupe, Martinique and Barbados continue to operate “shooting swamps” some of which are artificial wetlands created to attract migrant shorebirds for sport shooting during fall migration. It is estimated that tens of thousands of shorebirds continue to be taken annually by hunting clubs on just these three islands. This practice is a throwback to more than a century ago when gunners hunted shorebirds throughout the Americas. The Migratory Bird Treaty Act was passed, in part, to protect dwindling numbers of birds that migrate across country borders. Operated as a French overseas department, both Guadeloupe and Martinique are part of the European Union and are not party to the Treaty. Barbados, once a British colony is now an independent state and also not party to the Treaty. The last Eskimo Curlew known to science was shot on Barbados in 1963. Shorebird hunting within these areas continues to be unregulated to the present time. Conservation organizations continue to work toward some compromise that will reduce pressures on declining species.This comes from the press release about the incident, which may be downloaded here.
Worldwide, many shorebird populations are experiencing dramatic declines. Most of the migratory shorebird species breeding in eastern North America and the Arctic pass over the Caribbean region during the late summer and early fall on their way to wintering grounds. When they encounter severe storms the birds use the islands as refuges before moving on to their final destinations. Hunting clubs take advantage of these events and shoot large numbers of downed birds following the passage of these storms. During the 2009 and 2010 fall migrations, Machi did not stop on any of the islands but flew directly from Virginia to Paramaribo, Suriname before moving on to winter near Sao Luis, Brazil. It appears that the encounter with Tropical Storm Maria caused the bird to stop on Guadeloupe.
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Tracking map of Machi (2009-2011). Image credit: The Center for Conservation Biology. |
Tuesday, September 13, 2011
An Abundance of Mushrooms
The star of the show was this red mushroom.
This was a close second because of its rich orange color.
Some mushrooms were tiny.
Others were large and cup-shaped.
At first I thought this black cup-shaped fungus was just a version of the one above that was past its prime, but then I realized there were a lot more like it.
This fungus resembled a flattened white blob, like someone spilled dough or batter on the ground.
This orange fungus grew from the end of a fallen branch.
This white fungus looked dainty compared to some of the others.