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Ten-day-old orphan dolphin is nursed back to health

Tuesday, November 9, 2010 @ 12:11 PM
posted by Sibella

By Daily Mail Reporter

A baby dolphin is lowered into a swimming pool just hours after being rescued.

The mammal was discovered by walkers on a beach near the Uruguayan capital, Montevideo.

It was suffering from injuries believed to have been caused by a fishing net.

There was no sign of its mother. The dolphin is only about ten days old.

Richard Tesore, head of the NGO Rescate Fauna Marina, has been caring for tiny animal in Piriapolis, 62 miles east of the capital, Montevideo. And while his cute charge is a hit with visitors, it seems they must queue behind a penguin if they want to see him.

The Magellan penguin is also being looked after at the centre and has taken an interest in the new patient.

The natural survival rate for dolphins within their first year of life in the wild is 20 per cent.

The death toll of captive born dolphins is much higher. According to the US Marine Mammal Inventory Report did between 1960 and 1993 more than 50 per cent of the dolphins born in captivity within the first four months of life.

Wildlife Online – October 2010: Nature’s Vampires

Sunday, October 17, 2010 @ 08:10 AM
posted by Bipasha

Nature’s Real Vampires: From Leeches to Bats
Vampires are the stuff of legend, but blood-sucking creatures are a real part of nature

With Halloween drawing near, our thoughts turn to horror, and among the most popular creatures of horror is the vampire. Although nature has produced no undead beings with the ability to change into bats, it does offer several species that survive by feeding on blood. Here is a sample:

Four Real-Life Vampires

Vampire finches: You can find these sparrow-sized birds in the Galapagos, using their sharp beaks to open wounds in larger birds, such as boobies, and feeding on their blood; however, they don’t live exclusively on blood.

Leeches: Leeches belong to a group called segmented worms (so does the earthworm), and there are about 650 different species of them. Some live on land, some in water, and many feed exclusively on blood. They swim or crawl up to their prey, latch on with sucking mouth parts and draw blood. Some aquatic leeches will swim into nasal cavities and stay there, feeding and growing. Capable of holding undigested blood in their stomachs, parasitic leeches can go months between feedings.

Vampire Bats: They are found only in Latin America, which is home to three species of vampire bat. Some species feed on fowl, others on mammals, scuttling around at night and crawling up on their prey (in the case of large mammals) or under it (in the case of birds). However, blood is mostly water, so even though vampire bats are adapted to feeding on it, their life is a wearisome pursuit of food: Two or three days without a good feed, and they starve to death. As the bats feed they have to get rid of the excess water they take in while absorbing the relatively small amount of protein they get from blood. So, vampire bats begin urinating while they are still feeding.

Candiru: This small South American catfish, which grows from an inch to 6 inches long, wears its eyes almost atop its head. Spines around its mouth allow it to latch onto the gills of larger fish. Once fixed in place, it wields its sharp teeth to open a wound and start feeding on blood.
The Stuff of Legends: Animals and Vampires

According to some folklore, as well as myriad motion pictures, vampires can turn into bats or wolves, but those aren’t the vampire’s only animal connections.

In Bulgaria and Serbia, people believed that animals had a role in making the dead into vampires. If a cat or dog jumped over a corpse—presto!—the dead became a vampire. The same thing might happen to a cadaver if a bird flew over.

But . . . there was also a role for animals in stopping vampires, according to Serbian belief. If you happened to have a plague of vampires in your neighborhood, all you had to do to find the vamps was put a virgin boy on a virgin black horse and lead the horse through a graveyard. When you came to a grave the horse wouldn’t cross, you had yourself a vampire. Then it was just a matter of digging up the grave, putting a stake through the corpse’s heart . . . and you were on your way to ending that plague of bloodsucking evil spirits. Just repeat the remedy as needed.

It’s not too late – Your gift will be doubled for sea turtles

Friday, September 3, 2010 @ 01:09 PM
posted by Bipasha

There are few things in nature more captivating than watching tiny sea turtle babies digging out of their beachside nests and making their way to the sea. Tragically, in portions of the Gulf Coast region right now, sea turtle hatchlings are heading straight into waters that have been contaminated by toxic oil.

An entire generation of loggerhead sea turtles — a threatened species — could die when they encounter the oil.

Help baby sea turtles now!

National Wildlife Federation has teamed up with the Sea Turtle Conservancy to execute immediate and longer-term plans to make the Gulf safe again for sea turtle hatchlings. Right now, our team is relocating loggerhead sea turtle eggs in the Florida Panhandle to safer waters along the Atlantic Coast far from the spill site. Moving the eggs is risky, but leaving the baby sea turtles to die is simply not an option.

NWF is partnering with state agencies and non-profit organizations to relocate hundreds of sea turtle nests in the Florida Panhandle.
We’re working to ensure that should the maturing hatchlings find their way back to the Gulf, they’ll be greeted as thousands of generations of sea turtles have, with clean water, plenty of food, and safe habitats to breed the next generation of small wonders.

Your gift today will go directly to giving sea turtle hatchlings a fighting chance. Please give now.

Every dollar you give will be matched, up to $75,000, thanks to a generous challenge grant from a Florida sea turtle enthusiast.

The loggerhead eggs are beginning to hatch, so we’re running out of time. Please give your most generous gift before it’s too late. Every dollar will be DOUBLED and go directly to conserving sea turtles.

Sincerely,
Larry Schweiger signature
Larry Schweiger
President & CEO

National Wildlife Magazine: Going for the Gold

Saturday, August 14, 2010 @ 12:08 AM
posted by Hood Family

Going for the Gold

Color matters in the world of the American goldfinch, where females select their potential mates based on the brightness of their plumage

American goldfinch by Gail C. DuBois

IN AN ARTICLE not long ago, National Wildlife asked readers to name which North American bird they would most like to see. In the letters and emails that followed, the number one response, by far, was the American goldfinch. It’s easy to understand why. According to data compiled by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology’s Project FeederWatch, the goldfinch is one of the most common backyard species in almost every region of the country. It also is one of the most colorful. During the warmer months, the lemon-yellow creature can instantly brighten up a bird feeder. Even in winter, when its plumage dulls to muted shades of brown and ocher, the songbird is a welcome sight.

The most widespread of the three North American goldfinch species, Spinus tristis also has caught the eye of scientists, who have studied everything from how the species can survive frigid winters to how it reacts to pesticides and habitat disturbance. Like backyard birders, some researchers have focused primarily on the bird’s striking plumage, and they have discovered there is much more to it than meets the eye.

For the past nine years, Keith Tarvin and his colleagues at Oberlin College in Ohio and Trinity University in Texas have been examining the complex interplay between color, status and sex in the lives of American goldfinches. A professor of biology at Oberlin, Tarvin spends his summers in fields and forest edges where these birds nest. When he begins his research in late June, male goldfinches are showing off their colors in a fluttering display called a butterfly flight. “The males make circles high in the air,” says Tarvin. “Usually one bird begins and it is joined by a couple of other males.” The exact purpose of this sky dance is unknown, but the scientist suspects it is part of courtship.

Male goldfinches have their work cut out for them when it comes to wooing a female. Banding studies show almost equal numbers of the sexes fledge from nests, but males tend to live longer. As a result, the breeding population of goldfinches has many more males, and females can afford to be choosy when selecting a mate. Not only do they go for color, but the brighter the better.

“Color matters,” says Tarvin, who explains the vivid hues of a goldfinch’s breeding plumage come from carotenoid pigments, the same group of chemicals that make carrots orange. The birds acquire this substance from their diet, so when females pick the brightest males to mate with, they are getting not only the best foragers but ultimately the best providers for their offspring.

Color may also indicate which birds are the healthiest. While he was a graduate student, Kevin McGraw, now a professor of evolutionary and systems biology at Arizona State University, examined the potential connection between bright feathers and good health in this species. During winter, he initiated a study of 60 temporarily captured male goldfinches. One group of the birds had a stomach parasite that weakened them; the other group did not have the parasite. When all of the goldfinches later grew their breeding plumage, the sick individuals were a much duller yellow.

Under any circumstances, molting into these summer colors is taxing and time-consuming for goldfinches. It may be one reason why this species breeds late in the season, usually not beginning in earnest until mid-July. One benefit of their slow start: Cowbirds, which parasitize other species’ nests, usually have finished laying their eggs by the end of June.

During breeding season, goldfinches seldom defend a territory and may even nest in loose colonies. The female builds her compact nest in a shrub or small tree, usually sheltered under a canopy of leaves. She lays three to six bluish white eggs and incubates them by herself, while her mate brings food to the nest. On the surface, it appears to be a peaceful scene of domestic bliss. But Tarvin and his colleagues have discovered that all of the youngsters in a nest are not necessarily the offspring of the female’s mate.

“Some of the young are sired by the male that raises them, and some by the guy next door or even the one down the road,” says Tarvin. “In our study area, we found 30 percent of the nests have young with different fathers.” And when the nestlings are about two weeks old, the female sometimes abandons them, leaving her mate to raise the youngsters alone while she begins a second brood with another male, presumably a colorful one.

Once the breeding season winds down, goldfinches begin to lose their brilliance and some people mistake them for sparrows. Most of the birds migrate to more southern climes and spend the winter jostling at feeders or foraging in overgrown fields and abandoned pastures. But when the days start to lengthen in March and April, bright flecks of yellow begin appearing on their plumage, and they morph once again into the bright birds of summer.

South Carolina writer Doreen Cubie sees goldfinches regularly in her NWF-certified wildlife habitat.

 


 

Enticing Goldfinches Is Easy

Just about anyone who feeds birds in a yard during winter discovers that goldfinches seldom come by ones and twos but instead often by the dozens. During summer, the birds visit backyards as well, although usually in smaller numbers. Niger (also called thistle) seed is their favorite, but the birds also devour black oil sunflower seeds. Goldfinches are not particularly picky about the type of feeder they will eat from. Gardeners also can lure them by growing native sunflowers, thistles, goldenrod, coreopsis, elm and alder. These plants are important sources of food, and female goldfinches use thistledown to line their nests.

Yellowstone Association E-Newsletter August 2010

Sunday, August 8, 2010 @ 08:08 AM
posted by Hood Family

 

New Old Faithful Visitor Education Center Opens August 25, 2010
Yellowstone National Park will celebrate the 94th anniversary of the National Park Service on August 25, 2010, with a ceremony opening the new Old Faithful Visitor Education Center at 11 a.m. NPS Director Jonathan B. Jarvis and top Interior Department officials will join Yellowstone Superintendent Suzanne Lewis at the podium. The keynote speaker will be retired park historian and noted Yellowstone author Paul Schullery.

The 26,000 square foot, $27 million center explains the workings of Yellowstone’s 12,000 geothermal features; introduces visitors to the microorganisms that live in the hot waters; and showcases the research that makes the park a rare living laboratory. A special exhibit area for children lets them explore those themes through interactive, hands-on experiments. “We think a lot of adults will get a big bang out of this space, too,” said Linda Young, chief of interpretation and education. The center also features a new Yellowstone Association Park Store with a large selection of educational books, maps, and more.

The building is designed to achieve a gold level Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) certification for its environmental and energy efficient design. It mirrors the roof lines and construction materials of the adjacent Old Faithful Inn. And its two-story wall of windows provides a breathtaking view of the iconic geyser. A Yellowstone Park Foundation contribution of $15 million and $11 million in federal money covered most costs. The Yellowstone Association also provided significant funding towards the new visitor center. This includes funding for the film Symphony of Fire and Water which was developed several years ago specifically for the anticipated new visitor center as well as approximately $500,000 in funding for space and fixtures related to the Association’s educational Park Store which is located in the visitor center lobby adjacent to the theater.

Young invites those who can’t be there to visit the Old Faithful Virtual Visitor Center. It includes some of the interactive videos in the new center and many others, with more being added regularly. “That was one of the things we planned to do from the start,” Young said. “People are really excited to come to the park, and we hope the virtual visitor center will help them stay connected to it.”