This week in birds - #566

 A roundup of the week's news of birds and the environment:


A flotilla of Canada Geese enjoying an early autumn swim.

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Some places on this continent have already experienced their first freeze of the season but not us! We're still in the mid-80s to 90s here in Southeast Texas and don't expect our first freeze until about December.

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Speaking of freezing, Antarctica has just recorded its sixth-lowest record of sea ice. And the annual peak was the lowest ever recorded

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Looking into the future - way into the future - scientists say Earth could become uninhabitable in 250 million years after the formation of a supercontinent.

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In our own time, a heat dome has roasted much of the continent this summer leaving a wide swath of it feeling almost uninhabitable.

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Climate change presents challenges to many species and some, including many amphibians, may not be able to adapt.

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The angel shark is one of the world's most elusive sharks but trails of its DNA are helping scientists to find it.

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Here is the week in wildlife pictures from The Guardian.

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Canada's wild horses are beloved by the public but they are having a devastating impact on biodiversity.

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The Bolson tortoise is North America's largest and rarest tortoise species. The length of its lifespan is unknown so protecting and preserving it is a long-term affair

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This is the Long-billed Curlew and its movements can tell scientists quite a lot about the health of the prairie.

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Chinese water deer may be losing ground in their native China but they've found a home in Britain.

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Good news for cows and for the environment: A Swedish report says that feeding the animals seaweed could cut methane emissions

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These ancient footprints at White Sands National Park in New Mexico are evidence that humans walked on this continent at least 21,000 to 23,000 years ago.

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We have two "Birds of the Week" since I last posted TWIB:

This is the Palila, or Finch-billed Honeycreeper, a critically endangered Hawaiian species that was the bird of the week last week.

And here is the BOTW for this week - the Marbled Murrelet.

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Mesolithic-era items found in a cave in Spain show that our hunter-gatherer ancestors were making baskets much earlier than had previously been believed.

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There is reason to fear that a huge escape of thousands of farmed salmon in Iceland could devastate local wild salmon populations.

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Here are a few autumn photos from Lake Erie Metropark in southeast Michigan.

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Is El Niño gathering its forces to zap us this winter?

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Paleontologists in Egypt have found an eight-foot-long whale that lived in Earth's waters 41 million years ago.

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Some American Flamingos that stopped off at Lake Michigan on their migration south for the winter gave local Wisconsonite birders a thrill.

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Archaeologists who explore glaciers recently found an intact 3,000-year-old arrow in Norway. 

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A NASA spacecraft has recently returned home with a cosmic gift - a piece of the asteroid Bennu.

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A fossil-rich desert in Peru is being threatened by human settlement.

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Sites in Ohio do not get the same attention as the Egyptian pyramids but they could be just as vital to human history.

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Every tree is amazing in my view but here are eight that are deemed the "world's most amazing."

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Climate change may be affecting the female-to-male balance in some populations of turtles.

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Rice's whale, a species of whale discovered in the Gulf of Mexico only two years ago, is one of the most endangered marine mammals in the world.

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This little beauty is the Fiery-throated Hummingbird, a resident of high elevations in Costa Rica and western Panama.

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Amidst all the doom and gloom surrounding news of climate change, there may actually be a ray of hope.

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A reminder for residents of Texas to do their part to protect the migrants now streaming through our state. The lights can disorient birds and cause them to go astray and sometimes fly into high-rise buildings.

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And, finally, just because it's my favorite sign of the week -



 



 


Comments

  1. Welcome back, Dorothy, with the reward of an extra long roundup this week. I hope that people will pay heed to the call to turn out the lights on tall buildings when birds are migrating. The carnage caused by birds flying into buildings is substantial, and having destroyed much of their breeding grounds in wildfires this year, it becomes ever more important that we do everything we can to help the ever decreasing populations that remain.

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  2. I'm so glad you are posting this week, Dorothy.

    I think Lights Out Texas is starting to get its message out there to the public. The ideas it promotes are easy to do, and they have a big impact, and everyone can participate.

    I love the article this week about the interesting trees. Trees are probably my favorite living things.

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  3. I bet Texas has such a diversity of wild birds and migrant birds through the yeat that bird watchers flock to your state. Too bad about the extreme heat there this summer.

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    Replies
    1. It is indeed a favored destination for birders for the reasons you mention. As for the weather, well, it is what it is.

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