This week in birds - #625
A roundup of the week's news of birds and the environment:
The American Bird Conservancy's Bird of the Week is a handsome shorebird, the Hudsonian Godwit. The "Hudwit" is a particularly well-traveled bird that breeds in Alaska but, after the breeding season is over, it may fly all the way to the tip of South America, ending up on Tierra del Fuego.*~*~*~*
The United States is burning. Literally. There are wildfires burning all across the country, many of them in Texas. Meanwhile, the federal government is cutting federal wildfire crews and the consequences of that could be dire indeed.
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Global sea ice hit a record low in February, which was the third warmest February on record.
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And then there is the El Niño/La Niña weather pattern in the Pacific that has its effect on global weather.
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There are thirty-six companies that are responsible for at least half of the world's climate-altering emissions.
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Here is a list of the worst villains who are damaging our public lands. Number one on the list is the Secretary of the Interior. I don't think that is what the creators of that position had in mind.
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Europe is suffering an invasion of Asian hornets which prey on native insect species.
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An executive order by the man whom a majority of those who voted in last year's election selected as our president has called for swathes of trees in national forests and on other public lands to be cut for timber.
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Off the coasts of Seattle, killer whales have been hunting seabirds rather than their usual prey of sea mammals.
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The Bald Eagle pair that nest at the National Arboretum in Washington is expecting chicks - possibly in early April.
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Here's how to garden so that you welcome birds into that space.
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A beautiful bird of the prairies - the Chestnut-collared Longspur.
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The Biden administration had sued a chemical manufacturer to stop the release of a carcinogen from its Louisiana plant. The new administration in Washington has dropped the suit. Presumably the carcinogen will now be released into the environment.
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In some good news for the environment, England will soon be releasing beavers into its waterways in an effort to help Nature recover.
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The funding cuts by the new administration will have the effect of putting elephants and rhinos at increased risk of poaching.
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A new study shows that butterfly populations in the United States have shrunk by 22% over the last twenty years. See how the numbers are increasing or decreasing in your area.
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Those who care about butterflies are stepping up to save the ones where they live. The Western Monarchs in particular have their champions.
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In some areas, Monarch butterfly numbers are actually increasing.
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Nutrias are an invasive species in some of this country's marshy areas. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is encouraging people to help control the population by hunting and eating them.
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Many things can influence birdsong, including age and migration status.
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Unfortunately, this iteration of the Supreme Court does not seem to be a friend of the environment.
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And, of course, national park facilities in many parts of the country are being targeted for closing. After all, Americans don't need or use those facilities, do they?
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The scientists who are attempting to recreate the woolly mammoth have managed to create the...woolly mouse! Well, it's a start...
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Marley, a Northern Rockhopper Penguin who lives at Moody Gardens in Houston, is quite the artist!
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These days it often seems we are surrounded by nothing but lies, but the truth always matters.
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An Ontario photographer captured a twenty-minute battle between a Canada Goose and a Bald Eagle when the eagle attacked the goose. Spoiler alert: The goose won!
I can see the woolly mouse becoming the latest 'must have' pet!
ReplyDeleteThey are rather adorable, aren't they?
DeleteGood morning, Dorothy. I look forward to the roundup every Saturday morning, and get to the end throughly depressed! It is important that you continue to do this, however. When Trump signs one of those orders (he seems to do it all day long) to cut trees in national forests I am sure he has no idea of the environmental impact. In fact, I am sure he doesn’t even know what kinds of trees are present and whether they are useful commercially. The news out of Washington gets more surreal and more disturbing every day. We know we have four more years of this and people are already musing about a third term - or dictator for life. The results of one election in the United States have had dire consequences for the entire world. Stay well and stay sane. All the best - David
ReplyDeleteStaying sane in our present circumstances can be quite the challenge.
DeleteI feel like the butterfly stats may, in part, draw from on-the-ground work my husband and I do each week. We are some of those observers who count butterflies. There is a close association with the number of butterflies we see and whether or not the park where we observe has been recently mowed. I wish the county overseers of the park would decrease the amount of mowing to provide more habitat for the butterflies.
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing this information with us this week.
You make an important point: our desire for well-manicured lawns contradicts our desire to encourage more butterflies and more life, in general. We have to be willing to accept a bit of the "mess" that these critters prefer.
DeleteGood morning Dorothy. I both love and dread this post each week once again. It's SO disheartening. I have been following the Alt National Parks Service since the first time around and it's so heartbraking and terrifying to watch everything we feared start to happen.
ReplyDeleteI find it infuriating and I often wonder if the people who voted for this are rejoicing over the damage they have wrought.
DeleteSo much bad news for the environment these days. Very alarming to see. The villains to public lands article and the 36 companies responsible for emissions are good to know. Though most of us are still using fossil fuels (cars, planes etc.) so we have a hand in this. A shift from fossil fuels still needs to happen. Instead it has gone up.
ReplyDeleteYou are right, of course. To some extent, we are all complicit.
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