A roundup of the week's news of birds and the environment:
The American Bird Conservancy's Bird of the Week is this little cutie: the Least Flycatcher. It is a small but fierce bird of North American forests that is known for its fearlessness in confronting birds that are much larger than it is. It is still fairly common in the appropriate habitat and its main threat is most likely the loss of such habitat, but its numbers have been declining since the 1970s and there are thought to be only about half as many as there once were.
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Monarch butterflies continue their flight northward. They have now reached as far as Kansas, Missouri, and the Carolinas. Happily, I also saw a few more in my own yard this week.
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A federal district court in California this week quashed the current administration's proposed changes to the Endangered Species Act.
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Unfortunately, the so-called "God Squad," led by Interior Secretary Doug Burgum, has now wiped out environmental safeguards for the Gulf of Mexico, perhaps condemning the endangered Rice's whale to extinction. There are currently only about fifty of the creatures left in the wild.
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Is Donald Trump an environmental hero? One man thinks so. I think his is likely a lonely position.
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Researchers filmed the birth of a sperm whale baby in the wild and discovered that the birth was attended by many helpers.
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The man who helped to write the Clean Air Act in the 1970s now fears for its survival under the current administration.
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Just two months after a set of mountain gorilla twins were born in Virunga National Park in the Democratic Republic of Congo, a second set has been born there.
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A fossil of a pincer-wielding crawler found in Utah decades ago is providing clues to the ancestors of chelicerates, a group that includes spiders, scorpions, and crabs.
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The dhole, a canine species that had been thought to be extinct in Vietnam, has been sighted there for the first time in two decades.
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What can we do to help save the endangered Hawksbill Sea Turtle? Perhaps each of us can play a part.
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This is the Regent Honeyeater, a critically endangered Australian bird. Scientists are attempting to save its song by recruiting some wild vocal tutors.*~*~*~*
Another endangered species, the hermit crab, also has its dedicated helpers that are trying to save it.
Good morning, Dorothy, and thank you for the roundup of environmental news. I am very glad to see you referring to the body of water close to your home as the Gulf of Mexico. That's what it will always be for most of us. How sad that the environmental safeguards have been wiped out and the Rice's Whale is placed in greater jeopardy, as are all the organisms that inhabit the gulf. The Least Flycatcher featured in your introduction breeds here in Ontario, and I can confirm that it is far less numerous than in years past, a fate shared with many other songbirds, unfortunately. Have a great weekend. All the best - David
ReplyDeleteYes, I think it will always be the Gulf of Mexico for all of us who live here in close proximity to it. And it is utterly tragic and unconscionable that the environmental safeguards are being destroyed by this administration and with it they are dooming entire species to extinction. As for the Least Flycatcher now winging its way to you, I can't claim to have seen any of them this week but my neighborhood has been full of migrants passing through. I've been keeping all the bird feeders filled to fuel them as they fly. I've had my first Ruby-throated Hummingbird visitors this week.
DeleteThere appears to be hope for the dhole - a very handsome canine.The Hawksbill Sea Turtle's decline is staggering.
ReplyDeleteWe'll take our hope anywhere we can find it these days and maybe it can even be found for the Hawksbill.
DeleteThat Edward Russo should check his head if he really thinks that. That's absurd. The admin is the worst towards the earth in history. On the positive side, I like hearing & reading about the mountain gorillas. Two sets of twins in Virunga, Wow!
ReplyDeleteThe mountain gorillas were my favorite bit of Nature news this week.
DeleteAll of these news items should be front page stuff. Thank you for sharing it with us, Dorothy. You are doing good work.
ReplyDeleteHow kind of you to say that.
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