This week in birds - #553

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

A perky little Carolina Wren just checking things out.

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Climate scientists warned us it was coming and now extremes in the climate contributing to heat waves and severe wildfires seem to be the norm.

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And of course, one factor contributing to those extremes is the phenomenon known as el ninoHe's back...

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One thing which thankfully has not gone away is the critically endangered porpoise called the vaquita. There's video to prove it.

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Hundreds of wildfires continue to burn across Canada but the air quality in the eastern United States has started to improve.

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By accepting the Montreal Protocol agreement, the government has actually taken some actions to curb climate change.

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Southwestern states have proposed a landmark deal that could help to conserve the Colorado River.

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Birds of prey, in general, seem to be holding their own, but that is not true for one of the smallest of their kind, the Kestrel

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Scientists in the United States have documented a new atmospheric carbon dioxide high that is more than 50% higher than the average before the beginning of the industrial era.

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Icebergs as a tourist attraction? Who would have thought it, but it is a strange world we live in. 

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Now, the Grand Canyon is my idea of a tourist attraction. But it seems that the canyon's river may be drying up.

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Avian flu is a threat to the critically endangered California Condors.

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Wolverines had been essentially extinct in California since the 1920s but now some have returned.

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This is the American Bird Conservancy's Bird of the Week. It is the sweet singing Wood Thrush.

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Earth's last great wilderness is its oceans. It is important that we protect them.

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Eastern Phoebes like to build their nests around human habitations and that means that sometimes we are witness to their tragedies.

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We tend to take the presence of birds in our lives for granted, but how did birds become birds? When did they first take off?

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I've long been fascinated by the civilization created by the ancient Mayas. It doesn't surprise me that scientists are continuing to discover more evidence of their ingenuity and sophistication. 

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Is it possible that the presumed extinct iconic bird the Ivory-billed Woodpecker still lives in the wilds of Louisiana? The debate continues. 

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On Hawaii's "Big Island," the Kilauea volcano has erupted once again.

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Some refer to them as "trash birds." They are the birds that live in close proximity to humans, feeding off our crumbs. Personally, I would never refer to any bird as trash, not even the ever-present House Sparrow

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Information derived from the exploration of a South African cave indicates that an ancient hominid species buried their dead more than 100,000 years before it had previously been known. 

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Scientists have managed to drill nearly a mile beneath the ocean's floor all the way to the planet's rocky mantle.

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The Arctic is rapidly losing sea ice and could be entirely free of it by the 2030s.

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Our world still contains many mysteries and one of them is who built the lost cities of the Nigerian Sahara.

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A road being built through the heart of the Amazon rainforest is a serious threat to the region's ecology.

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Have you ever used Merlin? He is an extremely useful tool for identifying birds in the field.

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This seems like the stuff of nightmares: The clumps of seaweed washing up on the shores of Florida contain a flesh-eating bacteria

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Here are some views of the nest of a pair of Red-tailed Hawks and of some of the birds that share their habitat area.

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The Washington Post has discovered that birds and their songs are good for our mental health. But you already knew that, didn't you? 



Comments

  1. Good morning, Dorothy, and thank you for the Saturday roundup, a veritable litany of humankind’s folly, profligacy and downright stupidity, but we are stuck with it now, as we suck the smoke from northern wildfires into our lungs. I mourn the loss of wildlife up there, incinerated in those infernos. Animals are innocent victims of actions beyond their control, with no escape. No evacuation order is issued to them. No one delivers food and water to the survivors. As for calling some birds “trash birds” I too detest the term. Ironically, it is most frequently directed at House Sparrows and European Starlings, two species humans deliberately introduced to North America. If we could read the minds of birds we might find that humans are considered trash animals by them. The legend of the Ivory-billed Woodpecker lives on, but not the bird itself. It is dead as the proverbial door nail, driven to extinction by - guess who - the distinctly unwise Homo sapiens, a misnomer if ever there was one! Thanks again for the weekly summary. David

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    1. I had to chuckle at the idea of "trash animals" and I think you are spot on with that term!

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  2. I, too, think that David is spot on with his interpretation of "trash animal". I've never called any species of bird "trash" no matter how much I may dislike them, but one year when we kept being visited by a sparrow hawk, I did mention that his visits were like stopping at his local McDonald's for a Big Mac. That is sad news about the Kestrel. We had a female stop by once a week for a bath during the spring. She's since moved on.

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    1. In past years, I've occasionally seen Kestrels as they pass through on migration. Since we have bird feeding stations in our front and back yards they probably considered our yard a cafeteria. But it has been a while since I've seen one.

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  3. I like the Merlin app for identifying birds and the Picture This app for identifying plants. Both apps are quite helpful & educational to me.

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    1. Thanks for mentioning that. I have used both of those apps and they are quite helpful.

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  4. One of the things that most took me aback when I became a Texas Master Naturalist was the idea that some plants and animals are considered invasive and must be "managed." I'm still not sure what I think about that. In my opinion, the most awful invasive species in the human being. And no one is doing anything about that awful species.

    I'm completely charmed by the Carolina Wren. I love seeing them in my yard. And the Washington Post is right---I think it was the birds I watched during the pandemic that kept me sane.

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    1. Birds do have a way of reminding us of the essentials of life which has the effect of grounding us, I think.

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