This week in birds - #615
A roundup of the week's news of birds and the environment:
This little cutie is the Winter Wren, a bird that nests across much of southern Canada and the northeastern United States. Some of them spend their winters with us here in southeast Texas. It is the American Bird Conservancy's Bird of the Week.*~*~*~*
Is it possible to unite the disparate factions of the climate movement to defend the Earth? A group in France is trying to do just that.
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A related question might be is it possible that birding could change the world? This new book tells how that might be done.
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Were our ancient ancestors more likely to be predator or prey? Perhaps we have misunderstood much about how our species evolved.
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Red wolves are an endangered species and it is important for us to help them avoid extinction. One way to do that is to help them safely cross roads.
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Balm of Gilead was a fragrant, highly prized resin in the ancient Middle East. For fourteen years, scientists have been growing a tree akin to Judean balsam, source of the balm, from a 1000-year-old seed that was found in the Judean desert.
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A SONAR camera has given proof that thousands of Chinook salmon have returned home to the Klamath River since a dam on the river was destroyed.
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You could be forgiven for thinking that the Bald Eagle has been this country's "National Bird" all along, but you would be wrong. It is only since Christmas Eve when President Biden signed a bill making it so.
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Newly unearthed animal remains in Alaska have offered clues as to how wolves became domesticated and morphed into dogs.
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Many in Auburn, Alabama are outraged that a local developer destroyed the nest of a beloved local pair of Bald Eagles.
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The land that straddles the Finnish/Russian border is being "rewilded" and as part of that project, wild reindeer are being reintroduced to the area. No doubt Santa would approve!
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Musk oxen are being pushed farther and farther north by the warming climate. Will these mammals that survived the Ice Age now be able to survive the heat?
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These sea otters are important soldiers in the war against invasive green crabs along California's coast.*~*~*~*
Farmers in the Midwest are embracing the idea of planting strips of native plants on their farmland to help reduce soil erosion.
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The Massaco people are an isolated group living in the Brazilian rainforest. They reject contact with the outside world but automatic cameras planted in the rainforest appear to show that they are thriving.
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Perentie lizards, native to Australia, are one of the world's largest lizards. The Los Angeles zoo has announced that they have been able to hatch two baby perenties. When grown, they could be as much as eight feet long.
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The last member of another uncontacted indigenous group living in the Amazon died in 2022. What should now become of the land where he lived?
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A surprising danger to the continued existence of sloths is electric power lines. They climb onto the lines and are sometimes electrocuted as a result.
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Humans are too often guilty of failing "see" or appreciate the plants around us. Experts call it "plant blindness" and it could cost us.
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Restoring oyster reefs helps not only the oysters but other residents of the reef and, ultimately, humans as well.
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Finally, here's to Flaco the owl, Moo Deng the hippo, and all the other celebrity animals that enlivened the news in 2024. What new celebrities will 2025 bring us?
So many news stories here and so much to learn. I didn't know there were red wolves, for example, and growing a 1,000-year-old seed is remarkable. I did know about the bald eagle becoming the USA's national bird so recently. It seems odd, since it is such an iconic bird.
ReplyDeleteThe red wolves have a reddish cast to their fur but, like most wolves, they are mostly gray.
DeleteGood morning, Dorothy. Your weekly roundup is the pause that refreshes, crushes and dismays all at the same time! I think I must look forward to it in the same way as a condemned man looks forward to the execution date. Enjoy what’s left of life to the fullest while you may! Climate breakdown is occurring all around us and more and more frequently I see evidence of it in declining bird populations, warming winters, increased flooding both in scale and frequency - and on and on. It is now a fact in the daily lives of all of us. All the very best for 2025 - dealing with an Elon Musk government is not going to be easy!
ReplyDeleteI'm not looking forward to "President" Musk.
DeleteWrens are so cute! I've only seen a few, but I love them. The call of the Canyon Wren is my favorite. Wishing you a wonderful weekend! :D
ReplyDeleteI remember seeing and hearing Canyon Wrens on our trips to New Mexico. They are marvelous little birds, a great representative of the wren family.
DeleteThe celebrity animals bring widespread attention to nature, and so I salute them.
ReplyDeleteI did not realize the Bald Eagle has not long been our official national bird.
I know. I think it has long been common belief that the Bald Eagle was the national bird.
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