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17701  Member Activities / Events / Re: Seasons Greetings and Happy Holidays from the Forum Members on: 24-Dec-10, 07:50:26 PM
Love it! Merry Christmas Carol!
17702  Anything Else / Totally OT / Santa's in Estonia right now on: 24-Dec-10, 04:12:32 PM
http://www.noradsanta.org/en/index.html

Watch out for them "piggy's", they can be feisty!
17703  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 24-Dec-10, 12:19:24 PM
Beauty taking off from Mercury. Yay, an action shot.
17704  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 24-Dec-10, 11:56:07 AM
Beauty is back on Mercury.
17705  Member Activities / Vacations and Holidays / Re: The miracles of Christmas on: 24-Dec-10, 11:46:36 AM
Beautiful story jeanne, thank you!
17706  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: Don't feed the birds on: 24-Dec-10, 08:05:28 AM
Hmmm... my first thought?

Bah! Humbug!



Big HUMBUG!!!
17707  Rochester Falcons / Rochester Falcon Discussion / Re: Pictures from the Rfalconcam cameras on: 24-Dec-10, 07:39:57 AM
B on Mercury
17708  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Don't feed the birds on: 24-Dec-10, 07:32:57 AM
FEEDING birds sounds the sort of thing that no one in his right mind could oppose. In Britain, the world capital of amateur ornithology, roughly half of households put food out for their feathered friends, and it is estimated that around 30m of the country’s birds are given nourishment this way every year. Other places are somewhat less generous, but the general principle holds. Encouraging birds is good, and what better way to encourage them than to feed them?

Science is nothing, however, if it is not iconoclastic, so one scientist, Valentin Amrhein of the University of Basel, in Switzerland, asked himself if feeding birds this way really is good for them. The answer, it turns out, is “no”—at least, not always.

Dr Amrhein’s team conducted their study in the suburbs of Oslo, in the spring of 2007. The objects of their attention were 28 male great tits, each of which was observed at dawn three times, with 16-17 days between the observations.

The first observation took place in the absence of supplementary food. Immediately afterwards, a feeder was provided within the observed male’s territory. Half of these feeders were kept filled with food, but half remained empty. Full or empty, each feeder was left in place for 16-17 days, at which time a second observation was made and the feeder was removed. The third and final observation was made 17 days after this.

The object of the exercise was to look at the effect of feeding on a male’s performance in the dawn chorus. This chorus might sound lovely to human ears, but it is a gruelling challenge for birds. Males have to get up early and, having fasted all night, expose themselves to extreme cold while singing their little hearts out to show females that they are worth breeding with. In general, those males that start singing long before the sun comes up get the best mates and best defend their territories from rivals.

Dr Amrhein expected that males who were being given extra food would perform better during the dawn chorus than those that were not. To his surprise, he discovered exactly the opposite. Those who received food supplements got lazy. He and his colleagues report in Animal Behaviour that 36% of the males whose feeders were filled started singing only after the sun had already come up. Among the birds without this extra food, that happened only 10% of the time. Moreover, the effect was sustained after feeders were removed, for it was still apparent at the time of the third observation.

Why extra food has this effect is unclear. What is clear is that delaying dawn singing is a dangerous game for males to play. The worm is not the only thing caught by the early bird. Fat and lazy tits risk losing out on a mate, as well.   Shocked



The Economist

17709  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: Funnies from around the interwebs on: 24-Dec-10, 07:24:47 AM
So much for the 3 little piggy's

17710  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / The Eagles have landed (VA) on: 24-Dec-10, 07:17:19 AM
(Although they weren't suppose to) From Janet

It’s not 17 Rhodesian Ridgeback puppies, but a woman in Sterling, Virginia came home to find an unusual pair of animals on her front yard when she returned from a morning of Christmas shopping.  Jan Hobbs, 64, discovered a pair of bald eagles in her front yard, their talons tangled together.  Sterling, a suburb of Washington, D.C., is not exactly an eagle hotbed.  In fact, Hobbs says she’s lived in her home on Gordon Street since 1971 and has never seen a bald eagle before, until her close encounter.

“I pulled into the driveway, and when I opened the door, I heard this horrible racket,” Hobbs said.  She described how the eagles appeared to be locked together, flapping their wings in an attempt to loosen themselves from whatever was holding them together.  She speculates, ”They might have gotten their talons tangled.  They were probably as scared of me as I was in awe of them.”

She called her daughter, called animal control, and then got out her camera, capturing the image of the tangled bald eagles on her yard.  However, before the authorities could arrive, the animals were able to untangle themselves and successfully flew away.  There are 680 breeding pairs of bald eagles in Virginia, which is appropriate considering its proximity to Washington, D.C. and its status as our national animal symbol.


Glad they are OK, could have been much worse.
17711  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Wildlife's fight for survival in a bitter winter UK on: 23-Dec-10, 09:27:53 PM
Nature
1° London Hi 0°C / Lo -4°C

It was only a small drama, but it encapsulated many of the downsides – and occasional upsides – which the hard winter weather presents to our wildlife.

A fox was creeping along the shore of the frozen lake, a quarter of a mile away. I was watching it at the London Wetland Centre in Barnes, south-west London – the urban nature reserve run by the Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust – and I imagined it was starving, for as I gazed on it earlier this week, with a panoramic view from the reserve's three-storey Peacock Tower hide, I could see what it was stalking: a bittern.

It had in its sights one of Britain's rarest breeding birds – and also one of the fattest. The brown striped heron-relative (a few of which winter in Barnes every year) would make a decent meal for any carnivore
, and because the lake was frozen, the bittern was standing on the ice far more visible than it would be normally, hidden among the reeds. So the fox had the bittern in its sights, for the bittern was visible. But here's the rub: so was the fox. On the snowy lake edge, it stood out a mile (or at least, the quarter of a mile to my vantage point) and it had not got to within 20 yards of its prey when, with a contemptuous flap of the wings, the bittern took off (it was then mobbed by a mad flock of carrion crows, but that's another story).

The point is, a big freeze is generally pretty bad for wildlife – for almost all creatures, food is harder to get and shelter is at a premium. But there can be advantages for some, and one of them is that predators can be much more visible in ice and snow. It's not just foxes. At Barnes this week, there was also the stunning spectacle of a peregrine falcon sitting at the frozen lake's edge, visible to every other bird.

Walking around the snow-covered, 100-acre reserve with Jamie Wyver from the management team and Richard Bullock, the resident ecologist, it became clear, looking at the frozen marsh and icebound water channels and pools, that different living things have different strategies to survive a nasty blast of winter.

With the exception of the occasional, unwelcome fox, most of the reserve's mammals – water voles, hedgehogs and bats – were in hibernation, or at least, snug in deep burrows. It was the birds which seemed to be bearing the full brunt of the freeze, since, with the sole exception of a species of nightjar found asleep in a crevice in California 60 years ago, none of the 10,000 species of birds in the world is known to hibernate.

Faced with Siberian weather, birds have only two strategies: stick it out, or flee. Many choose the latter, and from all over Europe, head south and west; indeed, the four or five bitterns present at Barnes are thought to have come from the Netherlands. Barnes's own great crested grebes have gone, perhaps to the coast.

Smaller birds suffer most in a freeze, for they lose heat and energy more quickly. The Wetland Centre has three feeding stations which are replenished, but staff rely more on their planting policy: they have planted many seed-bearing and berry-bearing plants and shrubs and trees with birds in mind. The berries have all gone now, but we watched as a mixed flock of siskins and goldfinches flew into an alder tree and began feeding.

In the end, though, casualties are unavoidable: in the last really terrible winter, of 1963, Britain lost most of its kingfishers (though they quickly bounced back). The RSPB has already issued warnings about the number of barn owls
found dead, unable to hunt mice and voles under the snow.

The staff at Barnes are more concerned with smaller things, such as their overwintering warblers: chiffchaffs and Cetti's warblers. They face a hard time, for in spite of a few advantages such as spotting predators, a really severe freeze brings mainly misery.

Cold comfort for some creatures
Winter wildlife: Advantages

Predators are more visible as camouflage works less well in snowy conditions. Icy weather kills plant pests such as slugs and snails, and hopefully, the larvae of the horse chestnut leaf-miner moth, which has been attacking conker trees over much of Britain since 2002, causing them to drop their leaves early.

Mice, voles and shrews can stay alive and well under the snow for weeks.

Fish under ice are safe from land predators (such as herons).

Winter wildlife: Downsides

Frozen water means that fish-eating birds such as kingfishers cannot find food and will starve.

Frozen ground means that many birds will be unable to probe for invertebrates such as earthworms, which are their main sources of food.

In really severe cold, small birds are likely to freeze to death, especially at night. Some species such as wrens will gather together, occasionally dozens at a time, in a single nestbox, to keep warm overnight. Josephine Forster

Cold facts: The big chill by numbers

ÂŁ10.5m was spent on emergency road salt in 2009-10 by local councils.
1,489,730 tonnes of road salt was ordered by councils this year, down from over 1.5m tonnes last year.
2,000 flights have been cancelled by British Airways over the past week.
ÂŁ40m amount of total loss to BA from disruption caused by the weather.
282 extra deaths per day were recorded in England and Wales between 3 and 10 December.
-19.6C The temperature recorded in Chesham, Buckinghamshire, on 19 December – the lowest in Britain.
ÂŁ13bn The estimated total cost to the economy of the freezing weather that began 27 days ago.
21,000 calls to AA's breakdown service were made on 22 December – an average of 900 calls an hour.
7,000 pipes burst in homes in Yorkshire, twice as many as normal.
4m letters and packages have remained undelivered.
600,000 passengers were stranded at Heathrow between 17 and 21 December as snow closed the airport.


17712  Member Activities / Events / Re: Seasons Greetings and Happy Holidays from the Forum Members on: 23-Dec-10, 09:16:39 PM
I made the front page !!!!!!!!!!!!!  clap 2thumbsup

Thank you & a Merry Christmas to All !


 clap thumbsup
17713  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: ABCs of Birds - Z- on: 23-Dec-10, 09:09:36 PM
Maybe Cyndi Lauper?

One of the commenters also thought it was Grace Jones



Ei

 hysterical 2funny laugh mbanana
17714  Other Nature Related Information / General Nature Discussion / Re: ABCs of Birds - Z- on: 23-Dec-10, 08:50:48 PM
OK...I'm putting this one here 'cause the site I found it on lists a Z in the title...no patience tonight to find where we left F or T...from Daily Squee (a cheezburger subsidiary)



"Whatsit Wednesday: Fischer’s Turaco, Zanzibar

This bird is awesome! And I love Whatsits where we know what it is: It’s a Fincher’s Turaco from Zanzibar! But I do have a question about this bird: doesn’t its hairstyle look… familiar? Isn’t there an ’80s singer with hair like that? I’ve been wracking my brain trying to recall who it was… The closest I could come up with is Grace Jones or… Annie Lennox? I know I’ve seen someone with hair exactly like this bird! Does anyone know who I’m talking about?"

Ei


Maybe Cyndi Lauper?
17715  Anything Else / Totally OT / Re: Favorite Holiday Thoughts, Quotes, Jokes, etc. etc. etc. on: 23-Dec-10, 08:45:22 PM
Christmas Pun Punch-line

Entering Heaven Three men died on Christmas Eve and were met by Saint Peter at the pearly gates.

"In honor of this holy season," Saint Peter said, "You must each possess something that symbolizes Christmas to get into heaven."

The first man fumbled through his pockets and pulled out a lighter. He flicked it on. "It represents a candle," he said. "You may pass through the pearly gates," Saint Peter said.

The second man reached into his pocket and pulled out a set of keys. He shook them and said, "They're bells." Saint Peter said, "You may pass through the pearly gates."

The third man started searching desperately through his pockets and finally pulled out a pair of women's glasses.

St. Peter looked at the man with a raised eyebrow and asked, "And just what do those symbolize?"

The man replied, "They're Carol's.
 
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