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These Acrobatic Beach Hoppers Shred All Night Long | Deep Look Video

March 11, 2021

[Posted by Chuck Almdale. Thanks to Prof. Karen Martin of Pepperdine U. and Lu Plauzoles for this.]

As the sun sets, hordes of tiny crustaceans called beach hoppers –– also known as sand hoppers –– emerge from underground burrows to frolic and feast. They eat so much decaying seaweed and other beach wrack that by morning all that’s left are ghostly outlines in the sand.

[Note: Two of the things I learned from this video: why they deserve the name “hopper;” why Say’s and Black Phoebes spend so much time on the beach.]

NOTE – Link to how this film was made: Article on Patreon.com

Night falls, and the beaches come alive with sand hoppers – hungry, jumping shrimp-like creatures that look a lot like giant translucent fleas. No, it’s not a horror movie, and these animals “don’t bite or suck your blood. They’re much more than fleas,” says Jenny Dugan of the Marine Science Institute at UC Santa Barbara. Through her research on sandy beach ecology, Dugan has spent years developing a respect for beach hoppers and their under-appreciated ecological role.

The small crustaceans, sometimes as large as two inches, are remarkably in tune with the tides. The mature adult beach hoppers only emerge from their burrows at night when the tide is retreating – which is the best time to find fresh kelp, and less of a risk being seen by predators.

This is another installment of the PBS Deep Look series. If no film or link appears in this email, go to the blog to view it by clicking on the blog title above. If the film stops & starts in an annoying manner, press pause (lower left double bars ||) to let it buffer and get ahead of you.   [Chuck Almdale]

 

Wild birds: Salmonella, conjunctivitis & feeders

March 9, 2021

[Posted by Chuck Almdale]

Tufted Titmouse eats snowman head (US FWS photo)

The following information appeared in an email from Pasadena Audubon Society.

Salmonella outbreak affecting songbirds.

News has been circulating about a salmonella outbreak affecting our songbirds in California.
Here’s what you need to know.

  • Pine Siskins are the most affected by the current outbreak, followed by their close relatives, goldfinches. The outbreak is more centered on Northern California, though some deaths have been reported around the Los Angeles area.
  • Salmonella is primarily transmitted through feces.
  • Crowding at feeders increases the rate of transmission.
  • Birders can help reduce disease transmission by removing all feeders and baths that Pine Siskins and goldfinches are using. These outbreaks typically end when Pine Siskins migrate out of the area usually around late March or April.
  • Hummingbird feeders can stay up as long as the finches don’t use them. 
  • Feeders and bird baths should always be kept clean. This will also limit the spread of conjunctivitis in House Finches (CA DFW which is also being reported. A thorough weekly cleaning is recommended.
  • Report any sick or dead birds to CA Fish & Wildlife so that they can continue to monitor the situation.
  • Read more on salmonellosis from CA Fish & Wildlife.

The best way to feed wild birds is by planting native plants!

Consider buckwheat, sages and bush sunflower. The birds will visit your yard but will be maintaining a healthy social distance. Your garden will not only provide seeds for our birds, but will also allow native insects to find their host plants and produce the caterpillars which are essential food for nestlings.

Visit Hahamongna Nursery or Theodore Payne for advice and a wide selection of native plants. 

Here’s a useful article from US Fish & Wildlife on feeding wild birds.

True Facts: Deception in the Rainforest | zefrank1 & Weiller

March 7, 2021
tags:
by

[Posted by Chuck Almdale]

The website host is zefrank1, but the person who did all the photography is David Weiller, who has his own YouTube channel loaded with beautiful short films. zefrank1 (I assume) did the amusing and sometimes slightly scatological narration. The photography is great and the mimicry is astonishing. Some of the animals you may never locate. Enjoy. Time 10:18.

What Monarch Butterflies Need | Los Angeles Times

March 5, 2021

[Posted by Chuck Almdale. Thanks to Travis Longcore of LAAS for additional information.]

You can Guide Monarchs Back to their Throne
Numbers in the West have Plummeted. Here are 7 Things Gardeners Can Do.

New York Times | Jeanette Marantos | 27 February 2021

The Los Angeles Times had a full-page article on Monarch Butterflies in their Feb 27, 2021 Saturday section. If you’re at all interested in Monarchs – how are they doing, what’s good for them, what’s bad, and so on — I highly recommend it. You’ll almost certainly learn something new. Click on the link above.

If you’re not sure you want to read the original, I’ve listed a few factoids and excerpts below. Perhaps they’ll pique your interest and you’ll read the original. There’s a lot you can do to help the Monarchs, and they really need our help.

Monarchs breeding in the western U.S. migrate to coastal California. They overwinter in a few locations from Mendocino to Baja. They don’t go to the central highlands of Mexico.

They’re on the verge of extinction. Habitat destruction, insecticides, herbicides — and our good intentions, all contribute to their vanishing.

Eastern Monarchs dwindled from 384 million in 1996 to 60 million in 2019 — an 84% decline. Western Monarchs dropped from 1.2 million in 1997 to 30,000 in 2019 — a 97.5% drop. The 2020 24th Western Monarch Thanksgiving Count yielded only 1,914 butterflies total — a 93.6% drop from the prior year.

Pacific Grove, a famous Monarch Winter sanctuary, saw a decline from 45,000 butterflies in 1997 to none in 2020.

The showy Tropical Milkweed (Asclepias curassavica) you have in your yard may be killing them. Most SoCal nurseries have only tropical milkweeds, which bear feathery purplish-green leaves and deep orange flowers.

Tropical Milkweed doesn’t die all the way back during winter in SoCal, as does native milkweed. That permits protozoa parasites (Ophryocystis elektroscirrha) to multiply on the plants. When the caterpillars hatch, they eat the protozoa along with the leaves. Scientists believe that when a caterpillar eats too many such protozoa, it sickens and weakens the adult monarchs, interfering with their migration patterns, mating success, flight ability and lifespan. Milkweed blooming during winter may also disrupt their migration patterns.

Travis Longcore of Los Angeles Audubon Society and Urban Wildlands Group says that cutting tropical milkweed right down to the ground and keeping it trimmed until April will kill any overwintering parasites.

Here’s seven things you can do, with complete explanations in the LA Times article:

  • Grow Native Milkweed
  • Make Sure It’s Organic – they won’t have systemic pesticides in them
  • Lobby Your Garden Center – to carry Native Milkweed, not Tropical (or Mexican) Milkweed
  • Plant Lots of Nectar Flowers – the butterflies eat nectar, caterpillars eat only Milkweed leaves
  • Don’t Try to ‘Rescue’ Monarchs – raising them indoors doesn’t help
  • Keep an Eye Out – The Xerces Society wants photos
  • Don’t Use Pesticides or Herbicides

All data below is from WesternMonarchCount.org
The Western Monarch Thanksgiving and New Year’s Counts are the product of annual monitoring efforts by volunteer community scientists to collect data on the status of monarch populations overwintering along the California and Northern Baja, Mexico coast (and a few sites from inland areas of California and Arizona). Thanks to the extraordinary efforts of these volunteers, we have 24 years of data demonstrating that monarchs have undergone a dramatic 99.9% decline in the western U.S. since the 1980s. The data collected by volunteers are compiled and entered into the Xerces Society’s Western Monarch Overwintering Sites Database which also includes many historic counts and survey efforts. Contact wmtc@xerces.org if you are interested in obtaining a copy of the entire database.

List of Los Angeles County Monarch Butterfly survey sites
In 2020 only 5 of these sites were surveyed and no Monarch were found
List from an data available from https://www.westernmonarchcount.org/data/

Palm Cockatoo: Why a unique ‘drumming’ bird is in peril | BBC Video

March 3, 2021

[Posted by Chuck Almdale]

Click on YouTube photo above.

The palm cockatoo is thought to be the only bird species to use tools musically – drumming wood to attract a mate.
The largest cockatoo and the largest member of the order of parrots is found only in Australia and neighboring New Guinea. The species is facing a dramatic population decline, scientists say.
Video by Isabelle Rodd

[NOTE: The link in the original posting came from Google and stopped displaying the video, even from Google, sometime after I scheduled it to post. The above link is direct to the YouTube video and should work, dangnabbit!]