Sunday, November 17, 2013

Science Daily - November 4, 2013

Elusive Bay Cat Caught On Camera


Bay cat, Pardofelis badia. Until now, the bay cat (Pardofelis badia) had been recorded on camera traps just a handful of times in its Borneo forest home and was only photographed in the wild for the first time in 2003. (Credit: Copyright Oliver Wearn, SAFE Project.)

Elusive bay cat caught on camera

Science Daily - November 8, 2013


High Bat Mortality from Wind Turbines


High bat mortality from wind turbines

Science Daily - November 14, 2013

Laysan duck with ducklings. (Credit: Jimmy Breeden)

World's Most Irreplaceable Protected Areas Identified


World's most irreplaceable protected areas identified

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Michigan Audubon connecting birds and people - November 8, 2013

Featuring: The Green-winged Teal
One of the smallest ducks of North America

Breeding Grounds
The teal spends its summer in most of Canada, along with states such as Alaska, Montana, North Dakota, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan and Maine.
                               
Migration Range
The Green-winged Teal migrates through the midline of the U.S. including Nebraska, Kansas, Missouri, Iowa, Illinois, Indian, southern parts of Michigan, Ohio, Kentucky, West Virginia and Pennsylvania.  The duck has a year-round range in the western portion of the U.S. in Wyoming, Idaho, Utah and Colorado.

Wintering Grounds
The duck winters in all of the southern states in the U.S. along with Mexico and islands in the Caribbean.

Size & Shape
The duck displays a short neck and bill. As one of the smallest ducks in North America the Green-winged Teal only measures around 12.2 to 15.4 inches in length, with a wingspan around 20.5 to 23.2 inches and weighs 4.9 to 17.6 ounces.

Coloring

MaleMale_GWTL 2
The male has a chestnut colored head with a patch that goes from the eyes to the nape of the neck that is an iridescent green to purple. The chest is a brownish-pink color with small black spots while the back, sides and flanks are wavy grey with a white wing bar. The wing coverts are a brownish grey color with a hint of green.  Both the bill and feet are grey.
Female_GWTL
Female
Less vibrantly colored than the males, females display a molted brown all over with a green wing patch and a dark brown line that extends from the bill through the eye.  Like the male, the bill is also grey but the feet are olive grey to brownish grey. The female is slightly smaller than the male.

Habitat
Green-winged Teals prefer small, shallow permanent ponds, marshlands and marshy lakes near boreal forests that boast an abundance of emergent vegetation.  They can also be found during the breeding season in the prairie pothole country or in areas with dense emergent vegetation.

Food
The dabbler duck eats the seeds of sedges, smartweeds, pondweeds, grasses, aquatic insects, mollusks, crustaceans and tadpoles. Young teal consume insects.

Behavior
The Teal is an early migrants and can be observed flying south in large flocks. The males depart before the females.  Female Green-wined Teals work together to protect broods from predators such as skunks and crows.

Sound
Males are more vocal than females and are known for their high-pitched preep-preep call.  Females give off a sharp high quack noise when flushed.

Conservation Status
Least Concern. In 1962, the Green-winged Teal population hit an all time low of 722,000 birds, since then their population has been steadily increasing and in 2009, the duck hit an all time high of 3.4 million individual ducks.

Interesting Facts

  • Young Green-winged Teals have the fastest growth rate of all ducks.
  • According to Cornell Lab, “The American and Eurasian forms of the Green-winged Teal were formerly considered different species. The Eurasian teal differ from the American by lacking the vertical white shoulder stripe and having a horizontal white stripe along the back instead. Eurasian teal show up casually each year along both the Pacific and Atlantic coasts.”
  • The duck is among the fastest game bird capable of flying 60 MPH but more often is clocked at 50 MPH.
Your Bird Crew,
MAS_Logo_4c_edited_small web

Thursday, November 7, 2013

Transitions

I will never fully appreciate the depth of God's creation. In just my small yard, there are flora and fauna, large and small. Some are obvious like the oaks, the ferns, the squirrels and chickadees. But there are also slugs and microbes, bacteria and lichen that escape my vision.

At this time of the year the cycle of decomposition holds forth. The supple, green leaves have hardened, died and fallen to the ground. The summer birds have long departed, leaving nectar and seeds uneaten to rot in the feeders.

The light of day shortens and darkness dominates. All of creation is preparing for the arrival of winter, those long white months of silence. I too, am getting ready. Gone are the sandals, replaced by heavy socks and boots. The coats come out frequently now; even warm autumn days have a tinge of winter chill in its breath.

Despite all the work needed to prepare for the snow, I find my own movement slowing down; a seasonal change to align with the quiet that the thick layer of snow brings. Even the rain has changed. It sounds colder now; the pitter-patter of summer sprinkles has given way to heavy thuds on the roofs and ground. Autumn in all her color is only a gateway to the somber arrival of winter. The cycle of new birth and growth has passed. It's time to sit back and rest.