Saturday, October 31, 2009

Twin Cities Naturalist Podcast: October 2009

Posted by Kirk 2 Comments
Here's the October episode of the Twin Cities Naturalist Podcast. We recorded on Halloween and demons seemed to be possessing Paul's microphone. You can hear it start to drop out and by the end of the episode it died completely. Time to upgrade.

We hope you enjoy this episode.



Last Month's Trivia Answer:
Two people answered last month's trivia answer correctly. The winners were Jamie McBride and Mary Beth Pottratz. The only endemic plant species in the state of Minnesota is the Dwarf Trout Lily. Great job with your answers.

Calendar of Events
These are the events listed on the podcast. If you would like your natural history based event advertised on the Podcast or Blog you can send an email with details to kirkmona (at) yahoo.com.
Minnesota Naturalists' Association Fall Conference: People and the Prairie will be held November 6-8

The November podcast will come up quickly as we'll be recording at the Minnesota Naturalists' Association annual fall conference in southern Minnesota.

~Kirk & Paul
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Friday, October 30, 2009

More Snow on the Radar

Posted by Kirk
A little before lunch a cold front blew though and stripped all the leaves on the trees. We're in this beautiful sunny day right now during lunch but that's because we're sitting right in the middle of the low pressure system. You can see it on the regional radar. Hurricanes are essentially just powerful low pressure systems so I like to think of this as a weak land hurricane and we're in a really big eye of the storm now. All seems quiet but look at the sleet (purple) and snow (blue) over on the Dakota-Minnesota border! That is the other side of the low pressure system.


~Kirk
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Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Carving for Carl

Posted by Kirk 3 Comments

Halloween is just a few days away so I finally got around to carving my pumpkin. Who better to put on a pumpkin than Carl Sagan? I've been meaning to do this for a while. If you're a fan of Carl, why not join the Facebook group who's name says it all, Carl Sagan is a Sexy Sexy Manbeast. I guess I need to wear more turtle necks!


~Kirk
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Here comes the Snow

Posted by Kirk 3 Comments
I took a look at the regional radar at lunch today and it shows something I haven't seen in many months. Purple.

The green and yellow in Minnesota is rain. There is a diagonal line across the Dakotas. On one side, the precipitation is green on the other side, Purple. I suppose this could be interpreted as a good omen for the Vikings but what the purple really means is snow, well, sleet is more likely. Purple means mixed precipitation. The Blue down on the North Dakota/South Dakota boarder is frozen precipitation for sure though.

The line represents a clod front as a large low pressure system moves into the region.

Update:

So by the end of lunch there have been interesting changes to the radar. See that little hint of blue above. Remember that's the snow. Look at the new image from 30 minutes later. Less sleet, more snow. The forecast says it will all be rain when it gets here but snow can't be too far off. There are reports of heavy snow from this system in Colorado. I think we'll miss out on that but weather always keeps you on your toes.



~Kirk
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Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Book Review: The Ghost with Trembling Wings

Posted by Kirk
I picked up The Ghost with Trembling Wings: Science, Wishful Thinking and the Search for Lost Species more out of habit than anything else. I've made it a habit to read any book by Scott Weidensaul. This is a very good habit. 

I knew little more than the title but it turns out the book was so much more than I expected. Silly me. As I should have expected, Weidensaul isn't content to sit in his chair at home surfing the web for information and then musing academic about lost species. This book is about the human drive to get out there and look. 

Weidensaul travels the globe and we get to come along. I admit a bit of a soft spot for Cryptozoology, the search for animals that may or may not exist. I teach a Cryptozoology summer camp and my bookshelves at home hold such treasures as Cryptozoology A To Z by Loren Coleman, The Encyclopedia of Cryptozoology by Michael Newton and even classics such as On the Track of Unknown Animals by Bernard Heuvelmans and Animal Treasure by Ivan T. Sanderson.

Weidensaul treks across the English countryside looking for big cats, he prowls Tasmania looking for the Thylacine, he takes his turn looking for the Ivory Billed Woodpecker. 


Unlike a simple travelogue or a blinded-by-faith cryptozoology tract, Weidensaul examines human nature to try to suss out why it is we are so obsessed with species on the edge and species that elude our knowledge.

Weidensaul's writing style shines through in this gem of a book. I found myself lost in his descriptions. I trudged though the cerrado savanna of South America with sweat bees driving me crazy while we looked for the Cone-billed Tanager. I hiked next to him in the wilderness of Tasmania as he pointed out trees and birds and everything except a tasmanian tiger.

He is a gifted writer and this is one of his most adventurous books. When I finished, I was left wanting nothing short of more time in the woods, prairies, savannas, deserts and jungles of the world armed with binoculars and hope.

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Friday, October 23, 2009

A Rainy October

Posted by Kirk

This has been a wet October. We're now in the top ten wettest Twin Cities Octobers on record. On the snow side, we're the snowiest October in 18 years. The month isn't over yet. I've seen a few flakes in the sky today and more are predicted. Now accumulation, that's still a little ways off.

~Kirk
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Thursday, October 22, 2009

Vintage Snowshoes for Sale

Posted by Kirk

NOTE: ALL SNOWSHOES HAVE BEEN SOLD! THANKS!

Okay all you local readers. Here's a chance to own a piece of history and support kids being healthy and active at the same time. I work at the Lee & Rose Warner Nature Center and we've been teaching kids to snowshoe for over 40 years. Over those years our audiences have grown a little younger and we're looking to buy some new mid-sized snowshoes. To raise money we are selling off some of our alult size vintage ash wood snowshoes. The money raised will go directly toward new kid-sized snowshoes.

There are two types to choose from. First up are the Michigan Style snowshoes (pictured above). These were the work-horses of our program for 40 years. They have been well maintained but are a little heavier than when they started because of layers of varnish. They are fully functional or can be used as decorations for your home or cabin. These come with universal quick bindings attached. We're asking for a donation of $125 per pair. These sell new for around $200. Many of these are engraved SMNC on the tail for Science Museum Nature Center (our old name back in the 1960s.) They are a really cool piece of history.

Speaking of a cool piece of history . . . we're also selling off a limited number of vintage World War II army snowshoes (see photo below). These have never touched snow and are in excellent condition. They are larger Alaskan style snowshoes. They are rawhide laced and made of wood. They are beautiful to decorate a cabin but would be even more awesome silently crunching though deep snow with history strapped to your feet. The Alaskan snowshoes are $175. They do not come with bindings. Of course, if you just want to make a donation so kids can experience snowshoeing and you don't want a pair of snowshoes in return that's okay too!

IN CASE YOU MISSED IT AT THE TOP--ALL SNOWSHOES HAVE BEEN SOLD! Thanks everyone!


~Kirk
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Wednesday, October 21, 2009

The Secret Insides of a Deer Stomach

Posted by Kirk 8 Comments

I'm starting this post off with a nice cute image of a fawn I took a few years ago because the following photos are frankly a little nasty. Consider yourself warned. Put the sandwich down.

One of the things that is so much fun about being an interpretive naturalist is that you get to teach others about the fascinating goings on of nature. We get to learn a lot as we go and we're always questing for more knowledge. Two of my co-workers, Kathy and Bekah, have been on a real deer kick lately as they re-work part of our deer curriculum. They wanted to go into more detail with the kids about how deer have four stomachs and each is unique. You've never heard people so excited about the difference between a reticulum and an abomasum before.

The four stomachs of a deer (and all ruminants) are truly bizarre and what better way to understand them than to get first-hand experience. There's nothing like experiential education. Bekah and Kathy got the stomach of a doe from a bow hunter and decided to slice it up to learn more. It reminded me of the early days of human anatomy study when scientists would go and steal corpses so they could study how bodies worked. This was far more ethical though quite possibly also more olfactorily offensive. Of course, I had to photograph everything so you could come along for the journey.


Pictured above are the four stomachs all laid out as we got them. They had been on ice all weekend waiting for us on Monday when we got to work. The main chamber, the rumen, is closest to the camera. It is divided into two lobes. The other sections are considerably smaller and mostly in the upper left. We decided to slice the whole thing open and take a look inside.

It is hard to really express the smell at this point. It was bad before we sliced it open. It was even worse once the chyme inside was exposed. Liberal use of a garden hose to constantly wash off the parts later in the process was only marginally helpful. I had olfactory hallucinations about this smell for a couple of days whenever I would look at these photos. There was some gagging and taking of breaks throughout this process but no one lost their lunch.

Speaking of lunch, you can see the deer has been dining on acorns, corn and at this point in the year, a fair amount of grazed food such as grass. The deer haven't switched to as heavy of a browsed diet yet. I imagine it would look different at that point. I have seen deer before that were hit by cars and their stomachs were essentially full of nothing but corn. Below is most of the rumen content laid out in a pile. Deer actually have a smaller rumen than other ruminants (a cow's rumen can hold up to 50 gallons!) but this was still a massive amount of partially broken down food. Keep in mind, this pile is HALF of the rumen contents!

The rumen is essentially a storage tank for the deer. They graze or browse to fill up and then retreat to a more secluded spot to process the food. The deer regurgitates food from the rumen so it can ruminate or "chew the cud." The cud is further ground up by chewing on it thus increasing the surface area. Microbes from the stomach are regurgitated as well. They become further mixed in with the food and then everything is re-swallowed. The thought of sitting around chewing on this stuff is one of the most vile things I can think of. Deer must have some of the worst breath in the animal kingdom. I honestly think drinking purified skunk scent with a hint of urine would give you better breath. Here's Bekah holding the four stomachs after they were washed out. The smell was clearly still overpowering. Incidentally, the yellow glove look is "in" this fall.


The microbes in a deer's rumen help break down the food. It is interesting to note that while the deer itself does not technically "digest" much food in the rumen, the microbes do. They break down cellulose and starch into volatile fatty acids. It is estimated that deer can get as much as 40% of their energy needs by absorbing the breakdown products of the microbes though the wall of the rumen. That's pretty impressive for what is essentially a holding tank that doesn't technically do any digestion. In the photo below, Kathy is posing with half of the rumen turned inside out. You have to be pretty excited about biology to smile with a deer rumen that close to your nose. While the outside is smooth, the inside is covered with thousands of little flaps.


These flaps are called papillae. The papillae greatly increase the surface area of the rumen and aid in the absorbtion of the fatty acids. I know, you want a close up photo of the papillae don't you? Don't say I never give you anything.

After the rumen, the chyme moves to the reticulum. This is one of the coolest looking structures and completely unexpected when you see the reticulum from the outside. The interior surface looks like a honeycomb.. The reticulum is essentially a specialized part of the rumen that works like a strainer. Food is passed back and forth between the rumen and the reticulum. Large pieces stay in the rumen so they can be further broken down and maybe even chewed as cud while food that is small enough can pass onto the next section.

Up next is the Omasum. The omasum can be thought of as a sponge. The chyme in the rumen has to have a lot of water mixed in to keep it the right consistency. The omasum removes about 65% of the water. It will mostly be replaced by stomach acid in the next section. The entire omasum is pictured below so you can see it isn't all that large. You can see all the folds to increase surface area. There are some little flaps like in the rumen as well. Some nutrients are absorbed here but that is not the primary function. It seemed to be to be rather tube shaped.

Finally, we reach the last of the stomachs, the Abomasum. This section is very smooth with long folds. If we compare a deer to a human, the abomasum is the most like our stomach. I'm going to digress here and suggest anyone looking to go on a diet should simply click on this photo below to enlarge it and then bookmark the photo. Whenever you have the urge to eat simply look at this photo and you'll lose all desire to eat.

All the previous steps are complex food processors getting it all ready for the abomasum. Here, acids help break down fats, carbohydrates, and proteins and the food so they can be absorbed. Another completely fascinating thing that happens here involves the microbes that were busy breaking down food in the rumen. Some of them invariably get passed into the abomasum along with the food. They die instantly from the acid. The deer can then absorb the nutrients from the microbe bodies. It is estimated that deer receive as much as 90% of the amino acids they need by digesting the microbes!

When we were done examining the stomachs we saved some samples to embed in a clear plastic resin so we can teach kids about them without the stench. Lucky for the kids, the stomach parts don't smell once encased in plastic.

~Kirk

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Monday, October 19, 2009

Top Ten Nature Time Lapse Videos

Posted by Kirk
I've searched the web for the ten best time-lapse videos that show off the incredible workings of our universe. Enjoy. Please vote for your favorite in the comments!

Time lapse video of the Simi Valley fire in California, September 28-29th 2005.



Time lapse video of a huge Amanita muscaria mushroom growing in someone's back yard.


Time lapse video of the Galactic Center of the Milky-way crossing the night sky at the Texas Star Party.


Time lapse video of ants eating a dead lizard. This is nature's recycling in action.


The best aurora time lapse I have seen. An entire night compressed into four minutes. Be sure to check out how much they light up the landscape.


The ubiquitous flowers blooming time lapse.


One year on the Ice. A time lapse showing a year's worth of changes in Antarctica.


One month of coastal erosion in Alaska. This is global warming in action. You can actually watch the thawing land wash into the sea.


The Great Arctic Ice Melt. Only part of this is time-lapse but it shows the impressive change that occurs from winter to summer in the Arctic.


Stunning time lapse of landscapes, sunrise, weather and stars from Japan. Available in HD too!



There you have it. Now scroll back up to the top where the comments link is and let me know which one is your favorite!

~Kirk
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Thursday, October 15, 2009

I and the Bird #111: South With the Fall

Posted by Kirk 5 Comments

In 1951, naturalist Edwin Way Teale wrote North With the Spring as he drove north following spring as it brought warmth to the land. In 1953 he wrote Autumn Across America as he drove from coast to coast. For the fifty five years since that book came out, Autumn has continued to descend from the north until it reaches south where its presence is known only by the changing birds. In this, the fifty-sixth autumn since Autumn Across America, I present South With the Fall, the one hundred and eleventh edition of I and the Bird. This is a collection of bird related writings from around the world in the past two weeks. Like autumn descending from the north we too shall head southward on our journey. Let's begin our migration shall we?

• White Rock Beach, British Columbia: 49.0° North
To start things off, Susannah, a.k.a. the Wanderin' Weeta took a trip down to White Rock Beach to photograph gulls and lure them into a life of high cholesterol by feeding them cheese.

• Point Pelee, Ontario: 47.97° North •
Just a few degrees to the south, Bob blogs about the 2009 Ontario Field Ornithologists annual convention. He gives an exhaustive report and don't worry, there are plenty of photos of people looking at birds. You know the ones.

• Carpenter Nature Center, Hastings, Minnesota: 44.8° North •
Half-way across the continent, and a little further south, Sharon Stiteler a.k.a. Birdchick captures the last hurrah of fall with flickers and bluebirds at Carpenter Nature Center.

• Sacramento National Wildlife Refuge: 39.41° North
Jumping back to the East coast of north America, Larry Jordan of The Birder's Report gives us a gorgeous overview of the avifauna of the Sacramento National Wildlife Refuge.

• Brigantine Division of the Edward B. Forsythe National Wildlife Refuge, New Jersey 39.41° North •
Curious what migration is like over at the exact same latitude on the East Coast, we join up with Corey of 10,000 Birds who spins a highly caffeinated yarn about a legendary birding spot.

• Knoxville Tennessee: 38.98° North •
In our strange yet ever southward migration, we wing our way back east to Tennesee where Vickey Henderson takes a break for a red-bellied woodpecker and marvels at the enormous fruit one wolfs down.

• Cape May New Jersey: 38.92° North •
Skipping back to the east coast again we join John Beetham who's doing a little raptor banging in Cape May.

• Cape Hatteras National Seashore, North Carolina: 35.25° North •
Newly banded and heading south down the Atlantic Flyway, we stop to talk with Nate of the Drinking Bird as he takes on the contentious issue of Off Road Vehicles. We also learn that Piping Plover tastes like chicken.

• Santa Fe Dam, California: 35.17° North •
Bob Kaufman revels in the schadenfreude of birding (as we engage in a sadistic migratory trek back to the Pacific flyway) but in the end, Two Wrens Make it Right.

Akrotiri Salt Flats, Cyrpus: 35.00° North •
We can of course can justify a 7349 mile detour to Cyprus since we're still technically traveling south. While there, Dan spots some black storks in Cyprus, which is not to be confused with seeing black storks in a Cypress which would just be strange.

• Dallas Texas; 32.78 North •
We head on back to Texas where Jason M Hogle has been keeping an eye on a set of cooper hawk triplets and we learn about one aptly named Trouble.

• Port Aransas, Texas: 27.83° North •
Amber Coakley over at birders lounge took a trip to Port Aransas and took some wonderful shots of animals. Seriously though, which one of you was feeding the Egret single malt scotch?

And so it is we finally cross the Tropic of Cancer at 23.5° North. We continue on south. Though the lush green tricks us into thinking that it is not fall, the migrating birds tell us otherwise.

• Xalapa, Mexico: 19.53° North •
Rick Wright takes a stroll though Xalapa’s Parque Natura on his last day at the 2009 ABA River of Raptors Conference and revels in being the only human out for a stroll with the morning birds.

• Veracruz, Mexico 19.2° North •
Alison Beringer takes pause looking at her husband's photos from the ABA River of Raptors Conference and at first doesn't recognize an old friend in shabby clothes.

• Panama: 9.00° North •
Jan Axel birds the Pipeline Road in Panama and spots fantastic birds that never see their way to the north. (Note to self, must go back to Panama.)

• Singapore: 1.36° North •
Meanwhile on the other side of the world, Jason Cho & Wang Luan Keng of the Bird Ecology Study Group discuss feather condition of a White-rumped Shama. It reminds me a lot of my How old's that Thrasher? post from last spring. Two birds, different sides of the earth, same idea.

• Tanzania: 3.23° South •
We're already heading south so why not keep going? Birdman decides he needs to tackle a light subject like The History of Birding.

• Gippsland, Australia: 37° South •
Meanwhile, Duncan of Ben Chuachan-Natural History, gets herded by a female duck while on a stroll.

• Bird Island, South Georgia: 54.00° South
Finally, we end our journey appropriately at the other end of the world from where we started and talking about one of the great long-distance flyers. Greg Laden gives us a nice review of black-browed albatross research using tiny cameras strapped to the birds.

Thanks so much for stopping by everyone. If you enjoyed this installment of I and the Bird please consider becoming a follower of the Twin Cities Naturalist through Google Reader, Networked Blogs, Email or simply by bookmarking the site and coming back. I'll leave you with some thoughts from Edwin Way Teale's Autumn Across America. ""Driving with infinite regret, away from the cony heights that night we seemed to be very close to one of the pioneer naturalists who had followed the westward trail more than a century before. No one but a naturalist, he had observed, can know the joy of a new discovery in the wild. And no one but a naturalist can know the sadness of having to leave so soon the thing so much enjoyed."

~Kirk
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Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Pitcher Plants as Nature's Toilets

Posted by Kirk 4 Comments
A post over at Zoologix brought the pitcher plant species Nepenthes lowii a.k.a. Low's Pitcher Plant to my attention. It is a pitcher plant that grows in Borneo and scientists have discovered a fascinating relationship between the plant and tree shrew. The plant produces a sweet nectar that attracts the shrews. This creation of nectar is not unusual. Many pitcher plants use attractants to lure animals to their deaths. Nepenthes lowii however, lures tree shrews to the plant not to trap and eat them but in order to collect their feces. Yup, you read that right. Evolutionary selection pressures have created a perfect toilet for tree shrews.

The plants attract the shrews who come to feed and they in turn make a deposit into the pitcher of the plant. The droppings are rich in nitrogen which the plants need to grow. The details were outlined in the paper, Tree shrew lavatories: a novel nitrogen sequestration strategy in a tropical pitcher plant by Charles M. Clarke, Ulrike Bauer, Ch'ien C. Lee, Andrew A. Tuen, Katja Rembold and Jonathan A. Moran.

I'm always interested in pitcher plants as we have a bog at work and I teach about these unique plants. The plants in Borneo are old world pitcher plants that belong to the family Nepenthaceae. The pitcher plants in our bog are part of the unrelated new world family Sarraceniaceae and are formed quite differently. The two families are placed into different clades and they are examples of convergent evolution.

In Sarraceniaceae pitcher plants, the pitcher is comprised of the entire leaf of the plant. Indeed, there is little more to the plant than a rosette of leaves rising out of moss. Nepenthaceae pitcher plants by contrast are often vine-like and can rise high into trees.

According to the excellent book, The Book of Swamp and Bog: Trees, Shrubs, and Wildflowers of the Eastern Freshwater Wetlands by John Eastman, the Sarracenia purpurea pitcher plant that we have in the bog at work is host to a variety of organisms that thrive in the mini-ecosystem created by the plant. Animals that live in a created host environment such as this are called inquilines from the latin "inquilinus" meaning lodger or tenant. Two of the most common inquilines in S. purpurea are the pitcher plant mosquito and the pitcher plant midge. While perhaps not as surprising or novel as the relationship between tree shrews and Nepenthes lowii, our local pitcher plants are host to dozens of species that depend on them. They are some of the most fascinating plants I have had the pleasure to study and enjoy.

~Kirk

Nepenthes lowii photo credit: Ch'ien C. Lee
Sarracenia purpurea photo credit: Kirk Mona
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Monday, October 12, 2009

Two and a Half Inches and Still Snowing...

Posted by Kirk

An uxpected early snowfall has come to the Twin Cities. We're no strangers to snow here in Minnesota but come on, October 12th? We had a little dusting of snow on Saturday but this is the real deal. I've measured two and a half inches of snow on the deck so far and it continues to fall. The prediction is that it will all melt quickly and we could be in the 60s by the weekend. We usually don't get snow until after the leaves have fallen from the trees.

The red maple outside the front door of the nature center was gorgeous this morning covered in fresh white snow. I love the snow and I hope we get a lot of deep snow that sticks around all winter but Ill be perfectly happy of we don't see any real snow until the end of November. I'm not mentally or physically ready for this yet.

~Kirk
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Friday, October 9, 2009

Name that Junco

Posted by Kirk 3 Comments
An interesting bird showed up at the Lee & Rose Warner Nature Center today during banding. There were three juncos in a net. One was male, one a female and one didn't seem quite right. There are a number of different types of Dark-eyed Juncos in North America. The ones we commonly see in Minnesota are the Slate-colored variety. They are essentially all gray on top and white on the bottom. If you look carefully though you can distinguish males and females as the females are slightly brownish gray on the back while the males are more pure gray.

What caught everyone's eye about the third Dark-eyed Junco, the one in all the photos here, was that the back of the bird seemed very brown but the head did not. In fact, there is no brown on the head whatsoever. The head also seemed to be darker than the rest of the bird but not extremely so.


Our first reaction was to consider calling this an Oregon Junco. The complete lack of brown on the head makes us think male but then again it isn't as dark a black as one would expect. What this comes down to is that there are a lot of intergrades when it comes to Juncos and it can be hard to draw a clear line between different sub-species.

Here's more photos. What do you think? Things to note:

1) No brown on head but clearly brown across back, brown extends slightly onto wing.
2) Bib is convex (like an Oregon Junco), not concave like a Slate-colored
3) Only very limited brown on the flanks




I welcome your thoughts and comments.

~Kirk
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Thursday, October 8, 2009

Water on the Moon

Posted by Kirk
At a NASA press conference recently, scientists with Chandrayaan-1 mission revealed fascinating results from the Moon Mineralogy Mapper. The Chandrayaan-1 is a joint project between NASA and India and marks India's first mission to the moon. Chandrayaan is Sanskrit for "lunar craft." The onboard mapper is imaging the entire surface of the moon in high spatial and spectral resolution. It will also reveal the minerals composition of the lunar surface. Results from the mapping were released today and there's a whopper of a conclusion. There's water on the moon. Lots of it.

Well, lots being a relative term. One of the scientists who discovered the water, University of Maryland astronomer Jessica Sunshine said, "If you took a two-liter soda bottle of lunar dirt, there would probably be a medicine dropperful of water in it." That may not seem like a lot to us earthlings who are awash in water but it is significant for the moon.

This news comes just as NASA is about to purposefully crash the LCROSS spacecraft and its Centaur booster rocket into a crater near the moon's south pole so they can analyse the plume they send up. Backyard astronomers with scopes of at least 10 inches may be able to see the impact (or at least the resulting plume) though their telescopes. Impact is tomorrow morning (Friday) at 6:30 AM CDT.

NASA is hoping to find evidence of water in the resulting plume and the confirmation of water by Chandrayaan-1 makes it likely. Why does all this matter? Getting stuff to the moon is expensive. It costs $30,000 for every liter of water NASA ships to the moon. And you thought bottled water was expensive on earth! If we ever build a lunar base, not having to bring water to the moon will save an enormous amount of money. Water can also be split via electrolysis into its primary parts both of which would be useful to a lunar colony. Oxygen is useful for breathing while hydrogen is useful as a fuel. Water on the Moon is a huge step toward a lunar colony.

~Kirk
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Wednesday, October 7, 2009

North Dakota Dinosaur Dig: Part 4

Posted by Kirk
(Be sure to read part 1, part 2 and part 3 first)

Ah, Thursday and Friday. We're almost at the end of our journey. I'm not posting anything about Friday as it was just our drive home.

After our rain day Wednesday we were itching to get back out in the field on Thursday.

We had a fantastic day. I drank over four liters of water in the field and I was still thirsty. I can see how if you were to run out of water out there it could be bad very quickly. It wasn't even that hot. The week before we arrived they were having temperatures in the 100s.

The arrow on the left shows the view of our van from where we ate lunch Thursday. That white splotch is an 18 foot long 15 passenger van.

Here's the same photo uncropped for comparison. Can you pick out the van? We hiked though this basin and stopped atop this butte for lunch. The spot we're sitting in is relatively flat as they removed a triceratops from this site a few years ago. There were some bone scraps left behind and little pieces of plaster from making a field jacket for the beast. Can you imagine carrying the dinosaur back to where the van is in this photo?

I sometimes read complaints that the fossil record is incomplete. This sometimes comes from those who oppose the theory of evolution. They argue that there has been plenty of time for scientists to find all the fossils they need and transitional forms have not been found. First of all, EVERY fossil is a transitional form since evolution is a gradual process. The "no transitional forms" argument is completely bogus and anyone who uses it shows a gross misunderstanding of what evolution is and how it works.

Second, people who complain in gaps in the fossil record need to go on a dig to appreciate how hard it is to get these finds out of the field. The dinosaurs are embedded in hard rock. First you have to find one, then you have to have the time and physical and financial resources to spend a year or more getting it out of the ground. This often involves taking off layers of stone many feet thick, one exacto blade scrape at a time. Imagine scraping away a whole hillside of hard rock with a dull exacto blade in blazing heat and humidity. Once you finally uncover the dinosaur you have to make a plaster field jacket and then transport it back to a lab (which in some cases means building new roads just to reach the site) It doesn't end there, you have to spend possibly years cleaning and assembling it which takes more money. Once you see the vastness on an area like this and then realize there are essentially two or three people with a shoestring budget trying to find the treasures that have been battered by erosion and covered over for 65 million years and you begin to see how it may take some time to fill in our gaps in understanding. This is still a very young science and there are many millions of critters still waiting to be dug up.

Thursday was all about microsites. Microsites are locations rich in animal parts but not necessarily complete animals. These were often little backwater areas long rivers. As animals died in or near the river their remains broke apart and were carried downstream. These parts all collected in slow spots and when scientists find these today the sites are very valuable scientifically. It may not seem as interesting if there are no complete animals at a site but a complete animal doesn't give us much information about the ecology of the place it lived. In microsites we get a cross section of animal life and that can tell us what types of animals lived together in the same area. Working a microsite means we spent a good part of the day sitting on the ground moving painstakingly forward looking for teeth, turtle shell pieces, fish scales and small limb bones. At the third site of the day I found two dromeosaur teeth but stupidly didn't take a picture. This particular site was still of scientific interest so we couldn't keep anything. It was similar to the teeth pictured here.

In the photo to the left we're heading home for dinner on Thursday. You can click on it (or any photo on the blog) to view a bigger image. The barbed wire fence on the left hand side of the picture marks the border with Montana. I could have spent many more hours in the field I was having so much fun. I inhaled a huge dinner of nachos and encheladas after the hour and thirty minute van trip back to Marmarth. I was very excited to not have hot dish.

I had a great time on the trip and I can't wait to go on another dig. I'll have to though. We need to line up some funding as this was an expensive summer camp to offer. In the mean time I'll have to content myself hunting down an relatively complete ordovician period cephalopod along the banks of the Mississippi or perhaps a complete crinoid. That should keep me busy.

~Kirk
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How to tell how old a bird is

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Today we taught our Fall Migration class so that means bird banding. This was the first non-raining day all week which made for a lot nicer conditions. The lead bander for the day was non other than my co-host on the podcast, Paul Smithson. I took a break during the day to see what they were catching and learn a little more about ageing birds. When I arrived, Paul was taking out the first bird of the day, a Fox Sparrow. This was a treat as it was the first Fox Sparrow at the nature center this fall. I love these big robust sparrows and their feeding behavior. Paul set to the task of gathering information about the bird to be recorded before it was let go. One of the things banders try to determine is how old a bird is. Often the distinction is between a hatching year bird (HY) or after hatching year bird (AHY). In the photo below he's looking at the outer rectrices to see how worn they are.


Here's the diagram banders use to determine the wear on the outer rectrices of a Fox Sparrow. Ideally they would look like one of the two drawings marked "Fall." In reality, that doesn't always work. In this case, the feathers looked somewhere in between the two drawings. He checked a couple of other feathers but wasn't confident enough to make a determination. It was probably a hatching year bird but without enough certain information the age was put down as unknown.
A very different technique came into play while determining the age of all the White-throated sparrows that were caught this morning. In the fall, white-throated sparrows can be aged by looking at the color of the iris of the eye. A hatching year bird will have a grayish brown to brown iris while an after hatching year bird will have a reddish brown iris. The distinction can be subtle and good lighting helps. Can you tell what color the iris is for the bird below? It was only slightly easier in person, which is to say, hard.

I thought it would be fun to include another photo here of a white-throated sparrow. Look at the difference in the heads. There are two different color morphs of the White-throated Sparrow. The one above is a tan-striped morph as the light colored stripes on the head are tan. In contrast, the bird below is a white-striped morph. (The stripes looked even whiter in person)
These are not two different sub-species. They are both represented about evenly in the population. What is really fascinating is that research suggests that the birds almost always mate with a bird that has the opposite color morph. Also, both males and females of the white-stripe morph tend to be more aggressive during mating season. The more aggressive white-striped females are preferred by both color types of males. Ironically, both types of females prefer the less aggressive tan-striped males. So, white-striped females do well and tan-striped males do well while white-striped males and tan-striped females do less well. That's all clear right?

Another fun bird of the day was a Winter Wren. It was the first winter wren caught at the nature center in 2009. I just love that little tail!


That's all for tonight. Thanks for stopping in.

~Kirk
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Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Name the Screech Owl Contest

Posted by Kirk
The Raptor Center at the University of Minnesota has a new Eastern Screech Owl education bird and they want your help naming it. If you think you have a good name for the little guy click on over to their website and enter your idea for a name in their contest. Education birds are important ambassadors to the animal world as they allow a wild bird to come in front of an audience so the public can understand them better.

There are two different kinds of education birds. Some are injured birds that cannot return to the wild. This is often a case of a broken wing or even a broken jaw like the Red-tailed Hawk I work with at the Lee & Rose Warner Nature Center. The other type of education bird is an imprinted bird. This is the case with the new Screech Owl you can name and is also the case with the American Kestrel I work with on outreach programs. Imprinted birds were taken from the nest or found when very young. Usually a well-meaning member of the public takes them in and tried to raise them instead of taking them to the raptor center or leaving them along like they should. The birds accidentally imprint on humans instead of their parents and basically never learn to be an adult bird. It is then our responsibility to take care of them for the rest of their lives.

Go name that owl and good luck!

~Kirk
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Monday, October 5, 2009

Call for Submissions: I and the Bird #111

Posted by Kirk
I'll be hosting I and the Bird number 111 on October 15th. I'm now accepting submissions of blog posts.

I and the Bird is a rotating blog carnival. Twice a month, a different blog hosts the publication of an edition of the carnival. The host collects submitted blog posts on birds and aggregates them into one fun round-up of what people are seeing and writing about. If you have a blog and write about birds then you too can participate. Send an email with your name and a link to your submission to kirkmona (at) yahoo (dot) com ASAP. It is a great way to expose new readers to your blog.

~Kirk
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North Dakota dinosaur Dig: Part 3

Posted by Kirk
(Be sure to read part 1 and Part 2 first)

Tuesday night we heard a rumble in the air. No, it wasn't one of the two nightly coal trains that sped through town about 50 feet from my window, it was a storm. I was dreading rain as it was completely out of our control and would bring all fossil hunting to a screeching halt. This is perhaps a good point to put in a picture of the "roads" we traveled on to get to the sites. These are not roads, they are two-track ranch trails through the Little Missouri National Grasslands and private ranches. Rain is not a good thing for two tracks as it makes them impassable mud pits.

Even at their best, these two tracks are a crazy ride. Both tracks don't have to be at the same height. The kids said it was more fun than an amusement park. It was a lot of fun to drive and it felt a lot wilder than it really was. We paused to take this photo on what was a pretty typical slope. From inside the van it felt like this was an extreme 45 degree angle and we were going to flip the thing. In reality it was probably only about 18 degrees.

It doesn't look that bad you say? Okay, okay, you'll have to check out the video. This was not for people who get carsick! I wonder if this was against our rental agreement? We were listening to They Might Be Giants in the van so that's what you'll hear in the background if you have the volume up.



These were active ranch lands so we often shared the "road" with cattle. They usually got out of the way but the view to the left was pretty common. We often had to get out and open and close gates as we drove along. The rain actually stopped by Wednesday morning but the roads would still be muddy.





Since the back country was impassable, we headed into Montana to the little town of Ekalaka where locals drove by again and again to look at the strangers. I'm glad we could entertain them. Ekalaka is home to the Carter County Museum which has a nice small fossil collection including a large hadrosaur, a copy of the skull of Peck's Rex (pictured to the left), and a triceratops skull. There were other nice small paleo items as well.



Being the county museum it also featured historical items. My brother would have appreciated the two headed calf. Now that's history we can all ogle at and appreciate. Here's a picture for you Erik.

We ate lunch at the historic and sacred native site the Medicine Rocks which locals have taken care of for the tribes by carving their names, two feet high, into the soft sacred stone. Way to go Montana. It was pretty disgusting not to mention horribly insulting. I consider all religion pretty silly but I still don't think it is okay to desecrate someone's holy site by carving your name into it. It would be like going into a catholic church and carving "Class of 95 RULZ!!!" into Jesus's chest over the altar. I found the place kind of depressing.

We finished up Wednesday in town by casting some plastic resin replicas of dinosaur teeth and claws. In the photo, I am showing kids how to add a little natural grit to their replica t-rex tooth to give it that fresh-out-of-the-ground look. Thanks to Doug for letting us work out of his garage as a temporary lab! We learned how to make the molds with real fossils and then how to cast as well. It was a really nice hands-on lesson for the kids in how to do actual lab work albeit in a pretty informal setting. I have lots of other great photos from Wednesday but since they all show the kids faces really clearly I don't think I can use them here.

Thanks for reading, come back tomorrow for part 4.

~Kirk
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