Why It’s Called The Mockingbird
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Why It’s Called The Mockingbird
I made a video! Highlights from a one-day cruise ship organized excursion to Torres Del Paine National Park during my January cruise around Cape Horn in South America.
Maybe one day I’ll have the gear to take video clips for travel videos... but for now, stitching together a ton of short “iphone live” type video clips with a few real clips I took will have to do for the rest of my South America trip. I’m hoping to do more traveling/birding videos in the future (with actual footage... not random mashups of 2 second iphone video clips!)... so please subscribe to my channel so I can finish setting it up! (Apparently now you need 100 subscribers to actually have a channel name...)
The highlight of this excursion?
Stunning weather- the mountains were socked in as we drove up, but the clouds lifted while we were there giving gorgeous photography opportunities... and then as we got ready to head back to the ship the clouds sunk back down.
Also- ANDEAN CONDORS. Stunning views of Andean Condors... wow, what an amazing bird!
The worst part?
Flying on a very tiny little plane for the first time going through angry clouds with dramatic drops and turbulence... but I saw my lifer flamingos from way up in the sky, so it made up for the terrifying aspects of the flight.
Oh, and I’ve started a proper “blog” for my travels and a proper website for my bird art and jewelry... check it out! www.craftybirder.com
A bird-loving scientist calls for an end to outdoor cats
People assume that Pete Marra, head of the Smithsonian Migratory Bird Center and author of the recent book Cat Wars, hates cats. This is not the case.
“I love cats,” he says, calling them “fascinating, magnificent animals,” that seem to have a “freakish love for me.” He’s even considered a pet cat, despite being mildly allergic. “This is the thing people don’t realize,” Marra told me recently at a café near his office in Washington, D.C. “I’m both a wild animal advocate and a domestic animal advocate. If my mother thought I wasn’t supporting cats, she’d be flipping in her grave.”
It’s an understandable mistake. After all, Marra has made himself the public face of what sounds a lot like an anti-cat crusade. For years, the wildlife ecologist has been investigating the lethal implications of cats and urging that pet owners keep them indoors.
Now, he argues in Cat Wars: The Devastating Consequences of a Cuddly Killer, co-authored with freelance writer Chris Santella, the time has come for more drastic action: a concerted, nationwide effort to rid the landscape of cats. (The book is based on Marra’s personal and scientific research, and the views and conclusion are expressly his own and do not represent those of the Smithsonian Institution)…
I’m reading papers while I wait for my flight home and this one actually cited Winnie the Pooh.
https://www.facebook.com/welcometomymemepage/ dont forget
My friends, the full set has been revealed to us!
I love you Archbishop Frank.
@therealvagabird
lightning rats & squawk rockets are very fitting descriptions for those critters...
Progress. Ringed Kingfisher in colored pencil by me. (Also, I have no idea how to do backgrounds! Normally I get distracted or lose interest in colored pencil drawings a day or two in... so I never get to the background. Maybe I'll actually finish this one!)
Curious Sea Otter Drains Monterey Bay
A sea otter floats outside of the Monterey Bay Aquarium with a large drain plug on its belly. Photo: AP—Aquarium Press
MONTEREY, CA — Monterey Bay Aquarium staff arriving to work early this morning were greeted with a shocking view: a fully drained Monterey Bay.
“Our first thought was: ‘Did we forget to the turn the pumps off last night?’” recalled systems operator Tara Lattrop. “But then we noticed our furry visitor.”
Indeed, floating in the Aquarium’s Great Tide Pool basin was a resting sea otter with what appeared to be the bay’s drain plug.
Satellite images of the water draining from the Monterey Bay Submarine Canyon after its drain plug was pulled. Images: JPL — Just Pictures of Liquid
“We periodically drop the water level to do general maintenance on the bay’s rock-work,” stated local marine technician Tad Keng. “Looks like this particular otter decided to ignore the “Paws Off” sign.”
Though officials were initially skeptical that the otter had acted unassisted, and were investigating a guilty-looking dolphin, video surfaced from local diver Joseph Platco that pulled the plug on that theory.
“Divers use the drain plug as a way to navigate back from deeper dives,” Joseph explained. “Out of nowhere, this otter swoops in and takes off with the plug!”
Though he had to end his dive early because of lack of ocean, he was thrilled by the encounter. “I can legitimately say that was the most otterly pawesome dive I’ve ever done.”
But for many visitors expecting to spend the day with an ocean view, the otter’s antics were less appreciated.
“I’ve always said otters are glorified sea weasels, and this just proves it yet again,” said Red Abalowne, a Mendocino local visiting family in Monterey. “They’re not cuddly, that’s one little big lie. Their popularity is way overblown—leave it to an otter for this kind of shameless self-plug.”
“Sea otters need to eat about a quarter of their weight in food every day,” countered sea otter specialist Sendrine Hasan. “As a result, they’re very curious and dextrous—to a hungry otter, this was just plug and play.”
Despite the initial surprise, Aquarium staff took the event in stride.
“It’s another interpretive moment!” mused science interpreter James Kovel. “We’re having a unique opportunity to witness the Monterey Bay Submarine Canyon, which is as deep as the Grand Canyon and usually covered by a mile of seawater.”
“Not only that,” he continued, “but this is a great visual representation of what the planet will look like when the global ocean vaporizes from the Sun’s inevitable expansion during the Apocalypse of the Solar System. Kids love this stuff.”
Guest experience supervisor Kirt MacKay and diver Patrik Anderson setting up to refill the bay from Aquarium storage. Photo: AP—Aquarium Press.
After trading the plug for a piece of kelp and plugging the bay back in, Aquarium staff started refilling the basin from their emergency seawater storage tanks. They expect Monterey Bay to be completely full by tomorrow, Sunday April 2.
Calumma marojezense by Mark Scherz
????? frog from vicinity of Tortuguero in Costa Rica (Oct 2015).
Can’t figure out what it is- ID help please! Closest so far is Hyla rubracyla (very far out of range & not quite right) and Hyloscirtus colymba (still out of range, colors not right… but closest so far and what it was IDed as on inaturalist).
What is this frog?
Thanks @markscherz for the ID- canal zone treefrog (Hypsiboas rufitelus)
STEM fields don’t need to be ultra competitive monocultures that work people to the bone and systematically drive out anyone who is seen as not being able to hack it.
Just because the system is set up in a way that fosters a super high stress lifestyle doesn’t mean that it needs to be that way. There’s nothing inherently competitive about science (except evolution).
Grad school, and STEM in general, should be intellectually difficult but not nearly as emotionally difficult as it is, and yet way too many people just accept it because that’s they way it’s always been.
I’m not saying it should be easy, but we shouldn’t have to sacrifice out mental and emotional well beings, anything resembling a personal life, or just a somewhat normal work/life balance at the altar of Science.
The pressure cooker environment of grad school and science in general is both unnecessary and bad for science. It self selects for a certain type of scientist and drives out anyone who varies from the norm.
But the people in charge aren’t incentivized to change it because they’re products of the system. They are the very type of people who the system was built to serve. When people fail they shrug and say it was unfortunate but not everyone was cut out for this life.
That is bullshit. You do not have to be broken down and built back up to be a good scientist. Science is not war. We are not soldiers. We are curious, creative people who want to understand the universe.
We need to stop trying to patch the leaky pipeline and rather build a new pipeline. One that isn’t coated with acid and pressurized beyond the point of failure.
I’m seeing more and more media recognize this problem. Is anyone doing anything about this? (Seriously, if you are, or you know someone who is trying to improve mental health and reduce exploitation in academia, inbox me. I’d like to cover it for PBS.)
A tweet I read once said “Everyone in academia is smart. Distinguish yourself by being kind.”
I think about it a lot and that’s what I try to live up to in my interactions with my fellow students. I don’t always do it (because I’m human), but I try, and it helps.
In return you meet kind people, and that’s a gift. I like the concept of radical empathy and helping to support others. You can rarely rely on the higher ups to care so much, but you can immediately start making a difference.
????? frog from vicinity of Tortuguero in Costa Rica (Oct 2015).
Can’t figure out what it is- ID help please! Closest so far is Hyla rubracyla (very far out of range & not quite right) and Hyloscirtus colymba (still out of range, colors not right... but closest so far and what it was IDed as on inaturalist).
What is this frog?
Museum people! Can you measure something for me?
If anyone has least weasels in their collections, can you do me a huge favor and get a rough estimate of average hair length (on the tail especially)? Much appreciated if someone could do this for me today! :)
this is the best headline i’ve ever seen in my life, i was just gonna post it w/o comment bc i thought it couldnt possibly get better, but it did
Biodiversity of the Contiguous United States.
I'm in Chile! Pretty waterfalls (Petrohue waterfalls), but so so crowded! Snagged only a few phone photos, didn't want to risk loosing my bird lens doing a lens swap.
Favorite birds?
I’m working on more bird charms for the etsy shop ( craftybirder ) ... but I’m getting distracted looking up cool birds instead of actually drawing them!
So please, let me know what your favorite birds are! (or alternatively if you’re like me and just can’t pick one... what kind of birds do you think would sell the best?)
The three best animals of the short Caribbean trip: Roatan spiny tailed iguana (Ctenosaura oedirhina) Jabiru King Vulture The jabiru and king vulture were seen less than five minutes apart from each other soaring really high above... both were also initially thought to be wood storks (the much more likely big white bird in that part of Belize) and I was just aiming to get a voucher photo, but nope! Two of my most wanted birds for the trip!!