Young barn owls ringed and weighed


This is a video about a barn owl nest where baby owls are hatching.

Tonight, the regional ornithological society went to ring young barn owls at a nest in a farmer’s barn near the Eempolder nature reserve. The society has been doing this research for 25 years.

There are six owlets in this nest. The ringing should be now, as the older chicks are about 60 days old and will fly away soon. The oldest chick which had been ringed earlier, has already flown away. Some young barn owls which can already fly, will return to the nest to get food from their parents.

The ladder goes up. Five owlets go from the nestbox into the bag.

Downstairs, one questions for the reearchers is: how long are their wings? Are they healthy? To find out, they are weighed. Yes, they are healthy. One weighs 340g.

The rings go around their legs.

One barn owl, ringed in this area, was later found in the Ukraine. Others in southern France and Spain. Barn owls do not have seasonal migration; but sometmes, they fly long distances until there is a place which they like.

One of the juvenile owls is a darker colour form than the others.

The youngest owlet is still downy, while the others are already all feathers. The youngest one is just 43 days old. The chicks do not hatch at the same time.

Six owlets is a good result. The maximum number of eggs in a barn owl nest is ten. This is a good year for barn owls, as there are many mice and voles. Probably, the juveniles in this nest, as it is still early for common voles, are eating wood mice and brown rats.

Barn owl nest numbers in this area vary a lot, depending on rodent numbers. Rodents can survive cold snowy winters by digging burrows. However, in wet winters, they drown.

Even in good rodent years, many barn owls may die. About 80% of dead barn owls found are victims of motor traffic.

Before the young owls are put back into the nest, the nest is cleaned. Probably, the parents will have a second clutch; maybe even a third clutch.

The Namibia Raptor Rehabilitation Research and Education Centre (Narrec) has urged the public not to destroy the nests of breeding barn owls, as these creatures serve as perfect pest controllers: here.

USA: Barn owls have not been seen in Michigan in over a decade, but a new guest at a bird rehabilitation facility in Grand Rapids has ornithologists excited. According to MLive.com, a male barn owl was delivered to the Blandford Nature Center May 21 after being discovered ill and weak in a barn. Initial examinations were inconclusive about what caused the bird’s condition, but poisoning could be at fault. Fortunately, the bird has been recovering strongly, but it is not yet known if it will be able to be released: here.

United States-trained Afghan rapists


This video says about itself:

It was the American General Petraeus’ idea to form a local police force in Afghanistan, a country that is riddled by violence. By funding, training and arming civilians, the Afghans would be able to defend themselves. But is it really such a good idea?

From the New York Times in the USA:

Rape case, in public, cites abuse by armed Afghan groups

By Alissa J. Rubin

New York Times

POSTED: 01:30 a.m. HST, Jun 02, 2012

KABUL, Afghanistan >> Lal Bibi is an 18-year-old rape victim who has taken a step rarely seen in Afghanistan: She has spoken out publicly against her tormentors, local militiamen, including several who have been identified as members of the U.S.-trained Afghan Local Police.

She says she was raped because her cousin offended a family linked to a local militia commander, who then had his men abduct her around May 17. She was chained to a wall, sexually assaulted and beaten for five days, she said.

A number of Afghan women who are victimized like Lal Bibi are later killed by their relatives because they believe the women have brought dishonor to the family. Extraordinarily, in this case, Lal Bibi’s relatives brought the battered girl to Kunduz Hospital, near their home in northern Afghanistan, and filed a complaint with the governor. They hoped for official justice even while holding out the possibility that her death might be the only way to restore the family’s honor.

“I am already a dead person,” she said in an interview, her voice breaking.

“If the people in government fail to bring these people to justice I am going to burn myself,” she said. “I don’t want to live with this stigma on my forehead. People will mock me if these men go unpunished, so I want every single one of them to be punished.”

In addition to stretching the bounds of conservative Afghan tradition, her plight is a test of the government’s willingness to challenge the impunity of the many armed groups operating in the country, in particular the Afghan Local Police, which provides security in Afghanistan’s rural expanses. These lightly trained and U.S.-backed security forces are considered by the U.S. military to be one of the best hopes of improving stability in remote areas, even as human rights groups and residents have linked some to abuses, especially in northern Afghanistan.

Like a number of areas in the north, Kunduz province has become a patchwork of armed militias with overlapping territories. In addition to the Afghan Local Police, who are attached to the government through the Interior Ministry, there are many freelance groups, as well as others financed by international forces to guard otherwise unsecured areas. In the past year, both official and unofficial armed groups in Kunduz province have been involved in abuses.

U.S. military officials said that as far as they could determine, members of the Afghan Local Police were not involved in abusing Lal Bibi, saying they hoped that justice would be done in any case. However, a number of the local authorities, including the governor, the military prosecutor for Kunduz, as well as the Afghan Local Police director for the province, said the men who had abducted her and beat her were ALP members.

Because of that government connection, the provincial military prosecutor has decided to take up her case. There were differing accounts of whether the man accused of raping her was a member of the ALP, but all agreed that his brother was a local commander in the force.

“All of the men are part of the first 300 ALP who were trained by the American Special Forces,” said the prosecutor, Gen. Mohammed Sharif Safi. “It is not the first time that they have committed such a horrible crime. All of them are a bunch of illiterate and uneducated bandits and thugs who go around harassing people.”

So far, two people have been arrested in the case, including Khudai Dad, who is accused of raping Lal Bibi, and his brother, Sakhi Dad, who is an Afghan Local Police member, according to the Kunduz governor’s office and the police officer in charge of the province’s ALP force, Col. Mohammed Shokur.

Not yet detained, however, is the chief suspect in Lal Bibi’s abduction, Cmdr. Muhammad Ishaq Nezaami, who disappeared shortly after she was grabbed.

He has a troubled past. He was arrested six months ago on charges of attempted rape in a different case but was cleared, Safi said, adding that he believed that powerful people intervened on Nezaami’s behalf. However, Shokur, the police official, said the charges were dropped in that case because of lack of evidence.

Lal Bibi is the youngest daughter in a Kuchi family, ethnic Pashtuns who are semi-nomadic herders. She and her family live in a tent in the scrub land outside the city of Kunduz and raise sheep for their livelihood.

Her nightmare began when a distant male cousin, Mohammed Issa, an Afghan Local Police member, started a relationship with a local girl. In one account, he tried unsuccessfully to elope with her. In another version, he contracted to marry her and then could not pay the bride price and fled. In either case, he was thought to have dishonored the father, who was furious and sought compensation.

Although Lal Bibi was only a cousin of the offender and in no way connected to the episode, in tribal justice one possible settlement would have been for her family to give Lal Bibi to the wronged girl’s family as payment, a practice known as baadal. But no tribal settlement was reached. Instead, Nezaami, the local ALP leader, came with armed men to her home and grabbed her, according to her and her family’s accounts.

“I was busy milking the sheep with my mother, and suddenly a car pulled up close to our tent,” Lal Bibi said. “They first grabbed my father and tied his hands, and then the armed men grabbed me and my mother from behind, and I didn’t know what happened and why they were there.”

She said that Nezaami’s men threw her into a truck and took her to the home of one of his subcommanders, Sakhi Dad, whose brother was the father of the girl whose honor was seen as compromised by Lal Bibi’s distant cousin.

She told the rest of the story in rushed gasps: She was chained to a wall, she said, and Khudai Dad raped her repeatedly. Other men came in and beat her.

“I would begin to scream every time one of them came into the room, because I knew they were going to beat me or rape me again,” she said.

The experience is written on her body, according to a report by the regional Kunduz Hospital. “The doctors found signs that she was beaten and tortured,” said Dr. Shukur Rahimi, the head of the hospital. And, there was physical evidence consistent with her account of being chained.

An examination confirmed that her hymen had been broken. That can be tantamount to a death sentence in Afghanistan, where women are considered fit to marry only if they are proved to be virgins on their wedding night. Some who fail that test are killed by relatives to restore the family’s honor.

In interviews, both Lal Bibi’s mother and grandfather said they were thinking of killing her unless justice was done, although the fact that they had come forward suggested that they were hoping that the government will prosecute the men and redress the wrongs done to her and her family through the legal system.

The girl’s grandfather, Hajji Rustam, who lives with the family, seemed torn between tribal traditions that require that a tarnished girl be killed and deep feeling for his granddaughter’s distress.

He said: “Put yourself in our shoes: What if somebody raped your daughter? I am sure when you see that no one is helping you to bring the culprits to justice, you will be ready to kill yourself, kill your daughter.”

Then, he looked over at his granddaughter, whom he has been staying with since the rape: “During the day, she sits and doesn’t talk and is silent for hours and suddenly she screams. Her soul has been broken, and she is a very sad person.”

Not all Kabul regime police in Kunduz province are US Special Forces-trained. Some are trained by other NATO countries’ forces, eg, from the Netherlands (who themselves do not always behave spotlessly to women). The police trainees get a really short police training, certainly not centered on helping old ladies cross roads or on arresting pickpockets or rapists, but on shooting. Thus making them in fact, cannon fodder for local warlords.

‘Bye-bye, Miss American Pie’ – then US helicopter appears to fire on Afghans. Video released on internet appears to show US helicopter crew singing before blasting Afghans with a missile: here.

Afghanistan: Misogynistic Hell Hole Made in the U.S.A.: here.

Good Sandwich tern news from Texel island


This video from Britain is called Sandwich terns return to RSPB Coquet Island.

Translated from Dutch conservation organization Natuurmonumenten:

Record number of Sandwich terns on Texel island

Friday, June 1, 2012

On Texel this year, up to 2900 couples of Sandwich terns nest, for the first time also in Ottersaat nature reserve. This is a fifth of the total breeding population in the Netherlands. The first chicks have already hatched.

The Sandwich tern is a seabird with long, narrow wings, with which it can soar well above the water. The Sandwich tern is recognizable by its black crest and its [black] bill with a small yellow dot at the end. In winter, most Sandwich terns migrate to Africa or southern Europe.

For a long time, bird island Griend was the stronghold of the Sandwich terns. In recent years, this protected species has also settled in other places in the Netherlands, including Texel. Since 2004, there is a breeding colony in nature reserve De Petten. This year for the first time these terns are nesting in two other areas on the island, in ‘t Stoar (an area next to the Petten) and Ottersaat (near Oudeschild village). Unlike the Sandwich terns of Texel, the species is not doing well everywhere. The Sandwich tern is not on the list of endangered species for nothing.

See also here.

Caspian terns in the Netherlands: here.

Minke whales, striped dolphin near England


This video from Britain says about itself:

Short clip of a pod of Minke Whales seen off Hastings on May 29th 2012. We were fishing at the time and what we estimate to be about 5 – 7 whales came up to have a look and see what we were up to. The encounter lasted 15 minutes and this is a 1minute clip showing three of the whales.

From Wildlife Extra:

Minke whales off Hastings & Striped dolphin off Plymouth including video

June 2012. Two extraordinary sightings have been recorded off the southern coast of England during May – astonishing researchers at the marine research and conservation charity Sea Watch.

Striped dolphin

First, an unusual dolphin was seen leaping off Penlee Point, Plymouth, by the sail training organisation Morvargh Sailing Project and has since been positively identified by the marine research charity Sea Watch as a striped dolphin – one of very few live sightings in recent years.

5 Minke whales off Hastings

And then, on May 29, Tim Macpherson, of Catsfield, near Bexhill on Sea, was out sea angling with friends two miles off Hastings when they were amazed to find 5 large whales near their boat. They sent pictures and video to Sea Watch which has confirmed that they were Minke whales – a species not recently recorded in the area.

The confirmations brings to 11 the number of different species of cetaceans (whales, dolphins and porpoises seen off the UK coast during May alone. Sea Watch is the holder of the largest data base of whales, dolphins and porpoises in Europe.

Sea Watch Sighting officer Danielle Gibas says “We have seen an incredible diversity of species during May around the UK coast. Recorded sightings such as these are helping us to understand different species trends over the years – their distribution, and the health of populations. We are always delighted to hear sightings, and to help identify what has been seen. People can contact us as sightings@seawatchfoundation.org.uk or call 01545 561227,”

The striped dolphin sighting

The striped dolphin was in a group of three or four, but only one can be positively identified. The last three live sighting records Sea Watch has are in Porthgwarra, Cornwall in June 2007 with two sightings off the Hebrides in 2009.

Between 2005 and 2010, there were 55 stranded striped dolphins – 23 in Scotland, 18 in England, 10 in Wales, and 4 in Northern Ireland.

Sea Watch Sightings Officer Danielle Gibas said: “This striped dolphin is most exciting! It appears to be a very healthy individual. Striped dolphins are more often seen in the Mediterranean with a population off the Atlantic seaboard of France and the Iberian Peninsula.

“They are very rare off the Atlantic coasts of the UK , although it may be that they are sometimes confused with common dolphins. Sadly we more often hear of dead ones being washed ashore in the UK.”

Matt Barraud, Director & Skipper of Morvagh Sailing, based in Plymouth, says he was at anchor in Cawsands Bay just off Penlee Point having breakfast when they sighted the dolphins.

“We had on board a group of a dozen 13-14year olds and they were just bowled over by the sight. The dolphins stayed with us for an hour or more, tail slapping and jumping. We can’t be sure whether there were 3 or 4 individuals, but it was a magnificent sight, and we will now be including sightings records on all our training trips.”

Minke whale sighting

The group was of 5 individuals swam close to Tim’s boat. At first Tim and his friends thought they might be Sei whale but identified the animals as Minke whales thanks to the white bands on their pectoral fins.

Tim said:” I have seen dolphins and porpoises before, but nothing this large, It was really amazing.”

Sea Watch Director Peter Evans confirms: “Minkes occur fairly regularly in the Channel Islands but are pretty rare off the south-east coast of England.”

Sea Watch is holding the National Whale and Dolphin Watch from July 27-29. Anyone can take part by watching out to sea and sending in sightings or by joining a manned watch or accredited boat operators. Full details of how to take part and of recent sightings around the UK can be found at www.seawatchfoundation.org.uk

Striped Dolphin (Stenella coeruleoalba)

Length: 1.0m/3.3ft (newborn); 1.95-2.4m/6.4-7.9ft (adult).
Head and Beak: Tapering forehead with a distinct groove separating black beak
Fin and Markings: Centrally-placed slender dorsal fin is sickle-shaped or erect. Distinctive white or light grey V-shaped from above and behind eye with one finger narrowing to point below fin, and lower one extending towards tail; two black lines
ID: Striped Dolphins are usually animated; they often breach and bow-ride. Grey blaze and two black stripes.
Food: fish, squid, octopus, krill, and other crustaceans

Minke whale (Balaenoptera acutorostrata)

Length: 2.6m/8.6ft (newborn); 6.9-8.5m/22.8-28ft (adult).
Head and Beak: Slender with a pointed triangular head and single central ridge.
Fin and Markings: A relatively tall dorsal fin, sickle-shaped and situated nearly two-thirds along back. Head & body dark grey to black but with grey areas on flanks and diagonal white band on flippers.
ID: Inconspicuous (often unseen) vertical blow 2-3m high almost simultaneous with fin, before relatively arched roll. Minke whales can be confused with Sei whale and Northern Bottlenose.
Food: Plankton, krill and small fish

Top 10 whale-watching spots in Australia: here.