Lapwings and geese


Today in the nature reserve.

This is a video about a northern lapwing nest.

Northern lapwings on the meadow to the east.

A shelduck.

Two hares.

33 Egyptian geese, wood pigeons.

A magpie.

16 mute swans.

In the water, three male and two female tufted ducks.

Mallards, a coot.

Background sound: great tit.

In the castle pond, a moorhen.

Close to the drawbridge, now closed because of the breeding season: two muscovy ducks.

USA: corporate sponsors castrate film on hurricane Katrina


This video from the USA is called Roundtable Discussion with Hurricane Katrina Survivors 1.

From the Washington Post in the USA:

Rose-Colored Lens

In Louisiana, Environmental Destruction Never Looked So Pretty

By Philip Kennicott …

A new Imax film about the devastation wreaked by Hurricane Katrina seems a bit incomplete, as it somehow manages not to say a word about the political and societal dysfunction that have made Katrina a lasting blot on the American landscape. …

Why does a film that seems so insistent on decrying the loss of wetlands end with little more than an anodyne lament and some empty hope?

Roll the credits: The film was made with money contributed by Chevron. And Dow Chemical. And Dominion Exploration and Production, a major power company.

Videos of reptiles, and amphibians


Western diamondback rattlesnake

In the German language weblog Tierstimmen are various sound files of animal species, past and present; sometimes with videos.

They include voices of amphibians, snakes, and crocodiles.

And a video of a rattlesnake, of the species Crotalus atrox, the western diamondback rattlesnake.

Eastern diamondback populations are declining to dangerously low levels, largely because of festivals like the annual hunt in Opp: here.

Albino American alligator: here.

Stream salamanders and atrazine herbicide in the USA: here.

Palaeontology of amphibians and reptiles: here.

Videos of sounds of dinosaurs


Tyrannosaurus rex skeleton

In the German language weblog Tierstimmen are various sound files of animal species, past and present; sometimes with videos.

They include voices of dinosaurs and other extinct animals, as they might have sounded (at least somewhat speculative).

UPDATE 2008: it seems the Tierstimmen blog no longer has the dinosaur sounds.

Fossil water lizard with limbloss discovered


Adriosaurus microbrachis

From the University of Alberta in Canada:

Fossil discovery marks earliest record of limbloss in ancient lizard

Ancient lizard offers evolutionary clues

A University of Alberta paleontologist has helped discover the existence of a 95 million-year-old snakelike marine animal, a finding that provides not only the earliest example of limbloss in lizards but the first example of limbloss in an aquatic lizard.

“This was unsuspected,” said Dr. Michael Caldwell, from the U of A’s Faculty of Science.

“It adds to the picture we have of what was happening 100 million years ago. We now know that losing limbs isn’t a new thing and that lizards were doing it much earlier than we originally thought.

On top of that, this lizard is aquatic. All the examples we have in our modern world are terrestrial, so it’s a big deal.”

The evidence offers the earliest record of vestigial limbs—once used in an animal’s evolutionary past but that has lost its original function– in a fossil lizard.

The newly named speciesAdriosaurus microbrachis–is described in the current issue of the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology and offers clues to the evolution of terrestrial lizards as they returned to water.

The fossil was originally collected during the 19th Century from a limestone quarry in Slovenia.

It then sat at the Natural History Museum in Trieste, Italy for almost 100 years before Caldwell and a colleague found it in 1996 during a trip to Europe.

He later connected with Alessandro Palci, then a graduate student in Italy whom he helped supervise, and they worked on the fossil together.

The researchers soon realized the lizard’s front limbs were not formed during development.

“There was a moment when I said, ‘I think we stumbled on a new fossil illustrating some portion of the aquatic process of losing limbs,'” said Caldwell.

“There are lots of living lizards that love to lose their forelimbs and then their rearlimbs, but we didn’t know it was being done 100 million years ago and we didn’t know that it was happening among groups of marine lizards.”

The researchers think this snake-like lizard was about 10 to 12 inches long, had a small head perched on an elongated neck, body and tail and relatively large and well-developed rear limbs.

All bones of the forearm, including the hands and digits were not formed during development.

“For some oddball reason the forelimbs were lost before the rear limbs when you would think it would be the opposite,” said Caldwell. “The front limbs would be useful for holding onto dinner or digging a hole but it must be developmentally easier to get rid of the forelimbs.”

The most well known ancient fossil snakes also kept their hind limbs.

Living lizards also show almost every variation in limb reduction from a perfectly formed back limb with no forelimb, or a spike for a forelimb and one or two toes on the rearlimb, to total limblessness.

This degree of variation makes it very difficult to understand the pattern of evolutionary limb loss in these animals.

“This discovery is one more data point that might help us answer some questions and perhaps shed some light on the fin to limb transition, which is a key step in the evolution of land animals,” said Caldwell. “It doesn’t give us all the answers but it’s a start.”

###

For more information, please contact:
Dr. Michael Caldwell, Faculty of Science
University of Alberta, (780)492-3458

Live webcams at birds’ nests in The Netherlands


Little owl

From the March 2007 newsletter of BirdLife in The Netherlands:

In the beginning of April, Vogelbescherming Nederland will start with real live webcams at nests of six bird species: white stork, peregrine falcon, kestrel, little owl, swift and barn swallow. …

The webcams have been put there long before the start of the breeding season, so they do not disturb the birds.

More spoonbills and purple herons breeding in The Netherlands


Spoonbill

From the March 2007 newsletter of BirdLife in The Netherlands:

1857 couples in 30 colonies of spoonbills bred in our country in 2006, Werkgroep Lepelaar says.

As far as we know, there have never ever been that many!

In the late 1980s, the number slowly rose to about 500 couples, and in less than ten years later, it was over 1000.

After this, there were ups and downs; more ups, however.

By far the biggest growth was in the Wadden region.

In 2006, the biggest colonies were on Texel (De Geul 339 couples), Vlieland (227) and Schiermonnikoog (208)

Not in the Wadden region, many spoonbills nested at Oostvaardersplassen (217) and on Voorne (184).

The population growth extended to the coastal regions of Belgium (19 couples in 2006), Germany (184) and Denmark (32).

Purple heron

The purple heron also did well.

In the Zouweboezem, the number rose further to 174 couples. It is by far the biggest colony of our country and also of North West Europe.

In Nieuwkoop, there were 120 couples, at Kinderdijk, 63.

Also, there were purple herons at the Zegveld colony (15 couples, none in 2005).

However, in Friesland (at least 11 couples) there were not many.

In the Biesbosch, numbers are growing (18 couples, in 2003 just 1).

Breeding birds of the Voorne coast: here.

New Mark Fiore animation on anti gay discrimination and Iraq war


There is a new Mark Fiore animation on the Internet.

It is here.

It is about anti gay discrimination in the US armed forces, while war and war profiteering continue in Iraq; as seen by US far Right religious fundamentalist Ralph Reed.

Anti gay abuse by US armed forces recruiter: here.

Senator McCain supports homophobia in the armed forces: here.

Iraq war and US spinach: here.

Von Sponeck on Iraq war: here.

Birds wintering in Guinea-Bissau


This is video about bar-tailed godwits, and dunlins, in Britain.

From the March 2007 newsletter of BirdLife in The Netherlands:

It is estimated that during the winter season, 700,000 to 900,000 waders and water birds are staying in the coastal zone of Guinea-Bissau; mainly curlew sandpipers, red knots [see also here; and here; and here and here], little stints and bar-tailed godwits [see also here and here and here].

That makes this country, after Mauretania (Banc d’Arguin), the most important wintering area of the African west coast.

Bar-tailed godwit migration in the Pacific: here.

And here.

Rare Temminck’s Stint Spotted at WWT Slimbridge Wetland Centre in the UK: here.

Reality behind Bush’s “aid” to Latin America


This music video is called Moby War in Iraq Bush.

By Vitor Hugo and R. Pichuaga in Sao Paulo in Brazil:

Bush’s “aid” to Latin America mirrors national programs to mask oppression

22 March 2007

On the eve of his recent trip to Latin America, US President George W. Bush and his administration complained that Washington was not given enough credit for the economic aid that it is bestowing upon the region—$1.8 billion for 2007.

The figure, however, represents a $200 million cut from last year, with half the total going to military aid.

Military aid mainly to the death squad linked Uribe regime in Colombia; see also here.

In an attempt to demonstrate America’s beneficence, Bush announced on the eve of his six-nation tour another package of aid programs—$75 million for education, $385 million to finance mortgages for the poor and the dispatch of a US Navy hospital ship to treat low-income people in various ports of call.

Not only is this less than a drop in the bucket given the massive poverty that prevails throughout the region, the aid figures as a whole represent a massive decline from what Washington provided during an earlier period, when Latin America was seen as an arena in the Cold War struggle against communism. In the 1960s, President John F. Kennedy’s Alliance for Progress provided more than $10 billion in today’s dollars in annual aid to the region.

Bush’s attempt to buy political support on the cheap clearly failed miserably, with mass demonstrations erupting against him in every city where he went.

Chiquita and paramilitaries in Colombia: here.

Argentine film Kiss of the Spider Woman: here.

May 2007: Negroponte in Latin America: here.