Category Archives: Wildlife & Environmental News

Wildlife & Environmental News

Natural Curiosities and top ten animals

The emperor penguin and the wood frog (that’s the American species,  Lithobates sylvaticus), are uncovered in a new television series as vertebrates  that can survive extreme cold: Useful in these days of extreme climates. Then,  rhinos and hedgehogs are typically classified as “armoured animals.”

This is the David  Attenborough trademark, as in “Life on Earth” right through the decades to “Life  in the Undergrowth” (invertebrates).

Sir David has another guaranteed winner on his hands with “Natural  Curiosities”. It’s a series, just about to start, on those rare and unusual  species that intrigue, as well as the relatively common creatures that people  see in the countryside….

Read the full article here, from Earth Times.

Breathtaking Patagonian ice field photographed by German artist Frank Thiel

For the photographers or the ardent travellers who visit this blog I need to tell you that the BBC has featured the work of German artist/photographer Frank Thiel and his study of glaciers in Patagonia.

The works are currently on display at a gallery in New York City and are very large in order to convey a sense of scale.

View a BBC video and/or read the full article at: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-26251368

Britain’s Farmland Butterflies Bounce Back from Low Numbers

Small tortoiseshell butterfly (Aglais urticae) on barley - Tim Melling - Butterfly Conservation

     Small tortoiseshell butterfly (Aglais urticae) on barley – Tim Melling – Butterfly Conservation

Farmland butterflies have flourished thanks to last year’s hot summer, the charity Butterfly Conservation says.

The annual Wider Countryside Butterfly Survey (WCBS) recorded almost double the number of insects compared with the previous year.

Long, sunny periods provided perfect breeding conditions for some of the UK’s brightest species, it suggested.

But experts warned the mild winter could reverse the insects’ fortunes if they emerged too early for spring.

The survey has been run by Butterfly Conservation, the British Trust for Ornithology [BTO] and The Centre for Ecology and Hydrology since 2009….

Read the full, very interesting article from the BBC, at: http://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/26242496

_______________________________________________

Eddie’s comment:  This is excellent news!  For the past few years, there has been a dismaying scenario of butterfly numbers falling, throughout Britain.  This has largely been attributed to inappropriately long periods of cold and/or wet weather, so it is nice to see that a warmer, drier summer brought numbers back up, perhaps to a larger extent than one might have dared hope.

As for the excellent photograph by Tim Melling, some experts say that the European Small Tortoiseshell (Aglais urticae) is actually the same species as North America’s “Milbert’s Tortoiseshell” (Aglais milberti).*

The other two North American tortoiseshells (‘California’ and ‘Compton’) are in a different genus — Nymphalis — the same as the Mourning Cloak.

* National Audubon Society Field Guide to Butterflies

More Disease Problems for Bees in the US and Worldwide

An article published today in Britain, by the BBC, under the heading of ‘Bumblebees infected with honeybee diseases’, might not seem to be cause for alarm among nature lovers in America, but there can be no doubt that it is.

Honey Bee on Birds-foot-trefoil. Copyright 2013, Eddie Wren

Honey Bee on Birds-foot-trefoil. Copyright 2013, Eddie Wren

Given that bees are a massive factor in the viability not only of the wild flowers that we all enjoy but also of many important food crops, the rise of Deformed Wing Virus [DWV] and of the microsporidian ‘Nosema ceranae‘ should be of concern to anyone who has an interest in the health of our environment, and not least to bee keepers, whose livelihoods are once again being threatened.

When I read the above article, I did a search for these two problems in the USA, and sure enough I found this this report from the American Society for Microbiology, about DWV here in the States.

As for the ‘Nosema ceranae‘, Wikipedia has plenty to tell us about the spread of this pathogen, not only in the Americas but worldwide.

__________________________________________

Fox News in the USA has now run a version of this story, here.

Bobcat sightings around Western New York show range map is in need of revision

This article, by Gerry Rising, was published in the Buffalo News at the end of December, 2013, but it is of more than enough interest for us to give the URL again, here:

http://www.buffalonews.com/opinion/nature-science/nature-watch-bobcat-sightings-around-western-new-york-show-range-map-is-in-need-of-revision-20131229

 

How salmon help keep a huge, Canadian rainforest thriving

Canada’s Great Bear Rainforest is the largest temperate rainforest in the world. This huge and pristine wilderness depends on an unlikely source for its long-term survival – the salmon which spawn in its rivers and creeks….

In the linked video (see below), ecological economist Pavan Sukhdev, The Nature Conservancy’s lead scientist Dr M Sanjayan and camerawoman Sophie Darlington talk about the salmon’s unsung role in fertilising the forest. The bears who feast on the spawning salmon don’t eat on the river – they drag the carcasses far into the forest. The remains of the salmon contain vast quantities of nitrogen that plants need to grow. Eighty percent of the nitrogen in the forest’s trees comes from the salmon. In other words, these ocean dwellers are crucial for the forest’s long-term survival.

Watch the video, from the BBC, at: http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20140218-salmon-fertilising-the-forests