tags: researchblogging.org, animal migration, ecology, conservation, habitat destruction, global warming, overexploitation Image: Makoa Farm Horseback Riding Safaris in Tanzania [larger view]. What do salmon, passenger pigeons, American bison and wildebeest have in common? They all are (or were) migratory, and their populations either are declining or have become extinct. In fact, the populations of nearly all migratory animals, from insects to fishes, birds to mammals, are suffering disproportionate population declines that sedentary species are not experiencing. This is hardly…
tags: Eastern Willet, Catoptrophorus semipalmatus semipalmatus, birds, nature, Image of the Day Eastern Willet, Catoptrophorus semipalmatus semipalmatus, at Bolivar Flats, Texas. Image: Joseph Kennedy, 6 June 2008 [larger view]. Nikon D200, Kowa 883 telescope with TSN-PZ camera eyepiece 1/640s f/8.0 at 1000.0mm iso400.
Here's a few recently published blog carnivals for you to enjoy; Carnival of Liberals, 30 July edition. This blog carnival focuses on politics and freethought. Carnival of the Green, issue 138. This blog carnival focuses on living lightly on the earth.
tags: flamingos, baboons, nature, streaming video This streaming National Geographic video shows a group of hungry baboons in Kenya's Lake Bogoria that find themselves surrounded by a million unsuspecting, and unprotected, flamingos. I am sure you can guess what happens next. [2:40]
tags: researchblogging.org, dinosaurian soft tissue, fossils, bacterial biofilms, paleontology, endocasts, formerly pyritic framboids, collagen Figure 1. EDS spectrum of framboid. EDS spectrum of framboid showing an iron-oxygen signature. Pt is from coating for SEM. Area in red box was scanned for elements. [larger view]. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0002808. Some of you might remember a paper published in Science that rocked the paleontological world by revealing that a broken thigh bone from Tyrannosaurus rex contained soft tissue. When this soft tissue was analyzed, it was identified as…
tags: West 66th street/Lincoln Center Subway Art, Artemis, Acrobats, Divas and Dancers, subway art, NYC through my eye, photography, NYC Artemis, Acrobats, Divas and Dancers. Artist: Nancy Spero, 1999. Installed 2004. West 66th Street/Lincoln Center Subway tile mosaic art #22 as seen at NYC's Lincoln Center stop at Broadway for the downtown (southbound) 1 train. Image: GrrlScientist 2008 [larger view]. Glass mosaic murals depicting scenes of theater, dance, and orchestra-related subjects are scattered throughout this station. I have photographed tile artworks from several NYC subway…
I receive a fair number of books to review each week, so I thought I should do what several magazines and other publications do; list those books that have arrived in my mailbox so you know that this is the pool of books from which I will be reading and reviewing on my blog. You may have noticed that some weeks, I am at the top of my game and read one book per day and review it within two or so days after I've finished it. Other weeks, like this one, I am unable to concentrate long enough to read a paragraph, so obviously, reading these books, all of which are worthy of a careful reading…
tags: Western Willet, Catoptrophorus semipalmatus inornatus, birds, nature, Image of the Day Western Willet, Catoptrophorus semipalmatus inornatus, at Bolivar Flats, Texas. The bird on the left is in alternate (breeding) plumage while the bird resting on the right is in basic (winter) plumage. Image: Joseph Kennedy, 2 July 2008 [larger view]. Nikon D200, Kowa 883 telescope with TSN-PZ camera eyepiece 1/800s f/8.0 at 1000.0mm iso400.
tags: Canadian Apology, humor, politics, streaming video This streaming video shows a truly Canadian apology for all the "wrongs" they have commited towards the U.S. [2:27]
Even though Homeland Security is not happy about this, I am rather pleased about this discovery. How about you? 44% Created by OnePlusYou
tags: West 66th street/Lincoln Center Subway Art, Artemis, Acrobats, Divas and Dancers, subway art, NYC through my eye, photography, NYC Artemis, Acrobats, Divas and Dancers. Artist: Nancy Spero, 1999. Installed 2004. West 66th Street/Lincoln Center Subway tile mosaic art #21 as seen at NYC's Lincoln Center stop at Broadway for the downtown (southbound) 1 train. Image: GrrlScientist 2008 [larger view]. Glass mosaic murals depicting scenes of theater, dance, and orchestra-related subjects are scattered throughout this station. I have photographed tile artworks from several NYC subway…
Here are a few blog carnivals for you to read and enjoy; Carnival of the Elitist Bastards, issue number three. This new blog carnival celebrates excessive arrogance and bare-knuckle commentary, where smart-assed brutes with swords for tongues receive their rightful acknowledgment. All Things Eco blog carnival, issue number ten. This blog carnival focuses on providing information to others on living in an earth-friendly way.
Hey, do you all know what day today is? Today is one month before I will be standing in London England. That's right, one month from this very moment, after having spent the previous night on a redeye from NYC, I will be hanging around with my NATURE blog colleagues and exploring London pubs with a science-y theme (we could still use some pub suggestions!) [Click the icon above to learn more and to register online to attend the conference free!] I am very excited. In fact, I am so excited, I could scream! I am already working on plans for things to see and do [tentative schedule],…
tags: identify this bird, shorebird, birds, nature, Image of the Day Mystery shorebird, Avium mysteriosus, at Bolivar Flats, Texas. Image: Joseph Kennedy, 25 August 2008 [larger view]. Nikon D200, Kowa 883 telescope with TSN-PZ camera eyepiece 1/640s f/8.0 at 1000.0mm iso400.
tags: Birds in the News, BirdNews, ornithology, birds, avian, newsletter A Marsh Wren, Cistothorus palustris, gathers cattail material for its nest along the shore of Lost Lake in North Central Washington just 10 miles south of the Canadian Border. Image: Jeff Larsen, Writer/Photographer [larger view]. View more images by this photographer. Birds in Science News Now here's a fascinating research paper that I've been trying to get my hands on: The chicks of a species of Australian cuckoo can adjust their call in order to fool other species into rearing them, despite never having heard…
tags: twin baby moose, sprinkler, Anchorage Alaska, streaming video Here's a sweet little video showing twin baby moose playing in a sprinkler in the back yard of a resident of Anchorage, Alaska. Mom also gets in on the fun. June 2008. [3:52]
Here's another one of those silly online quizzes for you to play with before you get down to work; 122,466 People Created by OnePlusYou Several of the people who died on my birthday throughout history include; 2007 - Mohammed Jamal Khalifa, Saudi brother-in-law of Osama bin Laden 2007 - Molly Ivins, American political columnist and author 1974 - Samuel Goldwyn, Polish-born film studio executive 1956 - A. A. Milne, English author 1944 - Jean Giraudoux, French writer 1933 - John Galsworthy, English writer, Nobel laureate
tags: West 66th street/Lincoln Center Subway Art, Artemis, Acrobats, Divas and Dancers, subway art, NYC through my eye, photography, NYC Artemis, Acrobats, Divas and Dancers. Artist: Nancy Spero, 1999. Installed 2004. West 66th Street/Lincoln Center Subway tile mosaic art #20 as seen at NYC's Lincoln Center stop at Broadway for the downtown (southbound) 1 train. Image: GrrlScientist 2008 [larger view]. Glass mosaic murals depicting scenes of theater, dance, and orchestra-related subjects are scattered throughout this station. I have photographed tile artworks from several NYC subway…
tags: Black-Bellied Plover, Pluvialis squatarola, birds, nature, Image of the Day Black-Bellied Plover, Pluvialis squatarola, at Bolivar Flats, Texas. This bird is in breeding plumage, more correctly known as "alternate plumage." Image: Joseph Kennedy, 6 June 2008 [larger view]. Nikon D200, Kowa 883 telescope with TSN-PZ camera eyepiece 1/1600s f/8.0 at 1000.0mm iso400.
tags: Birdbooker Report, bird books, natural history books, ecology books "One cannot have too many good bird books" --Ralph Hoffmann, Birds of the Pacific States (1927). Here's this week's issue of the Birdbooker Report by Ian "Birdbooker" Paulsen, which lists ecology, environment, natural history and bird books that are (or will soon be) available for purchase. FEATURED TITLE: Huxley, Robert (editor). The Great Naturalists. 2007. Thames and Hudson. Hardbound: 304 pages. Price: $39.95 U.S. [Amazon: $26.37]. SUMMARY: Covers the naturalists from Classical times to the end of the 19th…