Showing posts with label wild-animals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wild-animals. Show all posts
Wednesday, 4 May 2011
Monday, 2 May 2011
Blue Butterfly - gravely imperiled.
Like so many other urban animals, the Mission Blue is one that is gravely imperiled. This small blue lives in tiny fragments of habitat alongside multi-million dollar development in and around the
The Mission Blue was one of the first animals listed on the Endangered Species Act, acchieving offical protection in 1976. Efforts over the last few years have focused on restoring the habitat and the blue within it – with limited success. Before 2009 the last blue seen within the city limits was on
Not surprisingly, it turns out that reintroducing a species is a complicated game. The Mission Blue utilizes three host lupine species, Lupinus albifrons, formosus and variicolor. Yet maintaining these native species amongst the invasives requires radical measures including heavily applications of herbicides (against fennel, pampas grass and french broom – but including 136 other invasive plants (Marin Flora)). It is unknown what effect the herbicides have on developing larvae (only 17% success from egg to caterpillar) or what it does to native ant populations that tend the caterpillars of the blue. Without native ants the caterpillars are much more likely to be predated, but even native ants are falling to the invading hoards of Argentine ants. And yet another key player is a newly found fungus that is killing lupine plants – devastating butterfly numbers in 2010.
If you compare this subspecies to other members within the icarioides complex there is a striking difference in abundance. Plebejus i. moroensis from the central coast is an incredibly abundant butterfly within good habitat. It is highly restricted, but not facing nearly the difficulties the Mission Blue is. I hold out hope for one of our last
Thursday, 28 April 2011
Wolverines in NE Oregon, trail cam snaps.
The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife reported Monday that photos from two different automatic trail cameras in the Wallowa Mountains confirm the existence of at least two wolverines — the first known to be in Wallowa County in northeastern Oregon.
Under pressure from environmentalists, federal wildlife authorities have acknowledged that the wolverine — numbering about 300 individuals in the United States — warrants protection, but authorities haven't gotten around to it yet.
Wolverines are specially adapted to snow, and global warming is shrinking their habitat. They are protected by
A week ago, researcher Audrey Magoun had found tracks. Now two cameras set out at bait stations have snapped photos of two different wolverines.
Wednesday, 13 April 2011
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