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Archive for the 'Animal archive' Category

Do birds help curb global warming?

April 8th, 2010, 9:55 am by

The early bird catches the worm — and, one UC Irvine scientist says, might also help reduce the effects of global warming.

Eastern bluebird with leaf-eating caterpillar. Photo by Mike Onyon.

In a new study published in a scientific journal this week, ecologist and lead author Kailen Mooney shows that birds, bats and lizards consume enough insects to reduce the damage they cause to plants and promote plant growth — by 14 percent on average.

“The goal was to understand how natural communities work, and the role of top predators in shaping and affecting communities of insects,” Mooney said.

The study itself, a “meta-analysis” of 63 previous studies involving 113 experiments, looked only at how plant growth is affected by removing birds and other animals that prey on insects. But the implications for climate change are clear, Mooney said.

“Anytime a plant is growing, it’s taking carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere and turning it into tissues,” he said.

Humanity’s release of carbon dioxide, along with other greenhouse gases, is believed by climate scientists to be Read the rest of this entry »

Scientist captures elusive abalone off O.C.

March 30th, 2010, 12:47 pm by
A green abalone caught off Laguna Beach. Photo courtesy Nancy Caruso.

Green abalone captured off Laguna Beach. Photo courtesy Nancy Caruso.

An Orange County scientist who spent years growing kelp forests offshore is firing up volunteers for her newest project: breeding green abalone in local schools, then releasing them into the wild.

Nancy Caruso, a marine biologist and head of the “Get Inspired!” non-profit organization, caught three good-sized abalone off Laguna Beach Saturday with help from her dive team. She kept the abalone in tanks overnight to get fecal samples, and returned them to their offshore hideout the next day.

It’s the first step in an ambitious effort that would be the only one of  its kind in the state.

“We’re finding some abalone, and that’s good news,” Caruso said. “Nobody really knew if they were still around.”

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Edge of Nature: Meet the snipe, creature of legend

March 30th, 2010, 10:16 am by

Youngsters on their first camping trips still fall victim to a famous practical joke: being taken on a “snipe hunt.”

According to legend, the snipe doesn’t really exist, much to the chagrin of the inexperienced camper.

But in some places, the joke might be on the joker. Snipes do exist, and the Wilson’s snipe can be seen in Orange County this time of year, though it will soon head north for the summer.

Seeing a snipe can be a difficult proposition, perhaps contributing to its legendary non-existence.

Inhabitants of marshes, wet meadows and river banks, they are strikingly patterned birds, but the patterns serve to break up their shapes. The result: the birds can hide in plain sight, blending in so well with, say, a rocky or pebbly habitat that they’re virtually invisible until flushed by an approaching intruder.

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Biologist lauded for work on endangered bird

March 29th, 2010, 5:08 pm by

An Orange County Water District biologist who spent 30 years working to bring back the endangered light-footed clapper rail has won a national conservation award from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

Dick Zembal, right, with volunteer Molly Sallcup and captive-bred light-footed clapper rail about to be released. Courtesy Dick Zembal.

Dick Zembal, natural resources director at the water district who previously was a field supervisor at Fish and Wildlife, received the agency’s 2009 Recovery Champion Award — one of three to receive it in the state and one of 18 nationwide.

“In this day and age, what I use the clapper rail for is trying to get college kids involved with endangered species,” he said. “We get federal funds when we can to help kids pay for their schooling.”

Zembal has spent three decades monitoring the coastal wetlands, such as the wildlife refuge at the Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station and Upper Newport Bay, that provide habitat for the secretive bird, which weaves its floating nests out of cord grass.

He also supervised captive breeding of the birds, built nesting platforms that helped them breed in the wild, and brought together a variety of agencies and institutions to assist in his effort, among them the U.S. Navy, the state Department of Fish and Game, the Unified Port of San Diego, the San Diego Zoo and SeaWorld.

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Edge of Nature: Paintbrush is a pleasant parasite

March 23rd, 2010, 9:52 am by

Few things are what they seem when it comes to coastal paintbrush, a wildflower now making its appearance in Orange County’s native scrublands.

Its red spears poke up amid native shrubs such as buckwheat, black sage and white sage, and it is the most common of several paintbrush species.

Those red spears, however, aren’t really made of flowers. They’re modified leaves, called bracts. The actual flowers — long, thin and yellow — aren’t always visible, though right now paintbrush is blooming and the flowers can be seen.

And the reason it is found among shrubs? Paintbrush is a partial parasite. It can photosynthesize, but also draws nutrients from native shrubs by tapping into their root systems.

Because the paintbrush and the shrubs have evolved together, however, it is not known to cause any real damage to the plants.

The strategy is so successful, in fact, that paintbrushes are found from South America to Canada.

Even the plant’s name has a hidden history. It and other species are still sometimes referred to as “Indian paintbrush,” a name some experts consider demeaning to Native Americans. Best, they say, to stick with “paintbrush.”

Scientific name: Castilleja affinis

Sources: Biology professor Bob Allen, Irvine Valley College and Santa Ana College; “Flowering Plants: The Santa Monica Mountains, Coasal & Chaparral Regions of Southern California,” by Nancy Dale.

Next week: Common snipe

Photo by: H. Lorren Au, Jr., the Orange County Register

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Pelican, ‘stomped on’ by fisherman, recovers

March 19th, 2010, 2:39 pm by

Register file photo of pelicans being cared for at Wetlands and Wildlife Care Center by H. Lorren Au Jr.

A California brown pelican whose beak was stomped on and crushed by a fisherman is recovering at a Huntington Beach care center, though the bird must heal further before being released.

The bird was injured Sunday when it swooped down on a fish on the Newport Beach pier that belonged to fisherman Daniel Moreno III, 19, of Perris, Calif.

Moreno was accused of stomping on the pelican’s beak and splitting it. He was arrested on suspicion of cruelty to animals, said Newport Beach police Sgt. Steve Burdette.

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