Monthly Archives: September 2016

Catch Them From The Sky

Coast Guard Cutter Rush escorts the suspected high seas drift net fishing vessel Da Cheng in the North Pacific Ocean on August 14, 2012. (photo credit: U.S. Coast Guard)
Coast Guard Cutter Rush escorts suspected high seas drift net fishing vessel Da Cheng in the North Pacific Ocean on August 14, 2012 (photo from U.S. Coast Guard via NOAA)

After two days of sad stories about fish populations in decline here’s some hopeful news.

With sensible catch limits and sanctuaries where fishing is prohibited, we can turn the tide on ocean species decline — but only if we can enforce the laws.  Unfortunately the ocean is a huge place with few “cops on the beat” and a lot of places for illegal, unreported, and unregulated fishermen to hide.

Until now.

Last week Oceana, SkyTruth, and Google launched the public Beta of Global Fishing Watch (GFW), a free online tool that allows anyone in the world to monitor and track the activities of the world’s largest commercial fishing vessels in near real-time.

Here’s how it works:  Every ship over a certain tonnage is required to transmit Automatic Identification System (AIS) data containing its identity, location, course and speed.  The data, received by satellites and accumulated since 2012, is used to plot each ship’s movements.  To determine which boats are fishing vessels, Global Fishing Watch developed an algorithm that identifies fishing by the characteristic patterns it makes on the map.

The map shows no-fish zones and Economic Exclusion Zones where it’s easy to see if illegal fishing is going on.  Vessels that turn off their AIS transmitters or purposely falsify their GPS data are automatically suspect.

Nations at the mercy of illegal fishing are happy to use GFW. In December 2014, when the tool was still in test mode, SkyTruth analyst Bjorn Bergman (from his desk in West Virginia!) saw a Taiwanese boat fishing illegally in Palau’s protected waters. And it turned off its AIS. The boat left Palau and headed for Indonesia.  When it returned in January Bergman remotely helped Palau authorities chase it down. Read the whole story here at the GFW blog.

So if you’re wondering how the U.S. will stop illegal fishing in 582,578 square miles of the newly expanded Papahanaumokuakea Marine National Monument (surrounding the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands) the answer is:

We’ll catch them from the sky.

For more information, watch the video and visit the Global Fishing Watch website.

(video from Global Fishing Watch on YouTube)

Passenger Pigeon Of The Sea

Pacific bluefin tuna, Kaiyukan Aquarium, Osaka, Japan (photo from Wikimedia Commons)
Pacific bluefin tuna, Kaiyukan Aquarium, Osaka, Japan (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

Today, a fish story.

Bluefin tuna are following the same trajectory as the passenger pigeon.  Because they taste good they’re poised to go extinct.

Atlantic (Thunnus thynnus) and Pacific bluefin tuna (Thunnis orientalis) are highly migratory predators that spawn on one side of their respective oceans and travel thousands of miles on migration to their feeding grounds.  When they reach maturity at three to five years old they return to spawn.  Bluefins can live 15 to 50 years and reach up to 990 pounds but because of overfishing very few live to maturity.

Like the passenger pigeon, human hunting pressure is the only reason for the bluefin’s decline.  Technological advances in deep sea fishing have made it easy to catch all of them.  Their meat is so prized in Japan for sushi and sashimi that the Pacific population has declined more than 97%.  Large specimens are so rare that according to the January 11, 2013 issue of TIME magazine, “Just last week, a 489-lb. bluefin was sold at a fish auction in Tokyo for a record $1.76 million—or about $3,600 per pound.”  That was nearly four years ago.  Their status has only gotten worse.

Like the final decades of the passenger pigeon, the bluefin’s plight has been discussed for years.  Catch limits for Atlantic bluefin have been in place since 2007 and it’s been nominated for endangered status.  In 2010 the World Wildlife Fund pointed out there was still so much over-capacity for Atlantic tuna fishing that EU boats reached their catch limit in only one week.  In 2011 Salon magazine asked, “Why are we still eating bluefin tuna?”  In 2014, the Center for Biodiversity called for a Pacific bluefin fishing ban.

This summer the situation became so dire that a dozen environmental groups called for listing the Pacific bluefin tuna as Endangered and the Pew Trusts called for a Pacific bluefin moratorium.

This Pew Trusts video explains how the Pacific moratorium, implemented immediately, would save the species.

 

We still have time to turn it around — but not much.

Will bluefin tuna go the way of the passenger pigeon … from billions to none?

 

(photo from Wikimedia Commons. Click on the image to see the original.)

The Biggest Die First

Large swordfish on deck during long-lining operations (photo by Derke Snodgrass via NOAA Photo Library)
Large swordfish on deck during long-lining operations (photo by Derke Snodgrass from NOAA Photo Library)

It happened to land animals. Now it’s happening in the ocean.  The biggest die first.

Based on Earth’s current extinction rate of 1,000 times the normal background rate (predicted to become 10 times worse) scientists believe we’re at the start of the sixth mass extinction.

Stanford geoscientist Jonathan Payne wondered if the traits of extinct marine animals could predict the likelihood of extinction in today’s ocean organisms. For mollusks and vertebrates Payne and his colleagues compared ecological traits such as habitat preference and body size in past extinct and present threatened genera (genus: one level above species).  The results were surprising.

In past extinctions habitat preference was a good predictor that an animal would disappear.  That’s not the case now. In this era, the best predictor of future extinction is large body size.

The difference is us.  Human hunting pressure is driving ocean extinction.  Our demand for seafood is high (there are billions of us to feed) and we’ve become very efficient at capturing the largest fish.  Highly migratory predators like the Pacific bluefin tuna have declined precipitously.

We’ve seen this before.  At the end of the Ice Age, as human population expanded across the globe, the megafauna simultaneously went extinct.  It’s now known that sabretooth tigers, giant armadillos and woolly mammoths disappeared due to human hunting.

Woolly mammoth statue in the Royal BC Museum, Victoria, BC, Canada (photo from Wikimedia Commons)
Woolly mammoth statue in the Royal BC Museum, Victoria, BC, Canada (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

We humans are successful because we make tools and hunt cooperatively.  Of course we kill the largest prey first. One large animal feeds more people.

Unfortunately we don’t know when to stop.

Read more about Payne’s study here at Science Daily.

(photo of swordfish from NOAA Photo Library. photo of woolly mammoth statue in Royal BC Museum, Victoria, Canada via Wikimedia Commons. Click on the images to see the originals)

p.s. A word about the swordfish pictured above:  Swordfish are highly migratory predators whose population is in danger in many oceans around the world.  In 1998 the North Atlantic population dropped so low that fishing was suspended.  A 2009 international assessment of North Atlantic swordfish showed they had recovered in U.S. fishing areas, so fishing resumed.  Note: The fishermen who lost their lives aboard the Andrea Gail in The Perfect Storm were longline fishing for swordfish.

Reminder: Schenley Park Walk, Sep 25

Asters (photo by Kate St. John)Just a reminder: I’m leading a bird and nature walk at Schenley Park this Sunday, September 25, 8:30am – 10:30am.

Meet at the Westinghouse Memorial Fountain. Then, depending on the mud, we’ll walk the Falloon Trail or the Serpentine Road keeping our eyes open for fall migrants. We’ll watch for flowers, too,.

Dress for the weather and wear comfortable walking shoes. Bring binoculars and field guides if you have them.

Note: This is Pittsburgh’s Great Race Day and the course follows Forbes Avenue, so approach the park from the south.

Click here for more information and in case of cancellation. So far the weather forecast looks great!

 

(photo by Kate St. John)

Bathing On A Leaf

Here’s a bird bathing technique I had never seen before … until yesterday.

Sunday morning Jack and Sue Solomon led a Three Rivers Birding Club outing at Frick Park. We all hoped to see warblers but the birds were sparse and badly backlit in the treetops.

A passing shower halfway through the walk was just what we needed.  When the rain paused, a few birds were at eye level.  One of them was a Kentucky warbler who drew our attention by bathing on top of sumac leaves.

The hummingbird in this video is doing the same thing.  Watch at the 00:37 mark when he uses a leaf like a bathtub.  Who knew!

p.s.  Click here to see what a Kentucky warbler looks like.

 

(video by RM Videos on YouTube)

Scenes From Acadia

Jordan Pond, September 2016 (photo by Kate St.John)
Jordan Pond, September 2016 (photo by Kate St.John)

Though my husband and I have visited Acadia National Park every September since 1983 (including this month) I see that I’ve never shared my photos at Outside My Window.  Here’s a selection from the last two years showing the park’s stunning beauty.

Founded in 1916, Acadia National Park now includes land on several islands and one peninsula.  These photos were taken during hikes and walks on Mount Desert Island, the largest land mass of the park.

The area was carved by glaciers and contains many lakes.  Jordan Pond, above, is the size of a lake and extremely photogenic.

Eagle Lake from the south shore, September 2016 (photo by Kate St. John)
Eagle Lake from the south shore, September 2016 (photo by Kate St. John)

 

The Bubbles at Jordan Pond, September 2014 (photo by Kate St. John)
The Bubbles at Jordan Pond, September 2014 (photo by Kate St. John)

 

There are scenic views from the mountaintop hiking trails but humidity usually dampens my photos.

Somes Sound from Flying Mountain, September 2014 (photo by Kate St. John)
Somes Sound from Flying Mountain, September 2014 (photo by Kate St. John)

 

Looking southeast from Cadillac Mountain south trail, September 2014 (photo by Kate St. John)
Looking southeast from Cadillac Mountain south trail, September 2014 (photo by Kate St. John)

 

Northeast Harbor (the town we stay in) is tucked between two mountains.  It was named for its safe anchorage during Nor’easter storms.

Northeast Harbor, tucked in a nook of the mountains, September 2015 (photo by Kate St. John)
Northeast Harbor, tucked in a nook of the mountains, September 2015 (photo by Kate St. John)

A short walk from this view is the Asticou Azalea Garden.

At Asticou Azalea Garden, September 2015 (photo by Kate St. John)
At Asticou Azalea Garden, September 2015 (photo by Kate St. John)

Asticou’s sand garden mimics islands and the sea. The large rocks are islands; the sand ripples are waves. It’s a very peaceful place.

The Sand Garden at Asticou Azalea Garden, September 2015 (photo by Kate St. John)
The Sand Garden at Asticou Azalea Garden, September 2015 (photo by Kate St. John)

 

Much of Acadia’s Mount Desert acreage was donated by John D. Rockefeller, Jr.  Though he made his money in oil, he did not want cars on the island so he built scenic carriage paths, especially near his home in Seal Harbor.  The bridges along these carriage paths are beautiful in their own right.  This one crosses Jordan Stream on land recently donated by David Rockefeller that’s open to hiking and horses.

Cobblestone bridge carries a carriage path over Jordan Stream, September 2016 (photo by Kate St. John)
Cobblestone bridge carries a carriage path over Jordan Stream, September 2016 (photo by Kate St. John)

The underside of the cobblestone bridge -- even more cobblestones! (photo by Kate St.John)
The underside of the cobblestone bridge … even more cobblestones. Amazing workmanship! (photo by Kate St.John)

Acadia’s hiking trails are designed for scenic beauty.  Strewn with pine needles, this trail passes between two rock outcrops.

The trail goes to the light, a gap in the rocks, September 2014 (photo by Kate St. John)
The trail goes to the light, a gap in the rocks, September 2014 (photo by Kate St. John)

 

The Ship Harbor Trail treads pink granite at the coast.

Pink granite coast on the Ship Harbor Trail, September 2014 (photo by Kate St. John)
Pink granite coast on the Ship Harbor Trail, September 2014 (photo by Kate St. John)

 

French explorer Champlain named the island of barren mountains “Isle des Monts Desert” (Mount Desert Island). Sargent and Cadillac shoulder above the rest, easily visible from the sea.

The deserted mountains of Mount Desert Island: Sargent and Cadillac as seen from Seawall, September 2014 (photo by Kate St. John)
The deserted mountains of Mount Desert Island: Sargent and Cadillac as seen from Seawall, September 2014 (photo by Kate St. John)

Every year as we leave the island we say to the mountains, “See you next year.”

 

(photos by Kate St.John)

Honeybee Knickers

Honeybee with pollen bags on his legs (photo by Kate St. John)
Honeybee with pollen bags on his legs (photo by Kate St. John)

Honey bees are busy right now collecting nectar and pollen to get them through the winter.  They carry nectar to the hive by swallowing it.  They carry the pollen in sacs on their legs.

According to Wikipedia, the bee’s pollen basket or corbicula is “a polished cavity surrounded by a fringe of hairs.”  Each bee grooms the pollen off her body and stores it in her pollen baskets. Here’s how:

A honey bee moistens its forelegs with its protruding tongue and brushes the pollen that has collected on its head, body and forward appendages to the hind legs. The pollen is transferred to the pollen comb on the hind legs and then combed, pressed, compacted, and transferred to the corbicula on the outside surface of the tibia of the hind legs.

This honeybee’s pollen basket is so big that it looks like she’s wearing orange knickers.

 

(photo by Kate St. John)

p.s. for my British readers:  The word “knickers” in the U.S. is short for “knickerbockers,” the baggy trousers tight at the knee formerly worn by golfers.

Cheeps Like A Bird

The birds aren’t singing and many aren’t even making contact calls but you’ll still hear something in the forest that sounds like a bird.

Listen to the video above as a chipmunk makes chirpy calls that resemble a northern cardinal — except that they’re too fast and “sweet.”

Chipmunks make sounds we don’t expect from such a small body.  Lang Elliott recorded three of them:  “chip”, “tock” and squeak.  Click here to hear.

Want to know what they mean? Jim McCormac explains them in Deciphering the language of chipmunks.

You’ll get a lot of practice with these sounds in the weeks ahead.  The chipmunks are in overdrive and very vocal, storing up food for the winter.

 

(video by PAphotofun on YouTube. Chipmunk audio by Lang Elliott via Wildlife of Connecticut website)

Spread Your Wings

Two double-crested cormorants drying their wings (photo by Steve Gosser)
Two double-crested cormorants drying their wings (photo by Steve Gosser)

14 September 2016

Yesterday’s blog about double-crested cormorants reminded me there other birds that spread their wings to dry, not fly.  Some of them aren’t even wet when they do it.

Cormorants’ feathers are wettable but a layer near the skin stays dry so they don’t get very cold.  This allows them to live in the North Atlantic and the Aleutians (see species list below) where they sometimes “dry” their wings in fog or rain.

Anhingas (Anhinga anhinga) aren’t so lucky.  When they go swimming they get soaked and have to get out of the water to warm up.  This limits their distribution to warm climate zones.

Anhinga sunning at Ding Darling NWR, Florida (photo from Wikimedia Commons)
Anhinga sunning at Ding Darling NWR, Florida (photo by Dick Daniels from Wikimedia Commons)

Turkey vultures (Cathartes aura) are often dry when they spread their wings because they’re doing it to warm up.  Overnight their body temperature drops so a good sunning is welcome in the morning.

Turkey vulture sunning at Bluff, Utah (photo from Wikimedia Commons)
Turkey vulture sunning at Bluff, Utah (photo from Wikimedia Commons)

So there’s more than one reason to spread your wings.  Read more about it here.

(photo of double-crested cormorants by Steve Gosser. Anhinga and turkey vulture photos from Wikimedia Commons. Click on the Wikimedia images to see the originals.)


p.s. Cormorant species list:  In North America the genus Phalacrocorax (“sea raven”) has six members, though one is rare.

  • Along the Pacific coast:
  • On the Atlantic coast:
    • Great cormorant or “black shag”, Phalacrocorax carbo (Occurs worldwide. In North America breeds only in Maine and Greenland.)
  • In eastern North America and along the Atlantic coast:
  • In the Gulf of Mexico region, the Caribbean and South America: