April 27, 2010

Report Shows Pesticide Poisoning Up Close

By Chris Clarke | Posted April 27, 2010

A report released today profiles victims of pesticide poisoning across the state who call on the Department of Pesticide Regulation (DPR) not to register methyl iodide, a cancer-causing pesticide that would be used to sterilize soil. A decision on whether or not to register the industrial chemical for farm use is imminent. The report, Profiles of Poison, features nine short stories of individuals who suffered pesticide-related health damage from Ventura to Tulare to Monterey to Imperial Counties. They are representative of communities across California for whom pesticide poisoning is a constant and all too common danger. All these victims demand that methyl iodide not be registered so other workers and residents will not suffer the consequences of pesticide poisoning.

Read more... | | agriculture, california


April 24, 2010

Wildflowers are Out at the Proposed Calico Solar Project Site

By Laura Cunningham | Posted April 24, 2010

Making a field trip to a project site is always preferable to reading through a dry thousand-page environmental review document.

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March 31, 2010

Idaho and Montana Wolf Hunts End

By Chris Clarke | Posted March 31, 2010

A wolf pup in Idaho waits for alphas to return from the hunt. Photo by Sigmaeye

States plan to kill even more wolves next season
Bozeman, MT— As Idaho’s wolf hunt season came to an end today, wildlife advocates mourned the loss of more than 500 members of the Northern Rockies’ population of the endangered predator due to human killing.  The Idaho hunt, along with a similar season in Montana, followed on the heels of the Department of Interior’s April 2009 delisting of gray wolf populations in those states under the federal Endangered Species Act (ESA).

Read more... | | obama, wildlife

February 25, 2010

Esteros del Ibera—Buenos Aires, Argentina

By Biodiversivist | Posted February 25, 2010

To get to this wildlife preserve from Seattle, fly for about 15 hours to Buenos Aires. Rent a car, load it with your family and drive North toward Brazil for a day or so to a small town called Collinia Carlos Pellegrini where you will find a dirt road. Drive down that dirt road for three hours. Cross a rickety one-lane wooden bridge.

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February 4, 2010

Obama Administration Denies American Pika Endangered Species Act Protection

By Chris Clarke | Posted February 4, 2010

Today the Obama administration denied Endangered Species Act protection to the American pika, a small mountain-dwelling mammal that is on the frontlines of global-warming-driven endangerment. The decision, issued by Interior Secretary Salazar, comes in response to a scientific petition submitted in 2007 by the Center for Biological Diversity, represented by Earthjustice.

Read more... | | obama, wildlife

January 21, 2010

‘The birding community’ hates birds: Pishing and Tape-Luring - Part 1

By Jason M Hogle | Posted January 21, 2010

Crossposted from xenogere

In Fiji’s Pacific Harbor, tourists hold their noses as dive boats pour hundreds of pounds of discarded fish scraps into the ocean.  This “chumming the water” as it’s called brings in sea life from miles around, including various kinds of sharks.  And sharks are precisely what the tourists have paid to see.  Yet biologists the world over state time and again that this constant activity will no doubt have an impact on normal shark behavior, and that the conditioning will lead the sharks and other wildlife into a downward spiral of abnormal activity.  But one thing the tourists pay for is results, and unloading all that smelly refuse into the tank definitely brings in the sharks.

But was has this to do with birds?  That answer rests in two activities: pishing and tape-luring.  Together or apart, they represent the birding community’s equivalent of chumming the water.

Read more... | | nature, conservation

November 20, 2009

Biodiversions: Western Larch

By Elizabeth Enslin | Posted November 20, 2009

Crossposted from Yips and Howls

It was hard to leave our yurt in northeastern Oregon with Western larch (Larix occidentalis) at peak color.  But when the flanks of the mountains there blaze with what looks like a procession of candles, it’s time to get ready for a harsh winter or move to lower elevations.

Western larch (Larix occidentalis)

Read more... | | biodiversions

November 3, 2009

Montreal’s BIXI Bike System: 1 Season, 1 Million Rides

By Beth Adams | Posted November 3, 2009

Crossposted from The Cassandra Pages

For me, the bike represents both exercise and freedom - it’s so wonderful not to have the hassle of a car, having to find parking spots, and then being tied to that spot rather than able to roam around freely. We’re going from owning two cars to one that we use fairly infrequently, and saving substantial amounts of money as well as feeling like we’re doing our bit for greenness. In spite of being a city where cycling is difficult or impossible for four months out of the year, Montreal does a great deal to support and encourage it, extending bike paths and this year starting the BIXI program for short commutes, and I’m grateful.

Read more... | | transportation, urban life

October 26, 2009

Remiss and remorse

By Jason M Hogle | Posted October 26, 2009

I have been remiss.  A dereliction not so much because I stopped caring, but more because I cared too much.  About myself.  About my family.  About my future.

Does a mother with skin cancer stop the world from needing protection?  Does unemployment mean I can no longer tend the flock of biophilia?  Does a father’s battle with tumors and failing health, both circling him closer to the flame, somehow relieve me of the beauty I need share and the call to action I need sound?

Nay, I have been remiss.  In a depression once reserved for the fate of our planet due to uncaring masses, I let myself become lost in pity.  Pity for me.  Pity for family.  Pity for my cares and needs.  But no more.

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April 8, 2010

Statement on NMFS’ Northwest Regional Administrator Candidates

By Eugenia Clark | Posted April 8, 2010

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 6, 2010

Joint Statement of Zeke Grader, Executive Director, Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen’s Associations, 415-606-5140 Norm Ritchie, Board of Directors, Association of Northwest Steelheaders, 503-807-772

Fifteen months in, the Obama Administration has yet to appoint a regional administrator for National Marine Fisheries Service’s (NMFS’) Northwest Office. Fishing groups, on learning of several of the leading candidates, reacted strongly to some of the names currently reported to be under consideration within the Obama Administration. Zeke Grader, Executive Director, Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen’s Associations and Norm Ritchie, Director, Association of Northwest Steelheaders, issued this joint statement:

Read more... | | endangered species, salmon

March 29, 2010

Lawsuit Launched to Protect Sage Grouse, Vanishing Nevada Bird

By Chris Clarke | Posted March 29, 2010

Crossposted from Desert Blog

LAS VEGAS— The Center for Biological Diversity, Desert Survivors, and Western Watersheds Project took the first step in a lawsuit against the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service for unlawfully delaying protection under the Endangered Species Act of both the bi-state population of greater sage grouse and greater sage grouse as a whole by filing a formal notice of intent to sue.

“The sage grouse’s desperate need for Endangered Species Act protection is no longer in dispute,” said Rob Mrowka, an ecologist at the Center. “More bureaucratic delay is sure to drive it extinct.”

Read more... | | desert, birds

February 17, 2010

Rusties

By Jason M Hogle | Posted February 17, 2010

Crossposted from xenogere

What happened to all the rusties?  I’m speaking of rusty blackbirds (Euphagus carolensis).  While no one was looking over the past 40 years, the entire population declined 85%-99% throughout North America.  That’s a catastrophic collapse.

Read more... | | birds, extinction

January 28, 2010

‘The birding community’ hates birds: Pishing and Tape-Luring - Part 2

By Jason M Hogle | Posted January 28, 2010

Crossposted from xenogere

Energy cost, increased conspecific and intraspecific confrontations and interactions, and disruption of normal activity.  These mean one thing: forced stress and aggression.  That represents the combined general impact on individual birds when they respond to pishing or tape-luring.  Any call used to bring birds out of hiding must elicit the same natural responses that would coincide with the call were it issued by another bird.  For example, alarm calls must produce stress and aggression along with the correlative hormones that define those states.  A challenger call would likewise produce the same physiological response.  In truth, any call utilized must produce a physiological response in every bird that hears it regardless of whether or not they respond to it in person, and those who do respond to it must likewise take part in a compulsory meeting with other birds who respond.  That is a meeting we can scarcely predict or control.  Also, birds reacting to the calls must expend energy and must stop engaging in natural behavior in order to respond.  So let us then turn to the existing science with hope of understanding how these practices can produce, in Professor Daniel J. Mennill’s words, “longlasting and far-reaching effects on individual fitness.”

Read more... | | nature, conservation

January 11, 2010

‘The birding community’ hates birds: Introduction

By Jason M Hogle | Posted January 11, 2010

Crossposted from xenogere

In 2009 I made a dedicated effort to participate actively in “the birding community.”  This is something I had not done before.  Though I am one of the most successful birders in Texas—by statistics alone, I saw and photographed more than 430 species in 2009, a number that easily ranks as the second-best birder in the state—I had never before opted to report my sightings, to send rare bird alerts to those who might be interested, or to seek out and participate in local, statewide, national and international forums and groups.

Read more... | | nature, conservation

November 10, 2009

Stop the NRA’s assault on condors

By Chris Clarke | Posted November 10, 2009

Crossposted from Coyote Crossing

image

Photo by Just Chaos

The National Rifle Association is gunning for America’s largest and most endangered bird—the condor.

Calling us “extremists” for trying to stop the poisoning of condors by lead bullets — inside a federal national monument, no less — the NRA is pitting its multimillion-dollar legal team against our lawyers in a showdown that will determine whether condors survive or disappear forever.

 

Read more... | | wildlife, birds

October 27, 2009

Biodiversions: Quaking Aspen

By Elizabeth Enslin | Posted October 27, 2009

Crossposted from Yips and Howls

This time of year, I’m one of many throughout the West enthralled by – and worried about - one of our most striking fall color trees: Quaking Aspen (Populus tremuloides ). Utah and Colorado have acres and acres of aspens.  In northeast Oregon, we have smaller groves dotting the more prevalent bunchgrass slopes and ponderosa pine forests.

Partial view of a one acre aspen grove in eastern Oregon, October 2009.

Read more... | | biodiversions, trees