A personal blog from a Canadian Comparative Physiologist. May include topics from Evolutionary Physiology to Conservation Physiology to basic animal physiology. Ramphastos is the genus name of the Toco Toucan, an animal that signifies everything I find fascinating about animal evolution.
Tuesday, 30 April 2013
Caterpillar control
I really like these Galapagos Mockingbirds. They're everywhere here and they provide endless entertainment. They defend their little patches of territory against all intruders, dangerous or benign. I saw one have a tete a tete with an ani bird (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ani_(bird)) this morning.
This one below has hit the jackpot with a juicy caterpillar and seems to be taking its frustrations out on the caterpillar by whacking it to death. We never said nature was nice… beware the overly sentimental statements people make about animals...
Sunday, 28 April 2013
Maybe long necks can be adaptive for something other than foraging?
Everyone can probably look up the origin of the word Galapagos, which was given to these islands based on the tortoises found here. The giant tortoises (not all of them, mind you) have saddle shaped shells, from which the term galapagos comes from.
On top of that is the variance in shell morphology seen in turtles from island to island. Apparently, although they differ tremendously from island to island, the consensus is that there are ~11 (sub)species of the giant tortoise. I am still trying to wrap my head around which is which, but we see them every day here at the research station. Breeding (or attempts at breeding!) are common. Tortoise grunting can be heard from the bushes all around us, along with the 'fingernails on chalkboard' sounds of claws on shells.
I never thought a tortoise could grin, but here is a pretty cheeky male:
Same male demonstrating some rather intimate face-to-face contact with his less than impressed mate. It does show that a long neck can be useful for something other than that hard to reach plant.
I never thought a tortoise could grin, but here is a pretty cheeky male:
Same male demonstrating some rather intimate face-to-face contact with his less than impressed mate. It does show that a long neck can be useful for something other than that hard to reach plant.
Saturday, 27 April 2013
Pishing gets you the birds...not to be mistaken with Phishing.
I've known for years that birders 'pish' to get songbirds to come out of bushes or even to fly toward you, but it has rarely worked for me in Canada. All it does is make you look silly for making pishing sounds.
However, in trying to obtain thermal images of various finches here, we invariably have to find a way to call them in.
A fine catch with this beautiful yellow warbler:
Thursday, 25 April 2013
Destroyers of Galapagos Fauna!
In the ongoing saga of finchdom (yep…that's what I'm calling the Galapagos now). Finchdom. The land of the finches. Finchtastic. Well, you get the point.
So, in the previous instalment you did not see any bill action. The juvenile finches seem a little perplexed at what they are supposed to do. They follow ma and pa finch around picking up random bits of stuff on the ground and try it out.
Here, however, is the monster of all finches. Destroying the plant life!
This is a large ground finch (male) with a soft seed pod in toe, pit by pit destroying this plant.
And here is the aftermath. Looks a little like a destroyed halloween pumpkin:
Witness the carnage all around it.
This is a large ground finch (male) with a soft seed pod in toe, pit by pit destroying this plant.
And here is the aftermath. Looks a little like a destroyed halloween pumpkin:
Witness the carnage all around it.
Name that finch!
Whether it be truth or myth, there is an expression in many Galapagos field guides:
"It is only a very wise man or a fool who thinks that he is able to identify all the finches which he sees."
(From: http://people.rit.edu/rhrsbi/GalapagosPages/DarwinFinch.html) - actual source is Michael Harris' field guide.
This is so very true.
The small and medium ground finches can usually be discerned easily in some field sites, but in others…boy there can be overlapping distributions. Same can be said for the medium compared to the large ground finch.
Here is a little visitor to our porch, looking to me like a juvenile medium ground finch (hopefully the finch mafia isn't following my blog in case I've mis-identified this one!):
Beach? What Beach?
Hard at work, scorching myself in the sun. Rumours that I have melted in the heat in Galapagos are close to being true. Still, I have plenty of sun block and am off to sit under my tarpoline blind and hope the little finches come to my camera.
Meanwhile, here is the sign that we pass every day on our walk into town. There is a public beach right at the research station:
Tuesday, 23 April 2013
Lava gulls want in on the action
Apparently there are only about 400 pairs of breeding lava gulls on the islands. We seem to be near the most persistently bothersome ones, as this individual here has decided he would rather be in the limelight. Note how he has nicely placed himself squarely where we are trying to obtain thermal images of Darwin's finches. Maybe he fancies himself a finch? I have a nice thermal image of his hot little legs somewhere on one of my electronic devices...
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)