Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Study analyzes only known footage of the largest woodpecker that ever lived

The Imperial Woodpecker -- the largest woodpecker that ever lived --probably went extinct in the late 20th century in the high mountains of Mexico, without anyone ever capturing photos or film of the 2-foot-tall, flamboyantly crested bird. Or so scientists thought -- until a biologist from the Cornell Lab of Ornithology tracked down a 16-mm film shot in 1956 by a dentist from Pennsylvania.

The footage, which captures the last confirmed sighting of an imperial woodpecker in the wild, has now been restored and used to learn more about the species' behavior and its habitat -- determined by tracking down the exact filming location during a 2010 expedition.

The research appears in the October issue of The Auk, the scientific journal of the American Ornithologists' Union, and the cover features a painting of the woodpecker by graduate student Evaristo Hernández-Fernández, a Bartels Science Illustration intern.

"It is stunning to look back through time with this film and see the magnificent imperial woodpecker moving through its old-growth forest environment, and it is heartbreaking to know that both the bird and the forest are gone," said research associate Martjan Lammertink, lead author of the paper along with four Cornell lab staff members and two Mexican biologists.

In the 85-second color film, which is available for viewing online, a female imperial woodpecker hitches up, forages on the trunks of large Durango pines and then launches into flight.

The film was shot by dentist William Rhein, who filmed the bird with a hand-held movie camera from the back of a mule while camping in a remote location in the Sierra Madre Occidental in Durango state. In a 1997 interview with Lammertink, Rhein, who died in 1999, commented that the woodpecker was "like a great big turkey flying in front of me."

In March 2010, Lammertink and Tim Gallagher of the Cornell lab launched an expedition with members of the conservation group Pronatura Noroeste to identify and survey the film site. The expedition turned up no evidence that imperial woodpeckers are still alive. Only residents in their late 60s or older remembered the woodpecker, and no one reported seeing any of the birds after the 1950s.

The entire range of the imperial woodpecker lay in the high country of the Sierra Madre Occidental -- a rugged mountain range stretching some 900 miles south from the U.S.-Mexico border -- and the Transvolcanic Mountains of central Mexico. The species largely vanished in the late 1940s and 1950s as logging destroyed their old-growth pine forest habitat. Imperial woodpeckers were also frequently shot for food, for use in folk remedies or out of curiosity.

The imperial woodpecker was the closest relative of the ivory-billed woodpecker, which suffered a similar decline from habitat loss in the southeastern United States and Cuba. A 2005 study by the Cornell lab reported the rediscovery of an ivory-billed woodpecker in Arkansas, but subsequent regionwide surveys did not find evidence of a surviving population.

Other authors of the article are Tim Gallagher, Ken Rosenberg, John Fitzpatrick and Eric Liner of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and Jorge Rojas-Tomé of Organización Vida Silvestre and Patricia Escalante of Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.

Source:

Cornell ChronicleOnline: http://www.news.cornell.edu/stories/Oct11/ImperialWoodpecker.html

Friday, October 21, 2011

Amphibian Skin: Toxic Chemicals to Medical Marvels

I was eating breakfast when I noticed a black duck quietly feeding on our small pond. It would occasionally "tip-up" - head underwater, tail skyward - in typical puddle duck fashion. Suddenly, the peaceful scene was interrupted as the duck began spinning wildly in circles, one wing flapping frantically as water splashed in all directions. Ten seconds later and just as suddenly, all was calm, including the duck, which was now floating belly-up...

THE OUTSIDE STORY

Amphibian Skin: Toxic Chemicals to Medical Marvels

Steven D. Faccio


Full Article Text

Monday, October 17, 2011

Ed Hack: 2011 Recipient of Julie Nicholson Citizen Science Award

VCE is pleased to announce that Ed Hack, longtime birder, volunteer extraordinaire, and our great friend, is the recipient of this year's Julie Nicholson Citizen Science Award. Ed's involvement as a dedicated amateur naturalist hails back to the first Vermont Breeding Bird Atlas in 1975, and he's still at it 36 years later! His latest citizen science exploits have focused on being an avid eBirder and keeping other Windsor County birders at bay atop the leader board of the Vermont 2011 County Birding Quest (well, until Saturday...). A Stockbridge resident, Ed has been 'handicapped' as a Windsor Co. Quester by his relative distance from the Connecticut River, but he's more than compensated for that with his birding acumen and good old-fashioned effort.

We presented the award to Ed Saturday at VCE's fourth anniversary celebration gathering in Norwich, but unfortunately (mostly for us, less so for Ed), he was AWOL on an annual fall flyfishing trip in Montana. Ed's wife Sandy accepted the award on his behalf and read a gracious statement Ed had prepared before his departure. The award was especially meaningful to Ed, who was close friends with Julie Nicholson and spent many hours afield with her over the years.

There could be no more worthy recipient of this award for 2011, and we're only sorry that Ed couldn't be with us on Saturday to accept it in person. No doubt he'll redouble his efforts to regain the Windsor County lead upon his return in a few days, as a number of us strive for 200 species in this friendly, cooperative 'competition'.

Ed, thanks for all you've done to promote birding and wildlife conservation in Vermont!